Forced Confessions and the Japanese Justice System

Filed under: Trans-Pacific Radio, Shasetsu - Op/Ed
Posted by Christopher Pellegrini at 12:01 am on Sunday, March 11, 2007

It seems that the media has uncovered more evidence of how if someone gets arrested in Japan, they could be in big trouble. This quote from the Mainichi shows that a taxi driver spent more than two years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit:

The man was handed a three-year prison term in November 2002 after pleading guilty to the charges during his trial. He was released on parole in January 2005 after being jailed for two years and one month. However, police subsequently learned that another man under arrest is responsible for the rape and other attempted rape cases.

A quick note: judging by the write-up in The Economist, the Mainichi didn’t get all of its facts straight. The man actually pleaded not guilty and asserted his innocence throughout the trial. He had a credible alibi, and was able to demonstrate how he couldn’t possibly have committed the crime. Unfortunately, as is routinely the case in Japan, he was convicted based on the confession he was forced into signing after three days of intense interrogation.

The dots are not difficult to connect here–the authorities made a public apology when they figured out they were wrong, but have no idea where the freed “rapist” has gone. By simple logical extrapolation one quickly realizes that the cops might not have any idea where many convicted rapists (and murderers) are at the moment. Of course, it might not be that far-fetched to assume that some of those guys are innocent too, so it’s probably not something to get all worked up about.

Question 1: Do police force suspects to confess in Japan?

There are a lot of percentages floating around these days. The 99.9% conviction rate and an 86.6% rate of ‘full confession by the accused’ are two such statistics that regularly appear in writing related to this topic. While confessions are sought by authorities in most countries when it comes to criminal cases, no other country in the industrialized world can boast confession rates anywhere near Japan’s.

Confessions are important partly because they are believed to be the first step on the road to rehabilitation in the eyes of the court and society as a whole. Additionally, most prosecutors won’t touch a case unless they are guaranteed to win. Confessions, voluntary or forced, are an integral part of that certainty of conviction (note: prosecutors, as in the infamous Sayama case, are often not required to disclose evidence).

There also happens to be a woeful lack of crime scene investigative skills/determination on the part of police in Japan. Confessions, from the perspective of police, prosecutors, and the court, are nice because they immediately make up for the fact that the names of witnesses were not noted, pictures and statements were not taken, and blood samples were forgotten. Whether this inattention to detail is a result of the dependence on confessions, or, conversely, the confessions are necessitated by a lack of professional astuteness on the part of the police force, is a bit like getting involved in an argument about whether the chicken or the egg came first.

Of course, as can be seen on TV, there are occasions when the police are forced to do a more comprehensive job of collecting evidence and protecting crime scenes. Look closely though, and one notices a pattern: the instances when police are seen spending extended periods of time jotting things on clipboards are usually either when something big has been broken, someone really famous or very young was involved, or the media has once again (miraculously) arrived at the same time as investigators.

In agreement with the allegations just leveled, the 1991 White Paper on Police called for:

the establishment of a ‘Police With Crime Investigation Capabilities’. This would involve, amongst other things, the introduction of ’scientific knowhow’ into investigative activities, the improvement of investigative skills, and the development of ‘high-calibre’ investigators.

This “culture of confession” that is at the heart of the Japanese justice system goes a long way in negating the value of thorough investigation, so actual progress on the recommendations made internally in 1991 has been difficult to identify.

Wouldn’t it therefore make sense not to confess while being interrogated? If the police don’t have much (or any) evidence, or have thrown some of it out (as is the case with the evidence from the recent murder and dismemberment involving the Muto siblings), then wouldn’t it be better to just keep quiet during interrogations?

It would appear that the system has already thought of that one and moved decisively to safeguard against it. The ace up the authorities’ collective sleeve is daiyo kangoku. Daiyo kangoku can be translated as ’substitute prison’ in English, and in practice it is a very effective confession generator.

These substitute prisons are usually located in koban (police boxes), and they are perhaps the best display of the incredible autonomy from outside oversight, both political and operational, that is enjoyed by the police in Japan. The daiyo kangoku system was put into place in 1908 in response to a shortage of prison space. That shortage, needless to say, no longer exists.

Police, under pressure to improve crime clearance rates, continue to take advantage of the daiyo kangogu system. Police are allowed to detain suspects for up to 24 days; the suspect spends most of that time without the help of a lawyer or many of the protections that would safeguard the health and sanity of suspects in other modern countries. During the initial 72 hours of confinement a suspect can be held without charge, and access to a lawyer comes at the suspect’s expense.

