
EXCLUSIVE Inside Japan's secretive execution jails where death row inmates are given minutes notice before facing the noose - as serial killer dubbed 'hanging pro' is sent to the gallows
It is here that Japan's most deplorable criminals are plucked from their cells and hanged underneath fluorescent lights in a cold, bare wood-panelled room.
There is a chillingly theatrical element to how the condemned are executed in the East Asian country - the only member of the G7 besides the US that still metes out capital punishment.
Shackled prisoners are led past a small gold statue of Kannon, a Buddhist figure associated with compassion, as they enter their sterile execution chamber.
Here, they are forced to stand on a spot marked by an ominous red square - the trapdoor that will give way to send them on a short and sharp journey to their deaths.
Bright blue curtains are withdrawn to reveal a viewing gallery, where officials and families of victims are separated from the prisoner by nothing but a thin pane of glass.
Executioners then place a hood and blindfold on the condemned, fit the noose around their neck and step back to pull the lever. The trapdoor is released, and gravity does the rest.
But it is the unpredictable and sudden nature of the execution process that sets Japanese executions apart from those in the US.
Unlike in the States, where death row inmates typically receive their date of execution weeks or months in advance, Japanese prisoners are often given as little as an hour's notice - a decision the UN Committee against Torture claimed causes the families additional stress.
Last week's execution of the 'hanging pro' or 'Twitter killer' - a man who preyed on vulnerable women and girls before raping and killing them in his apartment in Japan - has reignited debate over the cold and clinical execution practices.
Journalists stand outside the grey Tokyo Detention House in Katsushika, November 20, 2018. There is a chilling theatrical element to how the East Asian country hangs the condemned
Takahiro Shiraishi, known as the ' Twitter killer,' was sentenced to death in 2020 for murdering nine victims in 2017. He was also convicted of sexually abusing his female victims.
Police arrested him later that year after finding the bodies of eight teenage girls and women, as well as one man, in cold-storage cases in his apartment.
Investigators said Shiraishi styled himself as a valiant helper, providing a way out for those with suicidal thoughts or those who had attempted suicide and failed.
On Twitter - the social media platform he used to reach out to potential victims - his profile featured a manga cartoon drawing showing a man whose neck and wrist are scarred, wearing a rope around his neck.
The profile bio described his expertise in hanging and his Twitter handle was '@hangingpro'.
'I want to help people who are really in pain. Please DM me anytime,' it read.
'There must be many people in society who are suffering after attempting suicide, though their cases are not reported in the news. I want to help such people.'
He also worked to ensure his victims severed ties with friends and family members in advance of meeting them.
'It is not good to tell friends, family members and social networking sites that you are going to die before committing suicide,' he wrote in one post.
He killed the three teenage girls and five women after raping them. He also killed the boyfriend of one of the women to silence him.
'The case caused extremely serious outcomes and dealt a major shockwave and unease to society,' Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki told an emergency news conference following Shiraishi's execution.
He said he signed the execution, but did not personally witness the hanging.
On Twitter - the social media platform he used to reach out to potential victims - his profile featured a manga cartoon drawing showing a man whose neck and wrist are scarred, wearing a rope around his neck
The abrupt nature of the Japanese approach to execution was revealed in 2021 by Yoshikuni Noguchi, a lawyer and former prison officer who recounted the system to a Japanese newspaper.
Convicts are only notified they will be executed that very morning, without warning, Noguchi said.
As soon as the announcement is made, they are moved to a special room and constantly monitored by security officers to prevent any attempts at escape or suicide.
The message is then supposed to be relayed to the inmate's family - though UN reports have suggested that loved ones are only told after the condemned is confirmed dead.
Once the execution is ordered, the process is quick.
The prisoner is plucked from the 'waiting room', shackled by guards and ushered towards the execution chamber.
Once they are blindfolded and cuffed with the noose around their neck, an official gives a signal for the trapdoor to be opened.
Viewers watch as the condemned promptly drops through the floor, never to be seen again.
Below the execution chamber, their limp body dangles from a rope in a grey, tiled room.
A doctor steps in to check their pulse, and once satisfied, wipes the body clean before directing orderlies to cut them down and take them to the morgue.
