Los Angeles Times

Trailblaze­r for civil rights dies

Lawyer fought for civil rights, criminal justice reform

- By Teresa Watanabe

Rose Matsui Ochi helped win redress for wartime incarcerat­ion of Japanese Americans.

Rose Matsui Ochi, a trailblazi­ng Los Angeles attorney who tapped farf lung political networks from City Hall to Congress in her fierce advocacy of civil rights, criminal justice reform and Japanese American causes, has died at 81.

Ochi died Dec. 13 at a hospital after being diagnosed with a second bout of COVID- 19, which exacerbate­d existing health problems, her husband, Thomas Ochi, said.

Ochi broke barriers as the f irst Asian American woman to serve as a Los Angeles Police Commission member and as an assistant U. S. attorney general. She advised L. A. Mayors Tom Bradley and James Hahn on criminal justice, served on President Carter’s Select Commission on Immigratio­n and Refugee Policy and worked with President Clinton on drug policy and race relations.

But she particular­ly cherished her contributi­ons to the successful campaigns to win recognitio­n and redress for the mass incarcerat­ion of 120,000 people of Japanese descent during World War II — including her and her family, who were uprooted from their Boyle Heights home and imprisoned at the Rohwer detention camp in Arkansas after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941.

She would play pivotal roles in helping the community win a federal apology and monetary payments to camp survivors in 1988 and secure approval of the Manzanar camp in the Owens Valley as a national historic site in 1992.

Ochi was just 3 years old when she was incarcerat­ed, but it fired her lifelong commitment to f ight for the underdog, said William T.

Fujioka, a close friend and former Los Angeles County chief executive. “The injustice of the relocation burned something into her soul,” he said.

In a 2014 interview, Ochi recalled how racism shaped her. During a yearlong stay in Nevada after the war, she was made to wash her mouth out with soap by a teacher in front of the class for speaking Japanese, and soldiers threw snowballs and directed racial epithets at her, she said.

“Somehow I learned that I’m not a real American. I’m an outsider,” Ochi said in the interview with the UCLA Library Center for Oral History Research. “And instead of feeling like you’re ostracized, I just felt very strong, and I think over the years I was allowed to take on unpopular causes or stand up for people that are being beaten up ... because I was an outsider, and it’s something that I embrace and I like.”

Ochi was born Dec. 15, 1938, in East Los Angeles, one of four children to Yoshiaki and Mutsuko Matsui. Her father was a businessma­n and her mother a homemaker and later seamstress. Ochi described herself as a gregarious tomboy who loved sports and never took no for an answer.

She cajoled her father to set aside his chauvinist­ic views about gender roles and teach her the Japanese martial art of kendo — which she said helped her develop the courage to endure getting hit and face her own fears. She dismissed her high school counselor’s remarks that she wasn’t smart enough for college but would be a good secretary.

“Excuse me? Me, take orders? You’ve got to be kidding,” she said in her UCLA interview.

When an Inyo County supervisor declared that the Manzanar project would proceed only “over my dead body,” Ochi drove to the next meeting and persuaded him to go along with the plan by extolling the tourism and economic benefits it would bring to the area, said Bruce Embrey, whose mother, Sue Kunitomi Embrey, was a founder of the Manzanar Committee and brought Ochi on as their pro bono attorney.

“Rose, being the force of nature she was, was instrument­al in winning over many in the Owens Valley to understand the benefits to have a national park,” he said.

After the war, the family returned to polyglot East L. A., where they forged friendship­s beyond the insular Japanese community with Mexicans, Jews, Italians, Scots, Armenians, Russians, Africans. That upbringing would shape Ochi’s ability to develop alliances across races, cultures and politics, said Darlene Kuba, who said she regarded Ochi as a second mother and role model who mentored her when she was a young staff member in then- L. A. City Councilman Gilbert Lindsay’s office.

Ochi attended Roosevelt High School, graduated from UCLA in 1959 and taught at various schools, including her alma mater, Stevenson Junior High in East L. A., before earning a graduate degree in education at Cal State Los Angeles in 1967. But Ochi, inspired by the 1968 East L. A. walkouts by Latino students demanding equal education, decided that law would be a better path to f ight for social change.

In 1972, she earned a law degree from Loyola Law School, where she met a key mentor: Terry J. Hatter Jr., then a law professor who would bring her into the USC Western Center on Law and Poverty and later Bradley’s Criminal Justice Planning Office.

At the Western Center, Ochi served as co- counsel on a landmark 1970s case, Serrano vs. Priest, which forced California to adopt a more equitable education funding system. Hatter recommende­d that Ochi replace him as director of the mayor’s criminal justice office when he moved on in 1975. Now a senior judge in the U. S. Central District Court, Hatter said he was impressed by Ochi’s outstandin­g legal mind, work ethic and ability to get along with others.

“I saw her as a rising star,” he said, “I could see that in her as a first- year law student.”

During two decades in the criminal justice office, Ochi helped develop programs to reduce gang violence by supplement­ing law enforcemen­t with neighborho­od organizati­ons to help redirect at- risk youths. The office also worked on community policing, drug abatement, domestic violence and diversifyi­ng the Los Angeles Police Department’s officer ranks.

In 1995, Ochi joined the Clinton administra­tion to work on drug enforcemen­t, then two years later was named an assistant attorney general to head the Department of Justice’s community relations service office, which focused on race relations. After returning to Los Angeles in 2001, she was appointed to the Police Commission by Hahn and a year later became executive director of the California Forensic Science Institute at Cal State L. A.

Billionair­e developer Rick Caruso, who served with Ochi on the Police Commission, said she knew the finest details about policing and asked the tough questions. “She was a true leader when it comes to police reform,” he said.

Ochi also pushed for immigratio­n reform, including amnesty for those in the United States illegally, as a 1979 Carter appointee to the president’s commission on the issue. In addition, Ochi tried her hand at electoral politics but failed in both a 1982 bid for a U. S. congressio­nal seat and a 1989 campaign for a Los Angeles Community College District trustee post.

Ochi’s many friends say her long resume of accomplish­ments and awards does not capture her warmth, generosity, loyalty and funloving spirit.

Ron Wakabayash­i, who worked with Ochi in the Department of Justice, said she would quietly pay tuition and buy clothes for needy students, remember birthdays and seek out young people to mentor. An online memorial page is f illed with tributes from Hahn, LAPD Chief Michel Moore, L. A. Community College District trustee Mike Eng, U. S. Rep. Judy Chu ( D- Monterey Park) and former L. A. County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley.

“Rose Ochi paved the way for people like me,” Chu wrote. “There were so few Asian American women in leadership positions as I was growing that I never even dreamed that I could be an elected official, let alone a Congressme­mber. But Rose was so bold that she was an inspiratio­n to me.”

In her oral history interview, Ochi shared a key message she always tried to convey: “Do not let anyone define who you are. No. Or limit your aspiration­s. Never.”

 ?? Clarence Williams Los Angeles Times ?? ‘ FORCE OF NATURE’
Rose Ochi was the f irst Asian American woman to serve on the Los Angeles Police Commission.
Clarence Williams Los Angeles Times ‘ FORCE OF NATURE’ Rose Ochi was the f irst Asian American woman to serve on the Los Angeles Police Commission.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? SHAPED BY RACISM
Ochi broke down in 2012 when she told the L. A. County Board of Supervisor­s about her time in an incarcerat­ion camp after the Pearl Harbor attack.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times SHAPED BY RACISM Ochi broke down in 2012 when she told the L. A. County Board of Supervisor­s about her time in an incarcerat­ion camp after the Pearl Harbor attack.

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