If three days of interrogation are not enough for the police to get what they want from the accused, they can request that the court extend the period of confinement by an additional 10 days (this request is granted 99% of the time). If those first two weeks aren’t enough, then another 10 day period will be requested and granted.

24 days with only limited access to legal counsel, and few limits on interrogation techniques (despite protections legislated on behalf of detainees), is a long time to hold out! The direct access to the accused enjoyed by the police usually results in a confession whether the suspect is guilty or not.

For those already thinking it, you are correct: police in most industrialized nations don’t have half the power that Japanese police are afforded. The only tangible outside check on power would have to be the prefectural and national Public Safety Committees which, as Walter A. Ames wrote in Police and Community in Japan, “…are usually filled by elderly and conservative men who almost always defer to police decisions”.

Maximum pressure, such as withholding meals, physical coersion, and sleep deprivation, is applied by police and investigators to make sure that a confession is signed.

It is worth noting that the justice system enables all of this. Videotapes and recordings are not needed (indeed they’re not allowed!) in the interrogation room; naturally, there are many cases where forced confessions have occurred. It is likely that a significant percentage of those forced confessions are indeed false. The fact that defense lawyers habitually warn investigators against forcing confessions from their clients is evidence both that forced confessions happen and that defense lawyers are allowed little or no participation when interrogations take place.

So, do police force suspects to confess in Japan? The answer, as in many countries, is yes. The troubling part about the situation in Japan, however, is that confessions are obtained in a surprisingly high number of cases, and that there are no guarantees that police aren’t resorting to human rights abuses to get suspects to sign police-drafted confessions.

Question 2: Are forced confessions a big problem in Japan?

A prominent member of the entertainment industry has finally decided to raise his voice on this subject. A new movie titled “I Just Didn’t Do It” by director Masayuki Suo (of “Shall We Dance” fame), is attempting to paint a realistic picture of the judicial system for a Japanese audience. An article in the Economist states that the movie:

…depicts how suspects, whether guilty or innocent, are brutalised by the Japanese police, and how the judges side with the prosecutors. Mr Suo argues that suspects are presumed guilty until proven innocent, and that the odds are stacked massively against them being so proven.

The resulting human rights violations that routinely take place under the auspices of the Japanese penal system are common knowledge among international watchdogs such as Amnesty International and the United Nations. Amnesty has highlighted a scary element in all of this by drawing attention to the fact that Japan is one of only two nations in the G8 that continues to execute convicted felons (the other nation being the United States of America). Amnesty Secretary General Irene Khan pointed out that executions levied on the heels of a forced confession mean that there are likely innocents on death row (and under tombstones) in Japan. Including arguments about how forced confessions can eventually lead to unwarranted death sentences is helpful here in showing how serious a problem this is in a modern country like Japan.

Question 3: What is being done about this?

Reform is under way! Major revisions have been made to the number of people allowed to pass the bar exam each year, and juries will be included in a limited number of cases in the future. However, the energy being put into producing more lawyers and increasing the size of the judicial system is not borne of an interest in protecting the rights of the average (alleged) groper, bike thief, or kidnapper, rather it is a reaction to the realities of modern society in Japan and simple economics. More people are choosing to sort out their problems in court these days, and the system is slowly being forced to allow more public participation in the way that justice is served.

Even though public participation should increase in the future, no legislation has been passed to alter the daiyo kangoku system. Amnesty acknowledged as much in a press release dated June 4th, 2005:

While welcoming the recent legislation to improve the treatment of prisoners, Amnesty International cautioned that there remain major deficiencies that need to be addressed urgently.”Secrecy prevails under the Daiyo Kangoku (pre-trial) detention system. Unmonitored interrogations and forced confessions are unacceptable”.

In the end, almost nothing is currently being done to curb the number of forced and false confessions that are produced by the Japanese criminal justice system.

Conclusion

The Japanese police force pursues investigations within a criminal justice system that allows them a carte blanche of legal powers, and forced confessions are a common by-product of that environment.

As is sometimes the case, it has taken a movie (I Just Didn’t Do It) by a well-liked domestic writer/director to get this issue to show up on the radar in Japan. While many observers outside of Japan recognize that there are some shocking flaws in the justice system of one of the most modern societies in the world, relatively few people in Japan have any idea about how that system actually works. Police are reasonably well respected in Japan, and most citizens, much like the movie’s lead character Teppei Kaneko, believe that their innocence will be proven in a court of law. That, as has been demonstrated on numerous occasions, is often not the case.

