Place these events from Korematsu’s life in chronological order.
His children learned about his Supreme Court case in high school history class.
Korematsu returned to federal court, and in 1983, a federal judge threw out his conviction.
But in 1981, a researcher uncovered evidence that the U.S. government had presented false information to the Supreme Court while suppressing intelligence findings about Japanese-Americans’ loyalty.
Korematsu married, had kids, moved back to California in 1949, and worked as a drafter, though his job prospects were limited by his criminal conviction.