Answer :

Fred Korematsu refused to follow Civilian Exclusion orders put in place by President Franklin D. Roosevelt after he signed Executive Order 9066.


Executive Order 9066 resulted in the establishment of Japanese-American internment camps after the attack on Pearl Harbor. This resulted in the internment of thousands of Japanese-American citizens. However, Korematsu refused to follow these orders, saying that this forced movement violated his constitutional rights.

Answer:

Fred T. Korematsu breached the Executive Order 9066, which authorized the removal of Japanese from their homes and placement in camps for that purpose. In this way, he became a fugitive from American justice. He was finally caught and tried.

Explanation:

Fred Toyosaburo Korematsu was an American civil rights activist of Japanese descent. He has become a symbol of the memory of the unjustified by his decades-long legal battle against his ethnically-motivated internment during the Second World War, which led to his cassation of the war in 1983, and the honors of several US states and the US President.

The Supreme Court judgment in Korematsu v. United States of America is among the most controversial decisions made by the country's highest court regarding racial discrimination.