Even though media attention to this issue is undoubtedly a good thing, arguments that the Japanese police force is monitored by a free and active press aren’t convincing. While the media is quick to pounce on obvious slip-ups by police, it largely abstains from any journalistic investigative work into criminal cases or allegations of police corruption.

In his book Miyazawa points out that the Japanese media receives most of its crime-related information directly from the police. All of the powers granted to the police dwarf the relative influence of public opinion as expressed by the media; in fact, police seem to be far more sensitive to public criticism about the progress or speed of investigations than to any possible flare-ups due to lack of procedural restraint.

It does seem, however, that the spotlight now being shown on forced and false confessions is making at least a small difference. This past week a large group of people were let off the hook in a vote-buying scandal because the court agreed that they had been forced to confess. Whether or not their ability to win an acquittal had anything to do with the fact that they are linked to politics is another argument altogether, but the fact that the court was willing to publicly state that investigators had used unsavory tactics to expedite handing the case over to a prosecutor (who has since seen his career go up in smoke because he was part of the 0.1% who has actually lost a court case) can’t be overlooked.

The average citizen will hopefully be worried after seeing the movie. Perhaps a bit of that worry will be voiced, and the slow path to reform might be embarked upon. It is clear, however, that an increased number of law professionals will have little effect on the treatment of suspects under the daiyou kangoku system; presumed guilt, as in the case of the taxi driver wrongfully convicted of rape, will likely be the name of the game in Japan for quite some time to come.

Works Cited

Ames, Walter A. Police and Community in Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981.

“Japanese Justice: Confess and be done with it.” The Economist 8 Feb. 2007.

Miyazawa, Setsuo, Frank G. Bennett, Jr., and John O. Haley. Policing in Japan: A Study on Making Crime. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1992.

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33 Comments »

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Comment by ken

March 11, 2007 @ 1:57 am

Welcome Chris! Congrats, this is a great article. I agree, this system will be here for some time: The Asahi is reporting on another case in Kagoshima where one defendant died.

Comment by Pellegrini

March 11, 2007 @ 10:23 am

Cheers, Ken, thanks for having me!

The case that the Asahi talked about stayed in the news for a couple of cycles. I’m impressed that it hung around for so long.

Comment by Alex Pappas

March 11, 2007 @ 12:17 pm

Great first article Chris and welcome to TransPacific Radio. Really looking forward to your future postings.

Comment by DeOrio

March 11, 2007 @ 6:20 pm

Pellegrini, I for one am outraged that you’re here.

But that’s mostly becuase you write better than me and I’m jealous and petty like that. Nice piece, nice follow-up to the interview with Debito. I’m looking forward to future articles from you.

This doesn’t mean you’re off the hook with Christmas stories, though.

Comment by A satisfied listener...

March 12, 2007 @ 6:06 am

Good job, well done Chris!
Since leaving Tokyo this site has been a great way for me to stay in touch with what’s going on in Japan.
Much appreciated!

Comment by Pellegrini

March 12, 2007 @ 7:08 am

Thanks Alex and DeOrio.

I’m not sure it was necessary to link back to that old recording, but I guess one must take responsibility for the stories he tells…

Comment by Pellegrini

March 14, 2007 @ 11:55 am

Interesting new development coming from the Supreme Public Prosecutor’s Office in Japan.

It seems that they’re starting to feel the heat; in light of recent scandals involving police, investigations, and false confessions, they have ordered prosecutors to stop relying so heavily on confessions.

Comment by DeOrio

March 14, 2007 @ 4:32 pm

Well, that’s good news. Do you think such an order will be enforced?

Comment by Turner

March 14, 2007 @ 10:39 pm

If it is, I hope the order is a little more detailed. Simply saying “rely less on confessions” leaves a lot of legroom for the koban.

Comment by Pellegrini

March 14, 2007 @ 11:35 pm

I think it was mostly a PR move on the part of the Prosecutor’s Office. They have too much face to lose, and too many changes to make, for them to immediately start requiring the police to actually do investigative work (or for prosecutors to have to start presenting real evidence in court).

Compounding the problem, the police don’t really seem to know another way forward when investigating crimes. The Prosecutor’s Office, judging by their recent statements, is obviously aware of this. Confessions, despite recent criticism, will remain the favored way to close cases.

