Denying Prejudice: Internment, Redress, and Denial, 51 UCLA L. REV. 933-1013 (2004).
Abstract
In the early 1980s, Fred Korematsu, Minoru Yasui, and Gordon
Hirabayashi marched back into the federal courts that convicted them
during World War II for defying the internment of persons of Japanese
descent. Relying on suppressed exculpatory evidence discovered in the
national archives, they filed writs of error coram nobis to overturn
their convictions. Remarkably, this litigation was successful and
fueled the extraordinary redress movement, which culminated in federal
reparations for surviving internees. Yet, a dark side to this victory
has never been discussed, until now. In granting the petitions, the
Judiciary absolved the one branch of government that has never been
held accountable for the internment: itself. Specifically, the lower
federal courts adopted an official legal history that insulated the
wartime Supreme Court from any fault. According to that account, the
Supreme Court was simply duped by conniving officials in the
Departments of War and Justice, who suppressed smoking gun evidence.
But this tidy story is nonsense. The wartime Court was no innocent. It
was a full participant in the internment machinery, and it deployed its
enormous intellectual resources to avoid interfering with the
internment, while at the same time, never granting it official
approval. The Court also made certain that blame would fall not on
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt or on Congress, but instead on the
little known War Relocation Authority, which was labeled a rogue
agency. This is what the Court did in the 1940s, exploiting
procedure-like tools often extolled as passive virtues. The Judiciary
has never accepted responsibility for its machinations. After the coram
nobis cases, official history has been rewritten to make any apology
simply unwarranted. In this way, the personal victories of Korematsu,
Yasui, and Hirabayashi were ironically exploited to complete the circle
of absolution the Supreme Court began in the 1940s. This Article
provides a more nuanced and disturbing interpretation of the
internment,the Judiciary, and the coram nobis cases. It also sheds
critical light on discussions of military exigency, racism, the role of
the Judiciary, and the lessons of history in a post-September 11 world.
Keywords: Internment, Japanese Americans, race, Asian Americans
[download published version @ SSRN]
[related articles: Watching the Watchers (2005), Dodging Responsibility: The Story of Hirabayashi (2008)]