Noguchi told the media how he resigned from his role as a prison officer after about four years in the job, recalling how faint he felt reflecting on his involvement in the execution of a prisoner with little more than a nod and the pull of a lever.
In January last year, another killer was sentenced to death despite calls for the death penalty to be abolished.
Yuki Endo was just 19 when the girl he liked spurned his advances in 2021.
Angry and despairing, the teenager sought revenge by targeting those closest to his muse, marching to the house of her parents in Kofu on October 12 and stabbing her 55-year-old father and 50-year-old mother to death in cold blood.
Endo then attacked the couple's second daughter with a machete, injuring her, and burned the house to the ground.
After his arrest, judges determined he was fully criminally responsible and showed no remorse for the crime, making it unlikely he could be rehabilitated in their view.
Endo also became the first person in Japan sentenced to death for a crime committed between the ages of 18 and 19 after Japan's courts brought down the legal age of adult criminal responsibility in 2022.
The change to the law was intended to get younger people to 'gain awareness of their responsibilities' and rehabilitate them more effectively.
Meanwhile, officials have opposed calls from human rights groups to end the death penalty.
Justice Minister Suzuki this week justified the need for the execution in Japan, noting a recent government survey shows an overwhelming majority of the public still supports capital punishment, though opposition has somewhat increased.
'I believe it is not appropriate to abolish execution,' Suzuki said, adding that there is growing concern about serious crime.
The case of Yuki Endo shares striking similarities with that of Tomohiro Kato, author of the atrocious 2008 Akihabara massacre.
On June 8, 2008, the then-25-year-old rented a two-ton Isuzu Elf truck and drove it into a lunchtime crowd of pedestrians at the Akihabara shopping district, killing three people.
Kato proceeded to stab onlookers with a dagger, killing four and wounding eight.
During his trial, Kato revealed that online bullying had driven him to madness.
Prosecutors painted a picture of a troubled young man who was demoralised after a girl he was talking to online abruptly cut contact after he sent a photo of himself.
His rampage prompted outcry and discussion around preventative measures that should be taken to stop angry and alienated young people from lashing out in brazen displays of indiscriminate violence.
Knife laws were tightened, and Kato was sentenced to death in 2011.
It would be another 11 years before Kato would face his penalty in the Tokyo Detention House.

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


The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
DeSantis set a Florida record for executions. It's driving a national increase
In the final moments of a life defined by violence, 60-year-old Edward Zakrzewski thanked the people of Florida for killing him "in the most cold, calculated, clean, humane, efficient way possible," breathing deeply as a lethal drug cocktail coursed through his veins. With his last breath, strapped to a gurney inside a state prison's death chamber, Zakrzewski paid what Florida had deemed was his debt to society and became the 27th person put to death in the U.S. so far this year, the highest number in a decade. Under Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida has executed nine people in 2025, more than than any other state, and set a new state record, with DeSantis overseeing more executions in a single year than any other Florida governor since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. Across the country, more people have been put to death in the first seven months of this year than in all of 2024. Florida's increase is helping put the U.S. on track to surpass 2015's total of 28 executions. And the number of executions is expected to keep climbing. Nine more people are scheduled to be put to death in seven states during the remainder of 2025. Florida drives a national increase in executions After the Supreme Court lifted its ban on capital punishment in the '70s, executions steadily increased, peaking in 1999 at 98 deaths. Since then, they had been dropping — in part due to legal battles, a shortage of lethal injection drugs, and declining public support for capital punishment, which has prompted a majority of states to either pause or abolish it altogether. The ratcheting up after this yearslong decline comes as Republican President Donald Trump has urged prosecutors to aggressively seek the death penalty and as some GOP-controlled state legislatures have pushed to expand the category of crimes punishable by death and the methods used to carry out executions. John Blume, director of the Cornell Death Penalty Project, says the uptick in executions doesn't appear to be linked to a change in public support for the death penalty or an increase in the rate of death sentences, but is rather a function of the discretion of state governors. 'The most cynical view would be: It seems to matter to the president, so it matters to them,' Blume said of the governors. 'The only appropriate punishment' In response to questions from The Associated Press, a spokesperson for DeSantis pointed to statements the governor made at a press conference in May, saying he takes capital cases 'very seriously.' 'There are some crimes that are just so horrific, the only appropriate punishment is the death penalty,' DeSantis said, adding: 'these are the worst of the worst.' Julie Andrew expressed relief after witnessing the April execution of the man who killed her sister in the Florida Keys in 2000. 