In order to reinforce how tough a job reform is going to be, allow me to plug some recent news in here. You’ll remember that not long after that torso was dumped in Shinjuku back in December of 2006, the media reported that Yusuke Mihashi’s colleagues had sounded the alarm on his wife. They had heard firsthand the marital troubles he was experiencing, and they viewed her as a prime suspect. The cops, however, failed to vigorously pursue the lead.

In the meantime, Mihashi’s wife had the living room remodeled (to cover up the foul smell and blood stains) and continued to dispose of body parts. It turns out that it was those same colleagues (through repeated calls to Mrs. Mihashi) who found the hole in her story which eventually led to her arrest.

Mihashi’s friends (not the cops) were the ones who cracked the case, but that revelation didn’t get a lot of press. Judging by the police’s track record, it is probable that they had decided that another person was responsible for the murder and were busy questioning him instead of keeping an eye on Mihashi’s wife. If it weren’t for his colleagues, it’s possible that the case would still be unsolved, or another person would have taken the blame for it.

My point is that the judicial system (including the police force) is not equipped to deal directly with the recommendations made by the Prosecutor’s Office. It is probably safe to assume that little or nothing will change in the next few years.

Comment by Adamu

March 15, 2007 @ 12:30 am

The case itself (and the friends’ involvement) were a major news story, but I never saw any outlets scolding the police for not investigating.

Comment by ken

March 15, 2007 @ 1:23 am

Adamu, you’re right, 100% - and there are a lot of reasons for that. It happened again in the dismemberment case in Shibuya when the police actually threw away evidence. It’s almost as if they’re mocking the defense attorneys in the country. At any rate, it was reported in the media, but there was nothing (I saw) in the way of editorial content requesting that the police at least make an effort at professionalism…

I would love to see a Police Academy handbook. Anyone have one? How much time is spent in the classroom on learning how to get a confession and how much is spent on investigative techniques? I have a feeling that a lot of problems we see will go back to inefficiencies in outdated training methods.

Comment by DeOrio

March 15, 2007 @ 11:39 am

I don’t know about investigation, but I know that officers at the Nogata police station and at the nearby lock-up receive hours of vigorous training in how to bow properly. Those who don’t quite get it get wooden poles down the back of their shirts to keep their backs straight. That makes me feel a lot more secure.

Comment by Pellegrini

March 16, 2007 @ 12:43 pm

I read that a significant portion of training is dedicated to developing recruits’ social skills and moral awareness.

Comment by John S

March 16, 2007 @ 2:35 pm

Let me guess: social skills=drinking at the izakaya
moral awareness=stopping foreign criminals!

Comment by Pellegrini

April 4, 2007 @ 2:08 am

I wonder how everyone would rate the police’s performance in the recent murder of Lindsay Ann Hawker by Tatsuya Ichihashi.

Did they botch the investigation by allowing Ichihashi to escape?

Comment by DeOrio

April 5, 2007 @ 12:53 am

Did they botch the investigation? Hell yes.

Did Ichihashi kill her? It seems so.

Will we ever learn exactly what happened through a fair trial and a thorough, professional investigation? No way in hell.

Is Ichihashi fucked whether he did it or not? Yep. Even a tangential bit of circumstancial evidence would have done the trick, with circumstancial evidence as compelling as it apparently is, there won’t even be an attempt at a sincere forensic investigation.

Are the police going to catch him any time soon? Only if he walks into a koban in Ichikawa, tells them who he is, and reminds them that they’re lookng for him.

This is the kind of case that should have people up in arms, not so much because of what happened to Miss Hawker, but because of the kind of danger that kind of killer poses. In other words, that’s the kind of murder done by someone who’s going to do it again and might have done it before.

Comment by Pellegrini

April 5, 2007 @ 1:24 am

I was just about to say the same thing!

He’s stayed very well hidden for more than a week now, and apparently he hasn’t tried to use his ATM card yet.

I could be wrong, but there seem to be two distinct possibilities here: a) Ichihashi has committed suiced or has died in some other way and is at the bottom of the bay; b) someone is helping him hide.

They flashed the official hotline phone number on the screen last night during the news broadcast for people who might have some information (which I was very pleased to see), but from what we know and have seen of the police, the only way he will be caught is if he makes a serious mistake (or turns himself in as you mentioned above).

I agree that people should be scared that this guy is on the loose, but I wonder if the average Japanese citizen actually views him as a threat to society.

