Department of the Interior Press Release Regarding the Release of Japanese Aliens from Tule Lake Segregation Center
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ADVANCE RELEASE ADVANCE RELEASE
Tozier - Int. 2838
OWI - 3375
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
TRUMAR
ADVANCE RELEASE:
Cleared and Issued
NATIONAL AND
For Sunday Papers,
RECORDS
Through Facilities of the
July 9, 1944
to
Office of War Information
Transfer of 26 Japanese aliens over the last three months from the Tule Lake
Segregation Center in northern California to enemy alien internment camps under
jurisdiction of the Department of Justice was announced today by Secretary of the
Interior Harold L. Ickes.
The aliens, Secretary Ickes explained, are men who were arrested for playing an
active part in the disturbance of last November at the segregation center and who
have been confined since their arrest in a fenced-off stockade at the center. Under
agreement between the Department of Justice and the War Relocation Authority, they
have been moved to internment camps during the last three months in comparatively
small groups.
All aliens have now been removed from the stockade area at Tule Lake, the
Secretary said, although a group of 25 United States citizens of Japanese ancestry,
who are not eligible for transfer to internment camps, still remains. After the
disturbance of November 4, both during and after the period when the Army was
temporarily in control of the segregation center, a total of 111 aliens and 229
citizens, suspected of complicity in the outbreak, were removed from the residence
area of the center and confined in the stockade.
The War Relocation Authority established a fact-finding committee, composed of
administrative employes at Tule Lake, to review the cases of these persons and to
make recommendations to the project director. Aliens whose records made them
eligible for internment were gradually .transferred to Justice Department camps.
Citizens who had records as chronic troublemakers were retained in the stockade.
Those individuals -- both citizen and alien -- whose behavior in the stockade
indicated they would not make further trouble were returned, after periods of con-
finement ranging from two to eight months, to the residence area of the Tule Lake
Center.
Originally, Secretary Ickes pointed out, the War Relocation Authority had con-
templated transferring citizen troublemakers from the stockade to its isolation
center at Leupp, Ariz., but because of the small number of citizens left in the
stockade after re-examination of the cases it was determined not to re-open the
special center in Arizona.
END OF ADVANCE RELEASE: For SUNDAY Papers, July 9, 1944.
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