
YouTuber stabbed to death as she livestreamed on Tokyo street
Tokyo metropolitan police said they had arrested Kenji Takano, 42, on the spot on suspicion of attempted murder Tuesday. He has since been sent to the prosecutors but has not been charged yet.
The victim, Airi Sato, 22, was rushed to a hospital with critical injuries after the attacker stabbed her repeatedly in her upper body, police said, and was later pronounced dead.
Witnesses and livestream viewers said that they heard her screaming for help, and the stream suddenly went black. Kyodo News reported that a witness said she saw a man wearing a black hat and mask attacking woman at the scene, and after she fell down, he held a smartphone toward her. The New York Times reported that following the attack, Sato's followers posted messages, including "Where did she go?" and "Someone help!"
The suspect told police that he got to know Sato through her livestreaming and had seen her in person a number of times, and that they had a financial dispute, according to media reports, including the Asahi newspaper. Kyodo News, citing police, reported that it is believed that he began lending her money around 2022.
According to Kyodo News, Sato was attacked while livestreaming on an app called WhoWatch and walking alone near the Takadanobaba train station in Shinjuku Ward.
Broadcast NHK reported that Takano had lent Sato a large sum of money and that she did not pay him back despite a court order to do so.
Takano traveled from the Oyama city, about 60 miles north of Tokyo, to carry out the attack after Sato announced the livestream and tracked down her location by watching the footage, media reports said, quoting police.
He told police he did not intend to kill her.
Violent crimes are still rare in Japan, where gun control is extremely strict, but there have been a number of high profile knife attacks and others using handmade guns in recent years amid a bleak wage and employment outlook.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
17 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Nearly 80 Afghans, including children dead after bus crash via Iran
Aug. 20 (UPI) -- Nearly 80 Afghan nationals, including more than a dozen children, died in a fiery bus crash on its way out of Iran to Afghanistan in Iran's ongoing push to rid millions of foreigners. The Kabul-bound bus crashed late Tuesday night during a long ride on treacherous Afghani terrain after colliding with another vehicle and a motorbike near the Iranian border in the western Afghan province of Herat. According to officials, 78 people died that included 17 children. "The car was carrying fuel and it caught fire after a head-on collision with the bus, fully loaded with passengers," according to Ahmadullah Muttaqi, a government communications official in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, told NBC and The New York Times. Muttaqi added the bus also caught fire and "the majority of people on the bus died of burn injuries." On Wednesday, the bodies were transferred to Afghanistan's capital Kabul. Video footage by Afghan news outlet Etilaatroz depicted the large bus engulfed in flames as firefighters battled the blaze and Afghans joined in to aid and its charred remain later hauled away by a larger truck. "These Afghan refugees were returning home after spending a long time in Iran, but they could not reach their destination as their bus met with a tragic accident," Muttaqi stated. The Iranian regime has cracked down on undocumented nationals. It comes as Iran has moved to expel nearly 2 million Afghan nationals from within its border, some who have lived in Iran for decades. More than 1.2 million since June have forcibly been returned to troubled Afghanistan as Iranian officials have accused Afghans of spying for Israel following its brief military conflict around spring. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.


New York Times
2 days ago
- New York Times
Trump Administration Live Updates: Tennessee Joins 5 States Sending National Guard Troops to D.C.
Mexican Marines guarded the scene of a murder in June on the outskirts of Culiacán, the stronghold of the Sinaloa cartel. The news release from the Drug Enforcement Administration trumpeted a 'bold bilateral initiative' with the Mexican government to crack down on cartels that smuggle drugs across the southern border. It was the sort of collaboration that both Mexico and the United States have called necessary and welcome to combat the powerful cartels, which have driven a wedge between the two nations. But on Tuesday morning, a day after the D.E.A.'s announcement, President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico opened her daily news conference by saying she had no idea what U.S. officials were talking about. 'I want to clarify something,' she said. 'There is no agreement with the D.E.A. The D.E.A. issues the statement, we don't know based on what. We haven't reached any agreement — none of the security institutions have — with the D.E.A.' The D.E.A. did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It appeared the news release was briefly taken offline shortly after her comments, but it was available again Tuesday morning. The confusion was the latest public divergence between the Mexican and U.S. governments, amid an intense pressure campaign by the Trump administration to get Mexico to do more against cartels that has often left Ms. Sheinbaum on the defensive. President Trump has repeatedly said Mexico must intensify the fight against cartels and curb the flow of fentanyl across the United States-Mexico border. Ms. Sheinbaum has said Mexico is doing just that, and indeed operations are up and fentanyl seizures at the border are down, according to officials in both countries. Image The San Ysidro crossing at the United States-Mexico border in June. Fentanyl seizures at the border have dropped significantly since last year. Credit... Alejandro Cegarra for The New York Times Ms. Sheinbaum has said that some of that success has been the fruit of longstanding cooperation between Mexican and U.S. authorities. And she has repeatedly suggested, including on Tuesday, that the two countries are on the verge of significantly expanding their teamwork against cartels in a new security agreement that is being negotiated. 