The Prague Post - Family fights for death-row retrial under Japan's 'snail-paced' system

EUR -
AED 4.313975
AFN 80.547545
ALL 97.434934
AMD 449.73046
ANG 2.102303
AOA 1077.171324
ARS 1492.791377
AUD 1.764031
AWG 2.116752
AZN 2.0016
BAM 1.955498
BBD 2.367734
BDT 143.357833
BGN 1.958424
BHD 0.442032
BIF 3495.35953
BMD 1.174668
BND 1.502568
BOB 8.102747
BRL 6.532923
BSD 1.172619
BTN 101.493307
BWP 15.744565
BYN 3.837607
BYR 23023.499991
BZD 2.355536
CAD 1.60865
CDF 3393.617337
CHF 0.926897
CLF 0.028411
CLP 1114.547663
CNY 8.403625
CNH 8.419418
COP 4775.561579
CRC 592.408399
CUC 1.174668
CUP 31.128712
CVE 110.247953
CZK 24.57048
DJF 208.817712
DKK 7.463496
DOP 71.148999
DZD 152.157473
EGP 57.684081
ERN 17.620026
ETB 163.190867
FJD 2.634488
FKP 0.873886
GBP 0.867394
GEL 3.18381
GGP 0.873886
GHS 12.254105
GIP 0.873886
GMD 84.57654
GNF 10176.42647
GTQ 9.000608
GYD 245.342064
HKD 9.220682
HNL 30.706252
HRK 7.537617
HTG 153.886205
HUF 396.850416
IDR 19217.339549
ILS 3.939608
IMP 0.873886
INR 101.616219
IQD 1536.162471
IRR 49468.226083
ISK 142.276286
JEP 0.873886
JMD 187.051077
JOD 0.832886
JPY 173.446879
KES 151.506573
KGS 102.553011
KHR 4697.273684
KMF 491.603168
KPW 1057.201531
KRW 1624.959912
KWD 0.358662
KYD 0.977249
KZT 639.001194
LAK 25279.09122
LBP 105069.953557
LKR 353.815291
LRD 235.113646
LSL 20.812382
LTL 3.468491
LVL 0.710546
LYD 6.330021
MAD 10.545169
MDL 19.72395
MGA 5179.199166
MKD 61.550483
MMK 2466.137469
MNT 4214.430294
MOP 9.481134
MRU 46.800763
MUR 53.342135
MVR 18.094285
MWK 2033.385588
MXN 21.791567
MYR 4.958867
MZN 75.131746
NAD 20.812382
NGN 1799.510154
NIO 43.153327
NOK 11.939518
NPR 162.388891
NZD 1.952022
OMR 0.45182
PAB 1.172619
PEN 4.153358
PGK 4.860248
PHP 67.132737
PKR 332.301418
PLN 4.249143
PYG 8783.641829
QAR 4.274539
RON 5.067641
RSD 117.131888
RUB 93.035614
RWF 1695.037905
SAR 4.407246
SBD 9.732239
SCR 16.61843
SDG 705.392672
SEK 11.182226
SGD 1.503815
SHP 0.923105
SLE 26.959075
SLL 24632.212956
SOS 670.196371
SRD 43.067458
STD 24313.263549
STN 24.496212
SVC 10.260413
SYP 15272.789827
SZL 20.804783
THB 38.024448
TJS 11.198868
TMT 4.123086
TND 3.423471
TOP 2.751195
TRY 47.660213
TTD 7.973767
TWD 34.632517
TZS 3004.935362
UAH 49.031718
UGX 4204.349902
USD 1.174668
UYU 46.972737
UZS 14837.70572
VES 141.281363
VND 30711.704452
VUV 139.313216
WST 3.217402
XAF 655.855588
XAG 0.030777
XAU 0.000352
XCD 3.1746
XCG 2.113373
XDR 0.815674
XOF 655.855588
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.036769
ZAR 20.886665
ZMK 10573.429114
ZMW 27.351771
ZWL 378.242735
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • RBGPF

    -1.1200

    73.88

    -1.52%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.89

    +0.17%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    10.58

    +0.66%

  • NGG

    -0.0800

    72.15

    -0.11%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    37.97

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0550

    22.485

    +0.24%

  • BP

    0.0700

    32.2

    +0.22%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    63.1

    -1.16%

  • AZN

    -1.0200

    72.66

    -1.4%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    52.73

    -1.86%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    52.25

    -0.71%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    11.43

    -0.79%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    24.2

    -0.95%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    13.2

    -0.3%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.09

    -0.46%

  • BCC

    1.7100

    88.14

    +1.94%

Family fights for death-row retrial under Japan's 'snail-paced' system
Family fights for death-row retrial under Japan's 'snail-paced' system / Photo: Philip FONG - AFP

Family fights for death-row retrial under Japan's 'snail-paced' system

Since his teenage years, Koji Hayashi has dreaded one thing: his stubborn, once-vivacious mother being hanged for murder after failing to win her long campaign for a retrial.

