Rose Ochi
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Takayo "Rose" Matsui Ochi (December 15, 1938 – December 13, 2020) was a Japanese-American attorney and civil rights activist notable for fighting for the approval of the Manzanar to become a National Historic Site and being the first Asian American woman to be appointed at the United States Assistant Attorney General level by President Bill Clinton. She was also the first Asian American to be appointed to the
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.


Early life and education

Ochi was born Takayo Matsui on December 15, 1938, in East Los Angeles, California, to Yoshiaki Roy and Mutsuko "Grace" Matsukawa Matsui, both who were from Kumamoto Prefecture,
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. She was the third of four children and was born at the Japanese Hospital in East Los Angeles, unlike the many Nikkei babies that were born at home. When she was three, her family was sent to the Santa Anita Detention Center because of the U.S. involvement in World War II and the signing of
Executive Order 9066 Executive Order 9066 was a United States presidential executive order signed and issued during World War II by United States president Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. This order authorized the secretary of war to prescribe certain ...
. After six months, they were then sent to the Rohwer War Relocation Center, where she was given the English name "Rose". After the end of the war, Ochi's parents faced deportation since they were on a business visa and fought the proceedings in San Francisco while Ochi and her siblings were left in
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. There, she experienced racism against her by the locals, but when her parents had the deportation orders overturned with the help of the
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, the family returned to East Los Angeles. Ochi skipped two grades in Roosevelt High School and participated in UCLA's UniCamp to go to college there. In 1959, Ochi ran for Nisei Week Queen because her mother wanted to visit their relatives in Japan but didn't have enough money to do so, but the grand prize for pageant was a trip to Japan. In the same year, she graduated from UCLA with a bachelor's degree in physical education and worked at
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and in the Montebello Unified School District before returning to East Los Angeles to teach at Stevenson Junior High School. She was cast in the musical film '' Flower Drum Song'' but pulled out when she saw the costume she would wear. In 1963, she married Thomas Ochi.


Law career and public service

Ochi decided to become a lawyer after seeing the
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in the 1960s. She graduated from Loyola Law School in 1972 and was accepted into the
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in December. She turned down a job with the United States Attorney Office as a prosecutor and went to the
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to earn a
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and became a Reginald Heber Smith Fellow for the Western Center on Law and Poverty. During that time, was co-counsel on an education reform case, ''
Serrano v. Priest ''Serrano v. Priest'' refers to three cases regarding the financing of public schools in California that were decided by the California Supreme Court: ''Serrano v. Priest'', (1971) (''Serrano I''); ''Serrano v. Priest'', (1976) (''Serrano II''); ...
''. She fought for Manzanar to become a National Historic Site. Ochi joined Mayor Tom Bradley's administration and later Richard Riordan's administration as Director for Criminal Justice Planning. In 1979, she was selected to serve on President Jimmy Carter's Select Commission on Immigration and Refugee Policy and later worked for Bill Clinton on the National Drug Control Policy in 1997. After returning to Los Angeles in 2001, she was appointed to the Police Commission by Mayor James Hahn and became executive director of the California Forensic Science Institute at California State University, Los Angeles a year later.


Death and legacy

After a second contacting of COVID-19, Ochi died on December 13, 2020, in Los Angeles after it further complicated her health problems. In a tribute post, Representative Judy Chu called her an inspiration to her. State Assembly member
Chris Holden Chris Holden (born July 19, 1960) is an American politician serving in the California State Assembly. He is a Democrat representing the 41st Assembly District, which encompasses the northern San Gabriel Valley, and is centered in Pasadena. ...
said that she was a "national treasure" while Assembly member
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said that he was saddened that they lost an "incredible community and civil rights leader." Developer
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, who served with Ochi on the commission, said that she was a "true leader when it comes to police reform." In 2021, the Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to name an intersection at
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and San Pedro in
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after her. The motion was introduced by Councilmember Kevin de León and a sign displaying the new name "Rose Ochi Square" was placed on the location. That same year, a plaque dedicated to Ochi was displayed at the LAPD Police Academy.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ochi, Rose 1938 births 2020 deaths Japanese-American internees University of California, Los Angeles alumni USC Gould School of Law alumni American civil rights activists of Japanese descent Clinton administration personnel Carter administration personnel Lawyers from Los Angeles Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in California