- The 1940's case of a Japanese American killed after detainment in a camp is reopened. Meanwhile the Cold Case team fears their beloved boss, John Stillman, will retire and leave them.
- Subsequent to his 30-days away from the office, Stillman submitted retirement papers and Lilly and staff pleads with him to withdraw them. This case is regarding a Japanese-American man who served time in a California internment camp. After moving his family to Philadelphia he was murdered in 1945.—lemoviecrtic@yahoo.com
- War baby Barbara politely ask the team to reopens the 1945 murder of her father Ray Takahashi, a hardworking Japanese-American family man who was killed outside an Army-Navy football game. The original investigation was probably scanty as his whole family was among the thousands of Japanese-Americans who were sent to WWII internment camps. US-born Ray remained a model citizen despite unprovoked abuse as by military camp guard Larry Scholz, even prodding fellow Japanese to cooperate and send their boys to the army, semi-forced to denounce rebel Shinji Nakamura. Ray turned only after the military showed no respect even for both their sons, who fell heroically in action, including his artistically gifted, gentle Billy, who only went into service because he hated Ray's affair with the boy's atypically sympathetic camp drawing teacher Mary Anne Clayton. Ray patched up his marriage learning his wife Evelyn was pregnant. Even Billy's youth buddy and platoon CO Eugene 'Skip' Robertson turned against all Japanese by the time the families has moved to Philadelphia, where Quakers offered them a rare warm welcome. Yet death struck unintentionally.—KGF Vissers
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