logo
Osaka prosecutor who accused boss of rape faces backlash

Osaka prosecutor who accused boss of rape faces backlash

The Mainichi05-07-2025
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- In Japan, prosecutors are powerful public officials who are meant to protect the public from rapists and other criminals. But what if the chief prosecutor is an accused rapist himself?
That's the explosive charge leveled by Hikari (a pseudonym), a female prosecutor with the Osaka District Public Prosecutors Office who says she was raped by her boss in 2018.
Her pain did not end after the alleged attack. She says it got worse due to a campaign by former chief prosecutor Kentaro Kitagawa and others to silence her, and a colleague who slandered her by spreading rumors claiming she had romantic feelings for Kitagawa.
Hikari's quest for justice is the latest MeToo case in Japan involving women who refused to be silenced after being assaulted by establishment figures. They include filmmaker Shiori Ito and former Ground Self-Defense Force member Rina Gonoi.
Kitagawa, 65, has been indicted and initially admitted the rape charge, but later recanted, saying the sexual encounter was consensual.
On May 21, Hikari -- not her real name -- held a press conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan in Tokyo in which she disclosed a handwritten letter she had received from Kitagawa, asking her to keep quiet about what happened.
According to the indictment, in September 2018, Hikari drank at a social gathering for work and became intoxicated before trying to catch a taxi. Kitagawa half-forced his way into the vehicle and took Hikari to his official residence where he raped her.
A groggy Hikari regained consciousness and pleaded for Kitagawa to stop, but he continued the sexual assault, telling her, "You are my woman now."
In an interview with Kyodo News in early May, Hikari said she believes she was "bullied by the prosecutors' organization" into initially not speaking publicly about the incident. She wishes to remain anonymous as she intends to continue her work.
Hikari developed post-traumatic stress disorder and was unable to continue work as a prosecutor, a job she loved.
In Kitagawa's six-page letter written to Hikari, dated Oct. 28, 2019, he apologizes for the "irreparable damage" his actions caused and for the fact that his apology following the incident was insufficient.
But after begging Hikari's forgiveness several times, Kitagawa asks her to keep the rape secret.
"If this incident becomes public, I will not be able to live on, and I have decided that I will have no choice but to commit suicide," the letter reads. The scandal would harm Kitagawa and the Public Prosecutors Office, leading to resignations by other high-ranking officials, it adds.
At the press conference, Hikari recalled that she was too scared to speak out about what happened. She finally decided she could not live without holding Kitagawa responsible and filed a formal report in February 2024 demanding strict punishment. She said she returned 10 million yen ($70,000) in compensation that Kitagawa had paid her and her husband.
"My dignity as a human being and as a prosecutor was trampled on, my body and soul broken...my harmonious life with my family, my precious job, the time I had spent working tainted and my future was stolen from me," she said.
Kitagawa was arrested in June 2024 on a charge of quasi-forcible sexual intercourse and indicted on the same charge in July.
At the first hearing of his trial in October, Kitagawa admitted to the indictment, saying he had "no intention of fighting the case," and apologized for "causing serious and severe harm to the victim."
However, the situation took a dramatic turn in December when his new defense council made it clear that Kitagawa would be denying the charge. He suddenly claimed there was consent and no intention to commit a crime. The trial has not been held since he changed his plea to not guilty.
Hikari's trauma continues to this day. After returning to work briefly in September 2024, a female deputy prosecutor in the same department, on the same floor, began circulating rumors about the incident and her involvement with Kitagawa. Hikari refers to this as a "secondary rape."
According to Hikari, the deputy prosecutor leaked her personal information and details of the sexual assault, and said her victim's report and PTSD claims were fraudulent. Hikari was again forced to take sick leave.
Hikari filed claims of defamation and harassment among other charges against the deputy prosecutor, but the woman was not charged and only received a warning.
Hikari and her lawyer are preparing to file a review with the Committee for the Inquest of Prosecution, claiming the decision not to prosecute the deputy prosecutor is unjust.
She is also calling for the establishment of an independent committee to review the responses to her case.
"Harassment is rampant in the Public Prosecutors Office," she said. "I believe that both the Kitagawa case and the further accusations by the deputy public prosecutor are the result of this kind of prosecutorial terrain."
In an email to Hikari's lawyer, a high-ranking official of the Osaka High Public Prosecutors Office said the office stands by its decision not to pursue a case against the deputy prosecutor based on the law and evidence.
The official also argues further that publicly speaking about the incident "undermines the credibility of the office."
"This is not an attempt to keep her quiet or a threat, but an obvious request, so we ask that she refrain from saying she has been told to shut up or threatened," the official said.
(By Aya Tamura)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

2 Filipino men held over killings of 2 Japanese in Manila
2 Filipino men held over killings of 2 Japanese in Manila

Japan Today

timea day ago

  • Japan Today

2 Filipino men held over killings of 2 Japanese in Manila

Manila police said Monday they brought two Filipino suspects into custody over the deadly shooting last week of two Japanese in the Philippine capital. The police identified the victims as Akinobu Nakayama of Shizuoka Prefecture and Hideaki Satori of Fukuoka Prefecture. They were shot on Friday in what police believe was a robbery, with local media reporting that two suspects fled the scene on a motorcycle. The police said they identified the suspects from security camera footage and witness accounts, and recovered a motorcycle believed to have been used in the crime. Since October, a series of robberies in Manila has targeted Japanese citizens. © KYODO

Lakeside trails at Hokkaido World Heritage site reopen after bear attack
Lakeside trails at Hokkaido World Heritage site reopen after bear attack

Japan Today

timea day ago

  • Japan Today

Lakeside trails at Hokkaido World Heritage site reopen after bear attack

All trails around lakes in the Shiretoko World Natural Heritage Site in Japan's northernmost main island of Hokkaido fully reopened on Monday after being closed last week due to a fatal bear attack. Following the reopening on Sunday of electrified fence-lined elevated wooden paths at Shiretoko Goko Lakes, the Environment Ministry also decided to allow access to the area's ground-level paths after multiple patrols to check for signs of brown bears. Entry to Mt. Rausu, in the same Shiretoko World Natural Heritage Site, remains closed after a man in his 20s was killed when he was dragged from a mountain trail by a brown bear on Thursday. The following day, a bear and two cubs were shot dead not far from where the man's body was found. Authorities have yet to confirm whether the animals were responsible for the attack. © KYODO

Vietnamese man indicted over robbery-murder in southwest Japan
Vietnamese man indicted over robbery-murder in southwest Japan

Japan Today

time2 days ago

  • Japan Today

Vietnamese man indicted over robbery-murder in southwest Japan

A Vietnamese man was indicted Sunday for allegedly killing a woman during robbery at her home in the southwestern Japan city of Imari in late July. Dam Duy Khang, a 24-year-old worker under Japan's technical internship program, allegedly entered the house in the afternoon of July 26 and stole 11,000 yen after threatening Maiko Mukumoto, a 40-year-old Japanese language teacher, and her mother by brandishing a kitchen knife. He is believed to have tried to take the two women upstairs but attacked them as they resisted. Mukumoto, who tried to protect her mother in her 70s, suffered multiple stab wounds to her neck and elsewhere, while the mother sustained injuries requiring about one month to heal. Khang, who lived near the victims in Imari, Saga Prefecture, was arrested the following day. Japan's technical internship program is intended to transfer skills to developing countries, but is often criticized as a means of importing low-wage labor. Khang came to Japan in December 2023, according to a supervisory body for interns. © KYODO

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store