Answer:
Executive Order 9066 was issued in February, 1942, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The order allowed the Secretary of War to designate certain areas as military zones. FDR's order cleared the way for relocating tens of thousands of Japanese Americans into to internment camps. The civil liberties of those persons were taken away by Executive Order 9066. Rounding up Japanese Americans and confining them in camps, without any due process, was later recognized as an unconstitutional action.
Further explanation:
As for the effect of Executive Order 9066 on civil liberties, in 1976, President Gerald Ford issued a strong statement about that. He rescinded the old executive order, which was still on the books. In his proclamation, President Ford said: