- home
- article
- Japan court acquits longest-serving death row inmate 56 years after murder conviction
Japan court acquits longest-serving death row inmate 56 years after murder conviction
ai generated text
Iwao Hakamada, an 88-year-old former professional boxer, was sentenced to death in 1968 for the murder of his boss, his wife, and their two teenage children. He spent 46 years on death row until new evidence emerged and a retrial was ordered in 2014. The retrial was held due to suspicions that investigators may have planted evidence. During the retrial, Hakamada's lawyers argued that new information proved his innocence, while prosecutors claimed there was enough evidence to confirm his guilt. This case has brought global scrutiny to the criminal justice system in Japan, which is one of the few major industrialized democracies that still retains capital punishment.
For so long we have fought a battle that has felt endless. But this time, I believe it will be settled.
It is unjust to detain the defendant further, as the possibility of his innocence has become clear to a respectable degree.
The Japanese judicial system, especially at that time, was a system that allowed investigative agencies to take advantage of their surreptitious nature to commit illegal or investigative crimes.
We are overjoyed by the court's decision to exonerate Iwao Hakamada.
Once you think you can't win, there is no path to victory.
His case is a painful reminder of how Japan's criminal justice system must change.
We have not even discussed the trial with Iwao because of his inability to recognize reality.
Iwao began to pay attention to the cats, worry about them, and take care of them, which was a big change.
For so long, we have fought a battle that has felt endless.
Sometimes he smiles happily, but that's when he's in his delusion.
sources
- 1.The Times of India
- 2.The Washington Post
- 3.ABC News (Australia)
- 4.Al Jazeera
- 5.Le Monde
- 6.France 24
- 7.BBC
- 8.CTV News
- 9.The Guardian
- 10.Agence France-Presse
- 11.CNN
- 12.Kyodo News Agency
perspectives
countries
organizations
- 1.Amnesty International
- 2.Shizuoka District Court
- 3.Human Rights Watch
- 4.Tokyo High Court
- 5.Death Penalty Information
- 6.Group of 7 nations
- 7.YouTube
persons
- 1.Iwao Hakamada
- 2.Koshi Kunii
- 3.Hideko Hakamada
- 4.Boram Jang
- 5.Hideyo Ogawa
- 6.Teppei Kasai
- 7.Atsushi Zukeran
- 8.Chiara Sangiorgio
- 9.Felicia Gayle
- 10.Fumio Hashiguchi
- 11.Hiroaki Murayama
- 12.Hiroshi Ichikawa