'It's done,' she said. 'My heart felt lighter and I can breathe again.' The governor's office did not respond to questions about why the governor is increasing the pace of executions now and whether Trump's policies are playing a role. Deciding who lives and who dies Little is publicly known about how the governor decides whose death warrant to sign and when, a process critics have called 'secretive' and 'arbitrary.' According to the Florida Department of Corrections, there are 266 people currently on death row, including two men in their 80s, both of whom have been awaiting their court-ordered fate for more than 40 years. Speaking at the press conference in May, DeSantis said it's his 'obligation' to oversee executions, which he hopes provide 'some closure' to victims' families. 'Any time we go forward, I'm convinced that not only was the verdict correct, but that this punishment is absolutely appropriate under the circumstances,' DeSantis said. US ranks alongside Iran and Saudi Arabia for executions For years, the U.S. has ranked alongside Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Egypt as among the countries carrying out the highest number of confirmed executions. China is thought to execute more of its citizens than any other nation, although the exact totals are considered a state secret, according to the non-profit Death Penalty Information Center. Robin Maher, the center's executive director, says elected officials in the U.S. have long used the death penalty as a 'political tool,' adding it's 'a way of embellishing their own tough-on-crime credentials.' Florida executions vary year to year In 2024, DeSantis signed one death warrant. From 2020-2022, Florida didn't carry out a single execution. In 2023, DeSantis oversaw six — the highest number during his time in office until this year. 2023 was also the year the governor challenged Trump for the Republican presidential nomination. There are a number of reasons why the rate of executions may vary from one administration to the next, said Mark Schlakman, an attorney and Florida State University professor who advised then-governor Lawton Chiles on the death penalty. The availability of staff resources, the tempo of lengthy legal appeals, and court challenges against the death penalty itself can all play a role, Schlakman said, as well as a governor's 'sensibilities.' 'The one person who can stop this' One execution after another, opponents of the death penalty hold vigils in the Florida capitol, outside the governor's mansion, and near the state prison that houses the death chamber, as people of faith across the state pray for mercy, healing and justice. Suzanne Printy, a volunteer with the group Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, has hand-delivered thousands of petitions to DeSantis' office, but says they seem to have no effect. Recently, DeSantis signed death warrants for two more men scheduled to die later this month. Still, Printy keeps praying. 'He's the one person who can stop this,' she said. ___


The Independent
5 hours ago
- The Independent
Attacks in China and Japan raise concerns about xenophobia in both countries
A Japanese woman living in China was attacked and injured by a man in a Suzhou subway station, Japanese media outlets said, hours after two Chinese men were seriously injured in violence in Tokyo. The attacks on Thursday raised concern about xenophobic sentiment in both China and Japan that have been blamed for assaults in both countries. It was the third attack involving Japanese living in China since last year. In the two previous cases in China, Chinese authorities have insisted they were isolated incidents. The Japanese broadcaster NHK did not identify the woman injured in Suzhou by name but, citing the Japanese Consulate General in Shanghai, said she was with her child inside a subway station when the attack took place. The child was not injured, and the mother had returned home after reportedly getting treated at a hospital, NHK reported. A phone call to the Suzhou Police went unanswered on Friday evening, and the local police were yet to release any official statement. But the Japanese news agency Kyodo said the suspect had been detained. In Tokyo earlier Thursday, two Chinese men were seriously injured in attacks, and four male assailants wielding unspecified weapons remained at large, according to a statement released by the Chinese Embassy in Japan. The identities of the assailants were unclear. The Chinese Embassy urged the Japanese authorities to take action to catch the assailants in the Tokyo attack and to ensure the safety and legal rights of Chinese citizens in Japan 'in response to the recent surge in xenophobic sentiment in Japanese society.' In southern China last September, a 10-year-old Japanese student died after being stabbed by a Chinese man not far from the gate of the Shenzhen Japanese School in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen. The man was sentenced to death. In June 2024, a Japanese woman and her child were injured in an attack by a Chinese man, also in Suzhou. A Chinese bus attendant who tried to protect them from the attack was killed. The man was sentenced to death. On Friday, the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry in China called for Chinese authorities to ensure Japanese citizens' safety and security in China. 'It is extremely regrettable that such an incident has happened again. Ensuring the safety of employees and their families is fundamental for doing business in China,' the statement said. ___ AP writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.


