Man sentenced to hang says he will search for meaning of his death: interview
SENDAI -- A 24-year-old man who was handed a death sentence for murdering two women and injuring a man said he would like to "search for the meaning of my death" until the day of his execution, during a recent interview with the Mainichi Shimbun at a detention center here.
The man, who was 18 at the time of the incident, sneaked into his ex-girlfriend's home in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, with an accomplice in February 2010 to try to get her back. He stabbed his ex-girlfriend's 20-year-old sister and an 18-year-old friend to death, and seriously injured the sister's male friend. The Supreme Court in June this year upheld lower court rulings sentencing him to death, marking the first time that a death sentence handed down in a lay judge trial to a defendant who was a minor at the time of the crime has been finalized.
During an interview with the Mainichi at a branch of the Sendai detention house, the 24-year-old said, "I'm hoping that my death will be a constructive one. I'd like to search for the meaning of my death until the day I'm executed."
Looking back on the some six years from the incident to the Supreme Court ruling, the 24-year-old said, "While I thought about standing up on my own legs again along with those who wished for my rehabilitation, I had mixed emotions when thinking about the feelings of the bereaved families," who wanted the death sentence.
Around the time the case was being tried at the Sendai District Court in 2010, he said he desired to die, but said, "I wouldn't be able to atone for anything just by killing myself. I thought about relinquishing the idea of hurting others, and I've felt remorse over the victims and their families. I'm not going to let go of all those feelings because of the death sentence."
With regard to the Juvenile Act, which prohibits giving the death sentence to those aged under 18 and prioritizes rehabilitation, the 24-year-old said, "The way one controls their actions and emotions is different between teenagers and those in their 40s. If the feelings of the victims and their families can be set aside, that point must be given consideration." He added calmly, "Considering the feelings and anger of the bereaved families, I would grant their wishes if I was a judge. Even minors should be tried the same way (as adults)."
While the man consistently denied that the killings were premeditated, the Supreme Court ruled, "He decided that he wouldn't hesitate to kill someone who got in the way" of his attempt to win back his ex-girlfriend.
During the interview with the Mainichi, he expressed distrust of the judicial proceedings, saying, "I feel saddened by the way the ruling was handed down and the case was tried." However, he said that, once the Supreme Court had confirmed his sentence, he became more aware that there would come a day when he would be executed.
"If (capital punishment) works to deter incidents in which people are killed, that sentence may be constructive. I'd like to search for the meaning of my death so that I can die with pure feelings," he said.
Not sure how I feel about the death sentence myself. I believe that society must take responsibility for their failures as well as their successes. I have some experience with incarceration and homelessness and have seen the underbelly of society up close. I met a lot of people that did not deserve their fate and some that did. Some animals need to be put down because they cannot be trusted to act in a civilized manner and are a danger to others. Some infections must be removed from the body in order for it to heal. What this person did was pretty reprehensible and unforgivable. Does one who sentences others to death have the right to complain about a similar sentence for himself? then again is society best served by his death? Has he not some better use? tough moral dilemmas.