Comment by DeOrio

April 5, 2007 @ 10:24 am

I’ve heard that his parents are both doctors who live near Tokyo. Other people have pointed out that it’s really odd that his parents have issued no kind of public statement and that the media don’t seem to be hounding them. Maybe he’s there. Maybe the police haven’t thought of that yet.

If the average Japanese citizen thinks Horiemon did something to hurt people, but that a young man from a wealthy background who has an interest in violent sexual fantasy beats, binds, strips, strangles, and buries a young woman he’s been following in sand in a bathtub he’s dragged out onto a balcony (anyone else want to be the first to say “serial killer”? ‘Cause that’s probably what we’re looking at - the hallmarks are all there)is not a threat society, we have some deep, deep issues in society.

Ichihashi (if it was him - I’ll be fair) is going to kill another young woman in the future and has quite possibly killed in the past. As a kid, he probably tortured animals. His parents are thinking it couldn’t possibly be him, but they really wouldn’t know because they’re not close to him at all. That’s all speculation, but I bet I’m right.

I also bet there will be no investigation to see if Ichihashi was involved in other unsolved murders. Again, we’ll have to wait for the dubious confession. The NPA will never allow “serial killer” to be said by any of its personnel publicly, but that’s what they’re dealing with and the sooner they figure that out and let the public know, the better.

Comment by Pellegrini

April 5, 2007 @ 1:27 pm

True, true. We do need to be fair and remember that his is, at this point, suspected of killing Hawker. As you mentioned in an earlier comment, however, that doesn’t really matter. If he’s ever caught, guilty or not, he’s going to take the fall on this one.

So…maybe being fair is a waste of what is already a dwindling supply of journalistic integrity.

On another note, I was wondering how long it would take for someone to classify him as a serial killer. I knew I could count on you, DeOrio! I agree with you that he fits the mold.

Just out of curiosity, are there any other unsolved disappearance/murder cases involving (young) women in the eastern part of Tokyo (or western Chiba) over the past several years?

Comment by ken

April 6, 2007 @ 4:53 am

Hmmm…I know what you’re saying about the profile, that such people have killed and/or will kill again. And also that they tend to have killed and/or tortured animals in the past.

That might all be true. But I’m going to say that I don’t think he’s dangerous unless cornered. I don’t think he’s physically much of a threat and I doubt he’s armed. That said, the fact that he hasn’t used his ATM card leads one to believe that he either had cash or someone is giving him some - and neither can last forever.

A man on the run will make mistakes unless he is very well experienced, trained in survival and has people who can cover him. I don’t see this clown being in that category. If he is alive, I’d be paying attention to dumpster/trash looters, day (cash-based) laborers and perhaps plastic surgery clinics. He might need any or all of them to survive, and using any should be a mistake that gives him away.

But, the perception that he could be dangerous would stop someone from confronting him (probably a good idea). Hopefully police could be alerted to his presence quickly enough.

Comment by Pellegrini

April 6, 2007 @ 1:20 pm

We know that police have stopped a train they thought he was on (they didn’t find him). We also know that they completely encircled a love hotel that they believed he was staying in (wrong again).

I don’t know if the sightings were genuine in those two cases, but I also wonder about the speed with which police responded. How long would it take to mobilize 100 officers in Tokyo at a specific love hotel? I imagine that if he had been in that hotel, he would have had ample opportunity to escape.

On a related note, I doubt it would be hard for him to walk around in broad daylight right now. It’s hay fever season, and 50% of the population wears a surgical mask these days. If police only stop men wearing a face mask, then they’ve narrowed things down quite a bit right there!

Pingback by Burakumin « I, Shingen

April 7, 2007 @ 7:46 am

[…] There are inter-related issues here, one is the efficacy of the koban (call box) system, and Japan’s police in general, secondly is the deficiencies of the legal system (particularly forced confessions), and finally it is the presentation of burakumin as fair game. […]

Comment by rbm

April 10, 2007 @ 12:09 pm

Great post on a fascinating topic. Japan Times recently reported on a very interesting government bill that relates to Question 3 in this post.


http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20070314b3.html

Bill set to let victims quiz defendants

The government adopted bills Tuesday that feature allowing people victimized by crime to question defendants or witnesses in court, make statements similar to closing arguments in seeking penalties and allow judges to award compensation in the event of guilty verdicts.
The bills, endorsed by the Cabinet, are aimed for passage during the ongoing Diet session. But they are likely to face opposition from not only defense lawyers but also some victims.
The Japan Federation of Bar Associations has expressed opposition due to concerns about securing rational evidence-based trials and fair sentencing.