BBC News
9 hours ago
- BBC News
Why Donald Trump's tariffs take aim at Asia and your iPhones
When he began his trade war, President Donald Trump said his goal was to bring American jobs and manufacturing back to the US, reduce trade deficits and create a more level playing field for American companies competing globally. But after months of negotiations and many countries' refusal to meet America's demands, his strategy has taken a more punitive companies have been here before. Under Trump's first administration, when he imposed tariffs on Chinese exports, they scrambled to limit their exposure to Beijing, with many shifting production to Vietnam, Thailand and India to avoid higher levies. But his battery of new tariffs does not spare any of these economies. Stocks saw a sell-off, with benchmark indexes in Taiwan and South Korea in the red on Friday. Both countries are central to Asia's sprawling electronics production. The details are still hazy, but US firms from Apple to Nvidia will likely be paying more for their supply chains - they source critical components from several Asian countries and assemble devices in the they are on the hook - for iPhones, chips, batteries, and scores of other tiny components that power modern lives. It's not good news for Asian economies that have grown and become richer because of exports and foreign investment - from Japanese cars to South Korean electronics to Taiwanese chips. Soaring demand for all these goods fuelled trade surpluses with Washington over the years - and has driven President Trump's charge that Asian manufacturing has been taking American jobs away. In May, Trump told Apple CEO Tim Cook: "We put up with all the plants you built in China for years... we are not interested in you building in India, India can take care of themselves." Apple earns roughly half its revenue by selling iPhones that are manufactured in China, Vietnam and India. The tech giant reported bumper earnings for the three months to June, hours before Trump's tariff announcement on Thursday night, but now the future looks more executive Tim Cook told analysts on a conference call that tariffs had already cost Apple $800m (£600m) in the previous quarter, and may add $1.1bn in costs to the next quarter. Tech companies typically plan years ahead, but Trump's unpredictable tariff policy has paralysed businesses. Amazon's online marketplace, for instance, is just as dependent on China for what it sells in the US. But it's not yet clear what rates Chinese imports into the US could face because Beijing has yet to strike a deal with Washington - it has until 12 August to do so. Before they agreed to de-escalate, the two sides imposed tit-for-tat tariffs that reached a staggering 145% on some goods. But it's no longer just about China. On Thursday, Mr Cook said that most iPhones sold in the US now come from India. But Trump has just levelled a 25% tariff on Indian imports, after Delhi was unable to clinch a deal in time. Other firms chose to re-route their goods bound for the US through Vietnam and Thailand after the tariffs in Trump's first term. It became so common that it was called the "China+1" strategy. But this time, these trans-shipped goods are also being targeted. In fact, trans-shipping has been a big part of the US negotiations with Asian countries. Vietnamese imports face a 20% US levy but trans-shipped goods face 40%, according to Trump. It's harder still for advanced manufacturing like semiconductors - more than half of the world's chips, and most of its advanced ones, come from Taiwan. It is now subject to a 20% tariff. Chips are the backbone of Taiwan's economy, but also central to US efforts to gain a technological lead over China. So it is another US company, Nvidia, that will pay steep levies to put advanced chips by Taiwan's TSMC inside its AI products. But perhaps the biggest casualty of Trump's tariffs could well be Asia's e-commerce giants - as well as the American companies that rely on Chinese sellers and marketplaces. In a surprise move this week, Trump ditched the "de minimis" rule which exempted parcels under $800 from customs duties. He first did this in May, targeting such parcels from China and Hong Kong - and this was a blow for retailers like Shein and Temu, whose huge success has come from online sales in the West. Now American sites like eBay and Etsy have also lost that exemption - and the price of second-hand, vintage and handmade items for US customers will go up. President Trump says he is batting for Americans with these tariffs, but in a deeply globalised world, US firms and customers could also become casualties. There is still so much uncertainty that it is hard to see who the winners really are.