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State Management of Japanese Canadian Property
During the process of internment, it was assured by federal officials that property would be held for protective measures only. However, as early as April 1942, as Japanese Canadians were being actively interned, Ian Alistair Mackenzie began planning with Thomas Crerar and Gordan Murchison for the use of Japanese Canadian land for veteran settlement under the upcoming Veteran’s Land Act program. Property appraisal was undertaken by the Soldier Settlement Board which valued the farms at less than half their actual market values. Order 5523 passed in June 1942 threatened jail time and $1000 fine for individuals attempting to make private arrangements for their farms.

Storage and Looting
In April 1942, the Office of the Custodian allowed Japanese Canadians to document the value of their property and possessions using registration forms prior to their displacement. However, insufficient warnings of displacement (sometimes as little 24 hours in advance) as well as fear of theft lead many individuals to abandon their homes or burn and bury their possessions. Vacated Japanese Canadian communities were commonly vandalized and looted. An official from the town of Steveston reported that “[a]lmost every building formerly owned by Japanese…has been entered at one time or another”. In Maple Ridge and  Pitt Meadows, officials described that “…it appears to be just the love of destruction which has made the thieves go through the buildings[.]”. The Marpole-Richmond Review reported that despite attempts to remove valuable items from the Steveston Buddhist Temple, looting had resulted in “…numbers of cans in which have been deposited the white ashes of cremated former citizens of Steveston, have had their seals broken and their contents scattered over the floor…”.

As a result, officials sought to warehouse many of the belongings of Japanese Canadians. However, poor conditions in these facilities and ongoing looting led to the eventual loss of untold amounts of movable property. The Office of the Custodian also struggled with a significant administrative task: multiple people were appointed to oversee and pinpoint how much property each Japanese Canadian had, the condition it was in, the value it held, as well as to establish title, maintain insurance claims, pay miscellaneous expenses and translate and type all communication with Japanese Canadian property owners. Before the Office of the Custodian could come up with a system for organizing and maintaining the property, creditors, Japanese Canadians, other state officials, and members of the general public were all inquiring about property and pressuring the Custodian for answers.

The Role of Glenn Willoughby McPherson
Glenn Willoughby McPherson was a young bureaucrat who established and directed the Vancouver office of the Custodian during the time of the forced property sales. As was common in his time, he held racial bias and believed skin colour determined loyalty, he once said "the only way the Yellow Race can obtain their place in the Sun is by winning the war". In addition to acting as director of the office of Custodian in Vancouver, McPherson acted as an intelligence agent for the British government. No Canadian would have trusted him with their property. McPherson’s role as a British agent was to send letters to update them on what was occurring in British Columbia. In these letters, he expressed prejudice against Japanese Canadians and his view that the RCMP was not doing enough to control them: "police intelligence is greatly understaffed and...the Japanese have developed a high inferiority complex" .Historians have speculated that he was the author of a 161-page document that was sent anonymously to the RCMP in June 1942. It identified suspects of Japanese heritage who were alleged to be a threat to the community. The document specified three different levels of danger: The document also claimed that Japanese Sex workers were spies for the Japanese government. This role and McPherson’s personal views were concealed from Japanese Canadians, while he orchestrated the sale of their property. Starting in September 1942, after most Japanese Canadians had been uprooted from coastal British Columbia, McPherson turned his attention to the forced sale of remaining Japanese Canadian-owned property.
 * CLASS A: identified 5 suspects who were to be immediately arrested and questioned
 * CLASS B: identified 173 suspects as dangerous
 * CLASS C: identified 74 suspects who were deemed as safety issues for the community

The Decision to Sell
On the 11th of January, 1943 a meeting of cabinet ministers (attended by Ian Alistair Mackenzie, Norman McLarty, Thomas Crerar and Humphrey Mitchell) made the decision to permit the sale of Japanese Canadian owned property, which had been previously seized. It was argued that it would be in the Japanese Canadian owners' best interest to sell because the value of their properties would go down over time.

Glenn McPherson was asked to write the resulting order in council (469), which was passed into law on January 19, 1943. The order gave McPherson the right to begin organizing the sale of all Japanese Canadian owned property. This signified a shift away from prior efforts to preserve Japanese Canadians’ belongings. July 1943 brought mass forced sale of real estate while well-attended weekly auctions in Vancouver were used from September 1943 to 1947 to sell chattels.

McPherson and the team working with the Custodian of Enemy Property started selling belongings deemed as “perishable”. Examples of these items would be grocery stock or other things that would deteriorate quickly. All of these items were sold without consent. Soon, the Custodian began claiming that items like fishing boats and automobiles were to be classified as perishable as well. Glenn McPherson rationalized this by saying that they were losing value over time and that the government couldn’t afford to maintain them. Not soon after, in the later months of 1942, McPherson began to argue that all Japanese Canadian owned property was perishable. Only property loosely defined by the Custodian of Enemy Property as having “sentimental value and religious nature” would be preserved throughout the auctions until 1949.

Unaware Japanese Canadians received receipts for a small fraction of the value that they saw in their property. The final auctions in 1947 left fragments of Japanese Canadian’s materials including only photograph albums, kotos, family shrines, and any items that would not sell in auction. These belongings could rarely be reunited with their owners.