
Knife Attack Suspect Picked Todaimae Station Due to University-Related Name; Says He Wanted to Show Danger of Education-Obsessed Parenting
The Yomiuri Shimbun
Yoshitaka Toda is seen at a police station in Bunkyo Ward on Wednesday.
The suspect who assaulted a man with a knife at a station in Tokyo on Wednesday night told police that he wanted to show parents that being too obsessed with educating their children in hopes of sending them to the University of Tokyo could lead to crime, according to investigative sources.
The suspect, Yoshitaka Toda, 43, of Ikusaka, Nagano Prefecture, was arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department after cutting the head of a 20-year-old male college student with a knife on a Nanboku Line train while it was stopped at Todaimae Station at around 7 p.m. The MPD believes that he chose the station because it was named for the University of Tokyo — commonly called 'Todai' in Japanese — and began attacking passengers indiscriminately.
According to the sources, Toda remained silent after being arrested, but on Thursday explained that he dropped out of junior high school because his parents were too obsessed with education. He also stated that because the name of the station refers to the University of Tokyo, it would be easy to associate it with educational abuse. As for why he attacked the victim, he said it was just because he happened to be nearby and that he didn't care if the victim died.

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In a move to enhance transparency of police questionings, police officers have started wearing body cameras on a trial basis to record interrogations in public spaces. Maurice Shelton, an African American man from Georgia who wears his hair in dreads and is another plaintiff in the suit, recounted how he had been interrogated by police at least 17 times since first coming to Japan in 2010. "Just because you look a certain way, does that mean you can be stopped randomly by the police?" the 42-year-old CEO of a personal training gym in Kanagawa Prefecture said. "Is that something that I should have to deal with because I'm a foreigner, or because I'm a black person, or because I have darker skin, or because I have this hair?" He cited as one of his motivations to join the suit the similar treatment he said he experienced in Georgia and which made him leave his country. "I've been harassed by the police in America. I've had guns pulled on me by the police," he said. 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