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Irons dug up those documents while researching a book on the internment cases. He remembers being struck by the strong language in a lawyer's memo calling the damaging assertions about the Japanese-Americans "lies." Yet when Fahy stood before the justices, Irons said, he told them "he stood by
'every sentence, every line and every word'" in an intelligence report that already had been debunked. Katyal's post may be the first time a Justice Department official has spoken so candidly about the mistakes of a predecessor. He said he was writing to stress the "duty of absolute candor in our representations to the court." Katyal was to speak at a Justice Department ceremony Tuesday honoring Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.
[Associated
Press;
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