FEATURED
Furuta Junko: The Horrific Murder That Tested Japan
How the case of Furuta Junko led Japan's press to break the rules, and citizens to question the country's juvenile criminal law.
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Japan's reputation as one of the world's safest countries sits uneasily alongside the stories collected here. This hub covers crime, criminal justice, and the legal landscape in Japan - arrests, court cases, legislative changes, and the social conditions that produce them. The cases range from individual acts of violence to systemic failures in law enforcement and prosecution, from organized crime to the gray-zone industries that blur the line between legal hustle and exploitation.
What separates our coverage from crime blotter journalism is attention to structure. When we report an arrest or a verdict, we're also asking what the law does and doesn't protect, and who falls through the gaps. Japan's 99.9 percent conviction rate isn't a statistic we cite as reassurance; it's a question about interrogation tactics, coerced confessions, and a judicial system that rarely acquits. For example, was an engineer killed by cancer - or because of aggressive prosecutors who accused him of making a biological weapon?
The themes we return to most often: the persistent inadequacy of Japan's stalking laws, tested against case after case of preventable violence against women; the expanding reach of yami-baito - social media-recruited dark gig work funneling young people into organized theft rings; the host club industry's predatory debt practices and the legislation beginning to address them; and the offline consequences of online dynamics, from livestreamed violence to social media-driven sex tourism. Across all of it, we pay close attention to how victims are framed - and whether public sympathy lands where it belongs.
FEATURED
How the case of Furuta Junko led Japan's press to break the rules, and citizens to question the country's juvenile criminal law.
LAW & CRIME
In Japan, married couples must share the same surname. A growing chorus of voices says it's time for that to change.
LAW & CRIME
Critics in Japan are calling out their country's judicial system after a series of rape cases are thrown out - and one…
LAW & CRIME
A new form of financial swindle targeting Japan's elderly is racking up victims - and bodies.
LAW & CRIME
An Osaka man who used his newfound powers for evil has been arrested by local police for a series of daring -…
LAW & CRIME
A Net backlash in Japan swells with news that several students of well-connected families at Keio University won't face multiple charges of…
LAW & CRIME
The prolonged detention of Carlos Ghosn has led to scrutiny of Japan's 99.9% conviction rate - and the tactics used to maintain…
LAW & CRIME
50 years ago, someone managed to steal 300 million yen without firing a shot. Was it, as some say, the perfect crime?