Japan’s prosecutors again seek death penalty for ex-boxer, 88, over 1968 murder saga

However, prosecutors argued at the retrial in Shizuoka, south of Tokyo, that Hakamada’s guilt could be proven “beyond reasonable doubt”, the Asahi newspaper daily said.

Defence lawyers are seeking an acquittal for Hakamada, whose case has become a famous saga in Japan.

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Japanese man who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate to hear fate in 58-year-old case

Japanese man who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate to hear fate in 58-year-old case

“I believe Iwao is innocent,” his sister Hideko Hakamada, 91, said on Wednesday.

Prosecutors are only seeking the death penalty “as a matter of course” and “the defence team’s rebuttal was so strong that I’m sure we’ll be able to win”, she told reporters.

The retrial began last year and the court is due to announce the verdict in late September.

Japan is the only major industrialised democracy other than the United States to retain capital punishment, which has broad public support.

Hakamada’s supporters say his decades of detention, mostly in solitary confinement with the ever-present threat of execution, took a heavy toll on his mental health.

He said in a 2018 interview with AFP that he felt he was “fighting a bout every day”.

Hideko Hakamada (front left), elder sister of former professional boxer Iwao Hakamada who was considered the world’s longest-serving death row inmate, attends her brother’s retrial hearing in the city of Shizuoka on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

Hakamada initially denied having robbed and murdered his boss, the man’s wife and their two teenage children, but then confessed, following what he later described as a brutal police interrogation that included beatings.

His attempts to retract his confession were in vain and his original verdict was confirmed by the Supreme Court in 1980.

But Hakamada continued to maintain his innocence. His sister Hideko has tirelessly pleaded for a review of the case.

A district court in Shizuoka granted a retrial in 2014 after a prolonged battle and issued a stay for Hakamada’s incarceration and the death penalty.

Tokyo’s High Court overturned the lower court ruling four years later.

The legal back-and-forth was not over. In 2020, the Supreme Court ruled that the High Court must reconsider its decision and the High Court ordered a retrial last year.

Hakamada’s plight has attracted public sympathy, with even national lawmakers forming a special group to offer their support.

Iwao Hakamada (left) and his sister Hideko leave a press conference in Tokyo in 2019. Japanese prosecutors on Wednesday sought the death penalty in a retrial of Hakamada. Photo: AFP

Hideko took the central role in her sickly brother’s defence during the retrial.

One key piece of evidence used to convict Hakamada was a set of bloodstained clothes that emerged more than a year after the crime.

Supporters say the clothes did not fit him and the bloodstains were too vivid given the time that had elapsed.

As of December, there were 107 prisoners on death row in Japan, where the sentences are always carried out by hanging.

Inmates are often informed of their impending death at the last minute, typically in the early morning just a few hours beforehand.

Some “may be given no warning at all,” Amnesty International said in a report.

Just nine per cent of Japanese people were in favour of abolishing the death penalty in a 2019 government survey.

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