How
long must the guilty wait to hang?
For
Japan's oldest death row inmate, execution has meant life
in prison
The
Japan Times: Saturday, Feb. 1, 2003
By KAHO
SHIMIZU
Staff
writer
Sentenced
to death for killing a farmer to claim an insurance payout
in 1963, Tsuneki Tomiyama played his last card in early
December when he and his support group filed a clemency
plea.
At 85, Tomiyama is the oldest man on Japan's death row. As
of the end of December, there were 57 people waiting for
the day their death sentences would be carried out.
"We were preparing to seek a retrial (for the third time),
but since Tomiyama was moved to a prison hospital and his
health is getting worse, we thought we would rather apply
for clemency," said Michio Shinohara, who has supported
Tomiyama for more than 35 years because he believes he is
innocent.
Tomiyama's supporters are hoping that judicial authorities
will approve the leniency petition and reduce his sentence.
This would allow Tomiyama to leave prison before his health
completely deteriorates.
Experts say it normally takes five to six years between
sentencing someone to death and the execution, but after
more than 26 years on death row Tomiyama is still in Tokyo
Detention House, awaiting his final day.
His supporters have now framed the question in humanitarian
terms -- will Tomiyama even have to face the death penalty
at his age?
Tomiyama's fate -- whether he walks free or is detained
until he dies -- is in the hands of the judicial
authorities. Their decision is expected to affect the fate
of other elderly death row inmates in Japan.
His death sentence was finalized by the Supreme Court in
1976. Tomiyama did not confess to the killing and the
evidence was not convincing, Shinohara said, adding that
the judgment was based purely on circumstantial evidence.
Shinohara visits Tomiyama once a month. He described
Tomiyama's health as critical, saying he complains of
headaches, poor eyesight and no appetite, and is confined
to a wheelchair.
In reply to an inquiry about Tomiyama's health, prison
officials said he has high blood pressure, suffers
arteriosclerosis and renal insufficiency and is undergoing
dialysis, adding that he can no longer stand.
His supporters and lawyers hastily prepared the petition
because they feared Tomiyama might end up like other
inmates on death row who ended up dying of old age.
Although those deaths have triggered debate over what
should happen to elderly inmates on death row, there has
been no change.
"The government should have learned from past experiences
and taken the appropriate measures" when they faced a
similar situation more than a decade ago, said Chuo
University law professor Toyo citing the case of Sadamichi
Hirasawa, who died in 1987 at the age of 95 while still
awaiting execution.
Hirasawa's case attracted a great deal of public attention
because he was convicted of the 1948 Teigin (Teikoku Bank)
robbery and murders that ended with 12 people dying of
poisoning -- one of Japan's most unforgettable and heinous
crimes.
Hirasawa and his supporters maintained his innocence,
seeking a retrial 18 times and petitioning for leniency
five times.
Even though justice authorities denied every appeal, Atsumi
believes the continuous appeals were effective in forcing
the Justice Ministry to hesitate before giving the final
go-ahead for his execution.
The Code of Criminal Procedure stipulates that the justice
minister must give the order for a prisoner to be hanged
within six months after a death sentence is finalized.
However, the law also says the ministry can delay execution
pending any retrial or clemency appeals.
This clause does not stop the justice ministry from
carrying out a death sentence, but it is widely
acknowledged that seeking a retrial or appealing for
leniency affects the ministry's attitude, Atsumi said.
On the other hand, Atsumi added, Hirasawa and his
supporters' continuous appeals for a retrial were dismissed
because they were unable to provide new evidence that could
overturn his conviction.
The case was effectively in limbo, leading to Hirasawa
being detained in prison until he died, 32 years after his
death sentence was finalized.
"No one would have expected a death-row prisoner to be
detained for such a long period of time, and this is a case
that goes beyond the limits of the rule of law," argued
Chuo University's Atsumi.
Atsumi is convinced that the only way to break the impasse
is to have authorities reduce the convict's sentence by
acting on a clemency plea.
Under the current system, a convict can obtain a pardon or
leniency if the Cabinet approves the application following
a screening process at the National Offenders
Rehabilitation Commission, a justice ministry panel.
But, in reality, since World War II it has been extremely
rare for inmates on death row to obtain a reduced sentence
or a pardon.
Meiji University law professor Koichi Kikuta, who campaigns
for the abolition of the death penalty, points out a
paradox involving retrial appeals and leniency petitions
that keeps authorities from approving clemency.
"If a convict is to obtain leniency, the prisoner must
confess and express remorse" because it is usually
understood by justice authorities that a leniency petition
is accepted only if the convict admits to the crime and
expresses remorse, Kikuta said.
Though Kikuta dislikes this standard, it is widely
acknowledged that it would be logically inconsistent for
the condemned person to apply for leniency while still
claiming to be innocent.
This is apparently another reason why Hirasawa's petitions
for clemency were denied, Kikuta added.
This theory is what concerns the supporters of the nation's
oldest convict on death row.
"When I suggested to Tomiyama to apply for clemency about
three years ago, he said he would not do it because he is
innocent," said Shinohara.
Some of Tomiyama's supporters are less than optimistic that
the appeal will succeed.
They even say that campaigning instead to abolish or
suspend the death penalty might be easier, Shinohara added.
A group of Diet members opposed to the death penalty is now
working on a bill that would place a moratorium on
hangings, with the eventual aim of ending the death penalty
altogether.
But Tomiyama's lawyers and supporters finally decided to
apply for leniency because they believe Tomiyama's
declining health means there is little time to lose.
Lawyer Toshiyuki Satake, who is involved in Tomiyama's
application for leniency, says it is not legally binding
for a prisoner who petitions for clemency to plead guilty.
The U.N. Economic and Social Council adopted a resolution
in May 1989 urging member states that still retain the
death penalty to establish a maximum age beyond which a
person may not be sentenced to death or the execution
carried out.
Although Japan does not set a limit on a criminal's age for
execution, experts believe Tomiyama is too old to be
hanged.
They also claim that detaining a person of such advanced
years is cruel from a humanitarian point of view.
"The clemency system should be a remedy for an aging
criminal on death row (like Tomiyama), whose health is
declining and is facing death in prison," said Satake.
The
Japan Times: Saturday, Feb. 1, 2003
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