Supreme Court Case: Plessy Vs. Ferguson

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What would you do if your physical attributes such as hair color, height, or even the color of your skin determined your livelihood? Well, that was the situation in the Supreme Court case entitled Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. In this controversial case, a man by the name of Homer Plessy was one-eighth black. This man was convicted of breaking a Louisiana law that stated that train cars had to be separated between whites and blacks. Plessy bought a train ticket and sat in the white-only car. He was convicted and imprisoned for violating the law. He was found guilty by Judge John Ferguson. Plessy filed a petition against Ferguson arguing that the ruling was unconstitutional. The case went to the Supreme Court where it made a 7-1 decision upholding …show more content…
Korematsu v. United States in 1944 is just one of the many that has been extremely prejudice Supreme Court case. It involves the national order put into force by President Franklin Roosevelt after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor to lunge the United States into World War II. The national order stated that all Japanese-Americans currently residing in America was forced to move to the west coast in California. They were all placed in internment camps until the remainder of the war. One man, named Fred Korematsu, defied this order. Fred Korematsu was living in San Leandro, California at the time and deliberately resisted law enforcement to move him to the internment camps. He was charged with defiance of the executive order, but he appealed. It soon came to the Supreme Court in 1944. In the end result of the ruling. The Supreme Court ruled a six to three vote in favor of the United States keeping Fred Korematsu imprisoned. The court ruled that, even though it may seem unconstitutional, the discrimination of Korematsu and the rest of the Japanese-Americans was within the guidelines of the Constitution. The Supreme Court also argued that some Japanese-Americans were still loyal to the country of