With the recent attention that’s been given prosecutorial abuse in pulling out confessions, the direction by gov to prosecutors to rely less on confessions, etc., i can’t help but wonder if this is in part meant as a tool for prosecutors. having victims participate in the manner mentioned in the article will make it easier to convict and get heavier sentences. it seems like replacing reliance on confessions with reliance on victims. all sorts of due process concerns of course… admitting a victim in a criminal proceeding seems to be an essential question. japan is very much behind the times in terms of victims’ rights, but the government proposal is problematic.

Here’s the Nichibenren statement:
http://www.nichibenren.or.jp/ja/opinion/statement/070313.html

Here’s the draft:
http://www.moj.go.jp/HOUAN/HANZAI-KENRI/refer01.pdf

Comment by rbm

April 10, 2007 @ 12:11 pm

(oops… that was supposed to read “seems to *beg* an essential question”)

cheers

Comment by ken

May 23, 2007 @ 3:10 am

RBM, thanks for the links. I know it’s been a while, but some good reading there.

On this topic, if anyone’s still on this thread, Bloomberg reported this headline today:

Japan’s Detention System May Lead to Abuses, UN Says

According to the article:

Japan’s use of substitute prisons to detain suspects was criticized by the United Nations, which called for legislation to separate police investigations from the detention system to prevent abuse of detainees’ rights.

Japan’s system of substitute prisons, which allows for the “prolonged detention of arrested persons,'’ lacks judicial control and may contribute to the high conviction rate in criminal trials based on confessions, the UN Committee Against Torture said in a statement yesterday. The Committee also criticized Japan’s “continuing official denial'’ of the use of sexual slaves used during World War II.

Emphasis added.

Comment by Pellegrini

May 24, 2007 @ 1:47 am

Related article: on a trial basis, it seems that the authorities are “experimenting” with recorded interrogations.

Pingback by Global Voices Online » Japan: "Thought Check" Screening for Citizen Judges

May 30, 2007 @ 4:34 pm

[…] To understand the significance of the new citizen judge system, it is useful to review some basic facts about the judicial system in Japan. On paper at least, Japan’s judicial system boasts impressive figures, with a staggeringly high 99.8% conviction rate and an 86.6% rate of “full confession by the accused”. And yet, as was recently revealed in the dramatic story of a group of suspects in a vote-buying case, forced, among other things, to shout confessions out a window and stomp on the names of loved ones, these figures hide much more than they actually reveal. […]

Pingback by Liberal Japan » Blog Archive » Another forced confession

June 21, 2007 @ 8:37 am

[…] 2007/03/11 Forced Confessions and the Japanese Justice System, Trans-Pacific Radio; Must read article for this topic. […]

Comment by J

April 12, 2008 @ 4:57 pm

Hi. Im doing a post on human rights in Japan. I was wondering if you can give us your source on the figures you mentioned (99.9 per cent copnviction rate, 86 per cent confession rate).

Comment by Pellegrini

April 12, 2008 @ 11:54 pm

J,
Just took a quick swing around the web and these are a couple that I found.

The 99.9 per cent conviction rate is quoted everywhere. Here is a recent example (http://www.economist.com/world/asia/
displaystory.cfm?story_id=10925858).

I didn’t use this in the article, but www.pdsdc.org/Calendar/SummerSeries/SS07102007/
The%20Truth%20About%20False%20Confessions.ppt says that the rate of confession is 90% in Japan. My citation was probably from a Cambridge Journals article that I can’t find at the moment.

Pingback by Global Voices in het Nederlands » Japan: ‘gedachtencontrole’ screening van lekenrechters

June 15, 2009 @ 3:38 am

[…] Meer recentelijk stelde de blogger Pellegrini op Trans-Pacific Radio[en] een minutieus overzicht samen van het probleem van afgedwongen bekentenissen in Japan, daarbij opmerkend: De politie en de opsporingsambtenaren oefenen de grootst mogelijke druk uit zoals het onthouden van maaltijden, fysieke dwang en onthouding van slaap om er zeker van te zijn dat een bekentenis wordt ondertekend. […]

Pingback by Burakumin « James in Japan

July 31, 2009 @ 10:22 am

[…] There are inter-related issues here, one is the efficacy of the koban (call box) system, and Japan’s police in general, secondly is the deficiencies of the legal system (particularly forced confessions), and finally it is the presentation of burakumin as fair game. […]

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