FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - Following reports in USA Today that the Census Bureau
gave American surveillance agencies information on persons of Japanese Ancestry
during World War II, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Japanese American
Citizens League (JACL) and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)
urged Congress to investigate and ensure that such practices do not occur
today.
"Wartime hysteria led our government to violate the privacy and trust of
Americans," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington
Legislative Office. "The census is a vital tool, but such sensitive information
must be protected. If Americans fear that their answers to the census will be
shared, it will dampen the ability of our government to provide effective
government services. Congress must investigate whether similar groups are facing
similar actions today."
The USA Today article was based on the research of William Seltzer of
Fordham University and Dr. Margo Anderson of the University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee. Their paper concludes that in 1943 the Census Bureau provided the
Treasury Department with a list of all persons of Japanese ancestry in the
Washington DC area. That information, gathered under a promise of
confidentiality, was also shared with the FBI and other government agencies. The
report also concludes that this action was not illegal, as it was authorized
under the Second War Powers Act.
"This is another slap in the face to Japanese Americans," said Floyd Mori,
National Director of JACL. "During World War II, 120,000 people of Japanese
ancestry, the majority of whom were U.S. citizens, were forced into American
concentration camps. Many others were immediately plucked from their homes by
the FBI and carted off to undisclosed imprisonment facilities. Like this recent
revelation that our privacy was also violated, internment was also deemed
‘legal.’ In America, not all ‘legal’ actions are consistent with the values and
freedoms enshrined in our Constitution."
The Census Bureau has previously denied that it had shared information on
Japanese Americans during World War II. Similar concerns were raised in 2004
when it was revealed that the Census Bureau had shared with the Department of
Homeland Security a limited set of zip code data on Americans of Arab
ancestry.
"Congress must take steps to ensure that this violation of Japanese
Americans’ privacy is not repeated with Arab Americans, this is vital in light
of the targeted-surveillance and enforcement programs we have seen in the past
few years," said Kareem Shora, National Executive Director of the ADC. "This
data needs to be collected, and it needs to be protected."