'This agreement is about to be signed, and it is fundamentally based on sovereignty, mutual trust, territorial respect — that is, that each nation operates in its own territory — and coordination without subordination,' she said on Tuesday. This month, The New York Times reported that Mr. Trump had directed the Pentagon to explore military action against cartels his administration has declared terrorist organizations, most of which are in Mexico. That prompted another strong pushback from Ms. Sheinbaum. 'The United States is not going to come to Mexico with the military,' she said at the time. 'We cooperate, we collaborate, but there is not going to be an invasion. That is ruled out.' The contradiction this week may be the result of miscommunication and disagreement on how to frame the two nations' work together, as the Trump administration seeks to publicize its action against cartels while Ms. Sheinbaum's government tries to manage its image with a Mexican public wary of U.S. interventionism. The D.E.A. announcement announced 'a major new initiative' to fight cartels with Mexico, centered around 'Project Portero, D.E.A.'s flagship operation aimed at dismantling cartel 'gatekeepers,' operatives who control the smuggling corridors along the southwest border.' The D.E.A. said such 'gatekeepers' helped smuggle drugs into the United States and guns and cash into Mexico. Image An operative for the Sinaloa cartel applying a liquid made up of chemicals that help disguise the potent smell of fentanyl to drug packages hidden in a car headed to the border. Credit... Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times The agency said the project involved 'a multiweek training and collaboration program' in the United States that would bring together 'Mexican investigators with U.S. law enforcement, prosecutors, defense officials and members of the intelligence community' to 'identify joint targets, develop coordinated enforcement strategies and strengthen the exchange of intelligence.' The release quoted the agency's administrator, Terrance Cole, as saying the project was 'a bold first step in a new era of cross-border enforcement, and we will pursue it relentlessly until these violent organizations are dismantled.' Ms. Sheinbaum suggested that was overdoing it. 'The only thing is a group of police officers from the Ministry of Security and Citizen Protection who were taking a workshop in Texas,' she said. 'That's all there is. There is nothing else. We do not know why they issued this statement.' That group consisted of four officers, she said. 'The only thing we will always ask for is respect — always,' she added. 'So if you are going to share something regarding Mexico that's a security matter, all we ask is that it's done within the collaborative framework we have, and that it isn't inaccurate.'


Forbes
2 days ago
- Forbes
Today's Wordle #1522 Hints And Answer For Tuesday, August 19th
The New York Times games section launched a brand new game this week called Pips. You have to line up dominoes just so, placing all your pieces into an increasingly elaborate grid. It gets quite challenging. It's definitely a puzzle for visual thinkers, much more so than Wordle. Speaking of Wordle, let's solve today's! Looking for yesterday's Wordle? Check out hints, clues and the answer right here. Wordle is a daily word puzzle game where your goal is to guess a hidden five-letter word in six tries or fewer. After each guess, the game gives feedback to help you get closer to the answer: FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder Use these clues to narrow down your guesses. Every day brings a new word, and everyone around the world is trying to solve the same puzzle. Some Wordlers also play Competitive Wordle against friends, family, the Wordle Bot or even against me, your humble narrator. See rules for Competitive Wordle toward the end of this post. Today's Wordle Hints And Answer Wordle Bot's Starting Word: SLATE My Starting Word Today: CRIME (163 words remaining) The Hint: Uproarious. Wild. The Clue: This Wordle ends in a 'Y'. Okay, spoilers below! The answer is coming! . . . Every day I check Wordle Bot to help analyze my guessing game. You can check your Wordles with Wordle Bot right here. CRIME didn't really pay once again. It never does but I keep trying it as my opening guess just to be sure. To be fair, it was better than Wordle Bot's SLATE! ROAST slashed the 163 words I had left to just 3, and from man, I almost guessed ROWDY but then ROUND seemed like a better choice. Oh well. I got it in four. The Bot and I each get 0 for guessing in four and 0 for tying, leaving our August totals at: Erik: 9 points Wordle Bot: 13 points The word rowdy comes from the mid-18th century American English slang term rowdy meaning 'rough, disorderly person.' It's probably a shortened form of rowdy-dowdy, itself an alteration of rigmarole-style slang for a boisterous, noisy fellow. The root idea is 'one who makes a row' (where row meant a noisy disturbance or quarrel). Over time, it shifted from describing a rough or violent person to the more general 'boisterous, loud, unruly.' Be sure to follow me for all your daily puzzle-solving guides, TV show and movie reviews and more here on this blog!