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David T. Johnson, "Japan’s Secretive Death Penalty Policy: Contours, Origins, Justifications, and Meanings" Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal, vol. 7(2006) pp. 62-124 Archived 27 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine; Death Penalty Database - Japan Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Academic research database on the laws ...
1 31 Akira Tsuda 59 M Hiroshima: Single murder 1 32 Masashi Satou 62 M 10 September 1999 Tokyo Multiple murders* 1 Takao Jinnouchi: 33 Katsutoshi Takada 61 M Sendai Multiple murders* 1 34 Tetsuyuki Morikawa: 69 M Fukuoka Multiple murders* 2 35 Teruo Ono 62 M 17 December 1999 Fukuoka Multiple murders* 1 Hideo Usui: 36 Kazuo Sagawa 48 M Tokyo
The death penalty is permissible when aggravating circumstances are decided to be proven by a nine-person panel of six jurors and three professional judges. [1] The list of death penalty-permissible aggravating circumstances are if the murder was committed: [2] [3] [4] Along with one or more other murders [2] [3] With torture of the victim [2] [3]
1 November 2023 [38] five unnamed convicts murder: firing squad: A South Africa: 14 November 1989 [4] Solomon Ngobeni: murder: hanging: D South Sudan: 7 January 2022 [39] Babu Emmanuel Lokiri triple murder hanging: D Sudan: 9 February 2021 [40] Eliza Aban Othu murder: hanging: C Tanzania: October 1994 [4] 7 unnamed men, 1 unnamed woman A Togo ...
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Japanese anti–death penalty activists ... (11 C, 10 P) P. Prisoners sentenced to death by Japan (1 C, 31 P)
The judge overseeing Bryan Kohberger's murder case has ruled the death penalty will remain on the table as the case moves forward, rejecting a request from Kohberger's defense attorneys. In June ...
[3] [4] Justin McCurry of The Guardian described the attack as one of the worst crimes committed on Japanese soil in modern history. [2] Uematsu was sentenced to death on 16 March 2020, after the prosecution sought the maximum penalty for murder in his trial; as of July 2022, he was on death row awaiting execution. [5]
Of all present European countries, San Marino, Portugal and the Netherlands were the first to abolish capital punishment; Romania banned it even earlier in 1864, but it was much later reintroduced from 1936 to 1990 during the dictatorial and communist eras; in Italy the nationwide ban on the death penalty dates from 1889 (capital punishment had ...