Harsh Judgment: Japan’s Criminal Justice System

At the Mercy of the System: Criminal Justice and Capital Punishment in Japan

Society

Public support for capital punishment remains high even while Japan’s criminal justice system comes under increasing scrutiny for practices, like long-term detention of suspects, that critics say violate basic human rights. Two legal experts examine core challenges to the way Japan metes out justice.

Issues with the Death Penalty

INTERVIEWER  What is the current state of capital punishment in Japan?

MURAI  The death penalty has broad public support, with around 80 percent of citizens backing the practice. However, I would say that much of this approval is passive and doesn’t reflect a deep understanding of the system.

One incident that should give people pause is the Iizuka case. Kuma Michitoshi was arrested for the 1992 abduction and murder of two elementary school girls in the city of Iizuka in Fukuoka Prefecture. He maintained his innocence throughout his trial, but was found guilty based on circumstantial evidence and DNA testing and was sentenced to death. He appealed the ruling without success and was executed in 2008. Kuma’s widow filed for a retrial in 2009 after a ruling in another high-profile case threw the accuracy of the DNA and blood tests used to convict Kuma into question, but Fukuoka courts have repeatedly rejected the request. She has since appealed to the Supreme Court and a decision is pending.

If a retrial exonerates Kuma, the state will have blood on its hands. There really is no place in the criminal justice system for a punishment with such irrevocable consequences if a person is wrongly convicted.

Abolishing capital punishment would certainly deter the small number of offenders who commit heinous crimes with the intent of receiving the death penalty. The state would be freed from helping such people carry out their suicidal wishes, and there would be no victims or grieving families.

Murai Toshikuni (left) and Muraoka Keiichi.
Murai Toshikuni (left) and Muraoka Keiichi.

A Cavalier Approach to Capital Punishment

MURAOKA Japan has come under scrutiny as one of the few advanced nations that retains capital punishment. A number of foreign NGOs dedicated to abolishing the death penalty plan to run a campaign in Japan in 2020, the same year Tokyo will host the Olympic and Paralympic Games, to pressure the government to end the practice. Their thinking is that if Japan were to stop executions, it would persuade other countries with capital punishment to do the same.

With such broad public support for the death penalty, though, the groups will be swimming against the tide. However, there is no denying that Japan needs to have a conversation about capital punishment, and legal organizations like the Japan Federation of Bar Associations must step forward and lead public education efforts.

MURAI  In the United States, trials where the death sentence is being sought are typically thorough affairs. Prosecutors spend an immense amount of time and money collecting evidence and refining their case as the burden of proof, and consequences, are far greater than in other criminal trials. At the same time, there are measures in place that assure the defense an equal say and prevent the accused from being railroaded. In short, the system provides sufficient human and financial resources to the defense side as well.

By comparison, Japan’s legal system is overly blithe about capital punishment. Authorities need to bolster procedures on every level to ensure that the process is just and that innocent people aren’t sent to the gallows. This includes assuring that defense lawyers in capital punishment trials are adequately compensated for their work, instead of relying on attorneys who are willing to argue cases for free or very little pay.

(Originally published in Japanese based on an interview by Takahashi Yuki of Power News. Interview photos by Igasaki Shinobu. Banner photo: Nepalese citizen Govinda Prasad Mainali waves from the balcony of his house in June 2012 after returning home following 15 years in prison in Japan for murder. He was cleared of the crime after DNA evidence presented at his retrial proved he was not the culprit. © Jiji.)

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