Text size:

Left almost unchanged for a century, Japan's current retrial system is often labelled the "Unopenable Door" because the chances of being granted a legal do-over are so slim.

But hopes have grown of a change since a court last year overturned the wrongful conviction of the world's longest-serving death row prisoner Iwao Hakamada, whose case took 42 years to be reopened.

The government is asking legal experts to study the system, and some hope they will recommend revising the arduous retrial process to better safeguard the interests of convicts like Hakamada.

Masumi Hayashi, 63, is notorious in Japan for a crime she swears she didn't commit -- killing four people by putting arsenic into a pot of curry at a summer festival in 1998.

Koji isn't entirely convinced his mother is innocent, but "I think there's a good chance", he told AFP.

"All I want is the truth, and a retrial is the only way to get it," the 37-year-old truck driver said.

Since the Supreme Court upheld her death sentence in 2009 Masumi has applied for retrial several times, with her latest bid seeking to discredit a forensic analysis.

"The thought of a noose around my mum's neck, even as she insists on her innocence, terrifies me so much my hands shake," Koji said at his minimal-style apartment in western Japan's Wakayama region.

"But when I saw how long it took Hakamada to be exonerated, I accepted this is the kind of fight I'm up against. I will bury my emotions, and deal with it."

- 'Lagging behind' -

Wakayama's prosecutor's office declined to discuss Masumi's case when contacted by AFP.

Evidence against her is mostly circumstantial, and the motive remains unexplained for what the Supreme Court described as indiscriminate killings.

Masumi has however admitted to a history of conspiring with her husband to use arsenic to orchestrate insurance fraud -- testament, judges said, to her "deep-seated criminality".

Koji, whose first name is a pseudonym, sometimes imagines what life could have been: "getting married, having kids and building a house, you know, ordinary happiness."

In reality, being Masumi's son has entailed a lifetime of discrimination, from an annulled engagement to online messages wishing him dead and his older sister's suicide four years ago.

Only five retrials have been granted in Japan's post-war history for death row prisoners, all resulting in exoneration.

The latest was for 89-year-old Hakamada, who in September was acquitted of a quadruple 1966 murder, following decades in solitary confinement.

Hakamada's lawyers first sought his retrial in 1981 but a back-and-forth of legal appeals meant it did not materialise until 2023.

Japan is "significantly lagging behind the world" in ensuring swift retrials, said former judge Hiroaki Murayama -- who himself ordered Hakamada's landmark retrial.

Just one percent of around 1,150 retrial applications from all convicts, processed in Japan between 2017 and 2021, won approval.

- 99.9 percent conviction rate -

Judges and defence lawyers are denied access to a trove of prosecutor-held evidence, including material that could potentially prove someone innocent, Murayama told AFP.

And legal loopholes mean retrial applications can be ignored with impunity for years in a system "too snail-paced" to protect against judicial errors, he added.

Steps taken in other countries against wrongful convictions include banning prosecutors from appealing retrial orders and weakening their monopoly on evidence.

But Japan's 99.9 percent conviction rate -- conveying rock-solid trust to prosecutors -- leaves little room for guilty verdicts to be questioned.

Prosecutors say easier access to their evidence raises privacy concerns, and Tokyo prosecutor Kaori Miyazaki warned last year against giving the impression "that trials can be casually redone even after rulings are finalised".

"That would cause a major loss of trust in our criminal judiciary," she told a justice ministry panel.

Former prisoner Kazuo Ishikawa died this month aged 86 after spending over 30 years seeking a retrial for the 1963 murder of a schoolgirl.

That prospect looms over the Hayashi family, including Masumi's 79-year-old husband, Kenji.

"It's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle" but giving up their joint retrial fight "would crush my son", he said.

"I'm nearly 80 though -– my body is reaching its limit," said Kenji, who uses a wheelchair after a brain haemorrhage.

Koji, the son, believes Japan is better off without capital punishment.

But if a retrial found Masumi guilty, he would eventually "have to accept" that she must be executed.

Meanwhile Masumi lives in a solitary cell only three tatami mats wide.

"You are my treasure," she told her son in a recent letter.

"Thanks to you, I have survived my 26 years of life here," she wrote. "Your smile is the best."

B.Hornik--TPP