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Scene of the attack in 2016. SIPA USA/PA Images

Man who murdered 19 people at disability care home in Japan is sentenced to death

The court ruled that the former employee of the facility deserved no leniency.

A JAPANESE MAN has been sentenced to death for the stabbing murder of 19 disabled people at a care home, in one of the country’s worst mass killings.

Satoshi Uematsu never disputed his involvement in the grisly rampage but his lawyers entered a plea of not guilty, arguing the 30-year-old was suffering a “mental disorder” linked to his use of marijuana.

The court ruled that the former employee of the facility deserved no leniency over the 2016 attack, which shocked the country.

“The lives of 19 people were taken away. This is profoundly grave,” chief judge Kiyoshi Aonuma told the court.

Uematsu planned the murders and had “an extreme intention to kill”, he added.

Prosecutors had sought the death penalty — which in Japan is carried out by hanging — and argued that the defendant was capable of taking responsibility for the violence at the Tsukui Yamayuri-en centre, just outside Tokyo.

Uematsu was impassive as the verdict was announced, looking straight ahead at the judge as he was sentenced.

He wore a black suit with his hair in a long ponytail down to his waist, and was flanked by six uniformed court officers wearing surgical masks.

Uematsu, who faced six charges including murder, reportedly said before the trial that he would not appeal any verdict, though he argued he did not deserve the death penalty.

He has reportedly said he wanted to eradicate all disabled people in the horrifying attack that also left 26 people wounded.

‘I hate you so much’

He turned himself in to police after the assault, carrying bloodied knives.

It later emerged he had left his job at the home just months earlier and been forcibly hospitalised after telling colleagues he intended to kill people at the centre.

But he was discharged after just 12 days when a doctor decided he was not a threat. He had also written a letter outlining plans to attack the home, claiming “disabled people only create unhappiness”.

Among the few victims to be identified publicly was a 19-year-old woman, Miho, whose mother said Uematsu “didn’t need a future”.

“I hate you so much. I want to rip you apart. Even the most extreme penalty is light for you. I will never forgive you,” the mother said before the verdict, according to public broadcaster NHK.

Please bring back my most precious daughter… You’re still alive. It’s not fair. It’s wrong. I demand capital punishment.

Takashi Ono, whose son was severely injured in the attack, told reporters he was “relieved”.

“The judge gave the sentence the victims’ families hoped for,” he said.

However, some questioned the need for the death sentence, a policy that faces little major opposition in Japan.

“It shouldn’t have been the death sentence. We should have allowed him to learn better,” said Rie Sumida, a disabled 45-year-old woman waiting for the verdict.

“If you kill the person because of what he did, it means you do the same thing as Uematsu,” she told AFP.

No remorse

The head of the care home, Kaoru Irikura, had tears in her eyes as she described listening to the verdict.

“When the judge explained Uematsu’s motives again today, I imagined each scene” from the day of the attack, she said tearfully.

“I want him to have to face what he has done until the day he dies.”

The trial was closely watched, and a court spokesman said more than 1,600 people lined up for 10 seats available for the verdict.

The number of spots was reduced because of rules requiring spectators to sit apart to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

Uematsu has shown no remorse for the attack, telling Japan’s Mainichi Shimbun daily that people with mental disabilities “have no heart”, and for them “there’s no point in living”.

Uematsu’s beliefs shocked Japan, with experts and activists raising questions about whether others might hold similar views.

Japan has been making efforts to increase accessibility — particularly in Tokyo ahead of this year’s Paralympic Games — and activists hailed last year’s election of two disabled lawmakers.

But some critics feel the country still falls short of fully integrating people with disabilities.

© – AFP 2020

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    Mute Emily Elephant
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    Jul 4th 2014, 8:25 AM

    And Andre Agassi had an obsessive father who made him bat at balls when he was still in his pram, then when he was 7 had a machine fire 1000 balls a day at him to return. It was all down to practice.

    Except that Agassi has an elder brother who got exactly the same treatment but never won anything. You can bias a sample to prove anything you like.

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    Mute Adrian De Cleir
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    Jul 4th 2014, 7:41 AM

    True in most cases, but Mozart was no normal kid who just practiced a lot and happened to be surrounded by music , he was a prodigy.

    27
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    Mute Ben Gunn
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    Jul 4th 2014, 8:13 AM

    A child is defined as a prodigy based on what they do, not on what they might do. We regularly confuse the attributes of talent, skill, knowledge and intellect. Ultimately none of these will deliver achievement without coaching/education, practice and commitment.

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    Mute Rónán O'Suilleabháin
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    Jul 4th 2014, 9:05 AM

    Agreed ben, though I’d add having an interest as an alternative to commitment, as the former drives the later in many cases.

    But where talent comes in, is that some folk deliver with far less of that coaching, practice and commitment. Some people catch on to certain things far quicker, and see the big picture – and that in its own right is talent. In the same way that the best sportspeople read a game and execute a plan (with flair to back it up), so to does natural talent in the workplace spot problems before they happen, troubleshoot as they happen, or clean up efficiently after things have happened.

    Certain things aren’t taught, and that’s why we speak about leaders, in every context of life.

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    Mute Seamus O'ceadagain
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    Jul 4th 2014, 10:16 AM

    Talent has to be there in the first place….without it practice is useless

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    Mute Ted Carroll
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    Jul 4th 2014, 7:54 AM

    This whole thing is a bit misleading! For most athletes they are genetically superior to your average person! A business leader I could believe but the reason top pros make it in their sport is because they stood out from the field from a very very young age! Hard work will cover some gaps but you need a certain physical structure in the first place!

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    Mute Liam Treacy
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    Jul 4th 2014, 9:51 AM

    Ted, look at the YouTube video I posted. You’ll change your mind! Talent, though VIP, is only one factor. Environment, access, peer influence, coaching (education) and opportunity are essential parts of the mix.

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    Mute Elma Phudd
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    Jul 4th 2014, 8:05 AM

    This is bullshit, the Kalenjin tribe has physical attributes that suit them to distance running. The Sports Gene gives an interesting, fact based insight into this.

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    Mute Richie Aprile
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    Jul 4th 2014, 7:40 AM

    Eh some people are just lucky ba$tards in life.

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    Mute Liam Treacy
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    Jul 4th 2014, 9:55 AM

    People can be unlucky but most successful people make their luck. They were in the gym at 6 and/or the office at 7 and do it for life!

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    Mute Seamus O'ceadagain
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    Jul 4th 2014, 10:17 AM

    True Story

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    Mute unknown
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    Jul 4th 2014, 10:29 AM

    The more you practice the luckier you get

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    Mute Liam Treacy
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    Jul 4th 2014, 9:46 AM

    http://youtu.be/njae5qGhxEw

    Listen to the man and get proper insight rather than read ill informed comments. Essentially talent is only part of the requirements for success and he believes it is wrong and damaging to young people to peddle the myth that talent is the only requirement.

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    Mute Zozzy Zozimus
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    Jul 4th 2014, 11:19 AM

    “it is wrong and damaging to young people to peddle the myth that talent is the only requirement.”

    In that case, it’s a happy coincidence that nobody is peddling that myth.

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    Mute Rónán O'Suilleabháin
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    Jul 4th 2014, 11:55 AM

    Someone is, on the other hand, peddling a book – to people who want to hear that there’s a path to success for everyone, regardless of their aptitude.

    5
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