All charges dropped against man accused of helping alleged burglars during killing of Oakland cop Tuan Le

Colleen Shalby | Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES — Months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, a Japanese American fishing community on San Pedro’s Terminal Island was given 48 hours to pack its belongings before it was forced into incarceration camps throughout the West. After the evacuation, most of its village was razed.

But for more than 80 years, two buildings have been left standing. Now, the original residents, their families and supporters have mobilized to protect the last vestiges of their history on Tuna Street.

Tim Yamamoto’s grandfather leased one of the buildings — a grocery store that fed the fishermen and cannery workers responsible for stocking places such as StarKist Tuna and Van Camp Seafood. The second building next door was a dry goods shop. Both are owned by the Port of Los Angeles.

When Yamamoto, 66, learned that the connected buildings may be demolished, he was compelled to take action in honor of his late parents, who grew up on Terminal Island and married at one of the incarceration camps.

“Those buildings show that there was something here. If they are wiped out, then any trace of the Terminal Island history is gone,” he said. “I just want to do something to keep some kind of history alive.”

Members of the Terminal Islanders club — a group of nearly 200 people that Yamamoto belongs to — learned of possible plans for the buildings when a local San Pedro resident spotted workers inspecting the area. Yamamoto and others rallied to make their case to the harbor commissioners to save the site. While some port leaders were sympathetic to the cause, Terminal Islanders members have said the group has not yet received any specific information about the port’s intentions.

The Port told The Times that there are currently no formal plans or timeline to change the buildings, but that there have been “internal staff discussions about the long-term future of the buildings, including the possibility of demolition.”

“Any changes to the site would go thorough a formal and public process, including input from the public and a vote by the Los Angeles Harbor Commission. Input from the Terminal Islanders group would be critical to any process involving change at the site,” Port of Los Angeles spokesperson Phillip Sanfield said.

Harbor Commission President Lucille Roybal-Allard, L.A. Councilman Tim McOsker and port leaders plan to visit the buildings during the first week of September, Sanfield said, before the port arranges a meeting with Terminal Islanders representatives.

“Our top priority on this issue [is] to gather input and ideas directly from the Terminal Islanders group for the future of the site,” Sanfield said.

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