When a court docket declared Iwao Hakamata harmless in September, the world’s longest-serving dying row inmate appeared unable to grasp, a lot much less savour the second.
“I instructed him he was acquitted, and he was silent,” Hideko Hakamata, his 91-year-old sister, tells the BBC at her residence in Hamamatsu, Japan.
“I could not inform whether or not he understood or not.”
Hideko had been preventing for her brother’s retrial ever since he was convicted of quadruple homicide in 1968.
In September 2024, on the age of 88, he was lastly acquitted – ending Japan’s longest working authorized saga.
Mr Hakamata’s case is exceptional. However it additionally shines a light-weight on the systemic brutality underpinning Japan’s justice system, the place dying row inmates are solely notified of their hanging a couple of hours prematurely, and spend years uncertain whether or not every day might be their final.
Human rights consultants have lengthy condemned such remedy as merciless and inhuman, saying it exacerbates prisoners’ danger of creating a critical psychological sickness.
And greater than half a lifetime spent in solitary confinement, ready to be executed for against the law he did not commit, took a heavy toll on Mr Hakamata.
Since being granted a retrial and launched from jail in 2014, he has lived beneath Hideko’s shut care.
After we arrive on the condo he’s on his day by day outing with a volunteer group that helps the 2 aged siblings. He’s anxious round strangers, Hideko explains, and has been in “his personal world” for years.
“Possibly it might’t be helped,” she says. “That is what occurs if you end up locked up and crammed in a small jail cell for greater than 40 years.
“They made him reside like an animal.”
Life on dying row
A former skilled boxer, Iwao Hakamata was working at a miso processing plant when the our bodies of his boss, the person’s spouse and their two teenage kids had been discovered. All 4 had been stabbed to dying.
Authorities accused Mr Hakamata of murdering the household, setting their home in Shizuoka alight and stealing 200,000 yen (£199; $556) in money.
“We had no thought what was happening,” Hideko says of the day in 1966 when police got here to arrest her brother.
The household residence was searched, in addition to the properties of their two elder sisters, and Mr Hakamata was taken away.
He initially denied all prices, however later gave what he got here to explain as a coerced confession following beatings and interrogations that lasted as much as 12 hours a day.
Two years after his arrest, Mr Hakamata was convicted of homicide and arson and sentenced to dying. It was when he was moved to a cell on dying row that Hideko observed a shift in his manner.
One jail go to specifically stands out.
“He instructed me, ‘there was an execution yesterday – it was an individual within the subsequent cell’,” she remembers. “He instructed me to take care – and from then on, he fully modified mentally and have become very quiet.”
Mr Hakamata will not be the one one to be broken by life on Japan’s dying row, the place inmates wake every morning not figuring out if it will likely be their final.
“Between 08:00 and 08:30 within the morning was essentially the most vital time, as a result of that was typically when prisoners had been notified of their execution,” Menda Sakae, who spent 34 years on dying row earlier than being exonerated, wrote in a e book about his expertise.
“You start to really feel essentially the most horrible anxiousness, as a result of you do not know if they’ll cease in entrance of your cell. It’s not possible to precise how terrible a sense this was.”
James Welsh, lead writer of a 2009 Amnesty Worldwide report into circumstances on dying row, famous that “the day by day menace of imminent dying is merciless, inhuman and degrading”. The report concluded that inmates had been prone to “important psychological well being points”.
Hideko might solely watch as her personal brother’s psychological well being deteriorated because the years glided by.
“As soon as he requested me ‘Have you learnt who I’m?’ I stated, ‘Sure, I do. You might be Iwao Hakamata’. ‘No,’ he stated, ‘you should be right here to see a distinct individual’. And he simply went again [to his cell].”
Hideko stepped up as his major spokesperson and advocate. It wasn’t till 2014, nonetheless, that there was a breakthrough in his case.
A key piece of proof in opposition to Mr Hakamata had been red-stained garments present in a miso tank at his office.
They had been recovered a 12 months and two months after the murders and the prosecution stated they belonged to him. However for years Mr Hakamata’s defence staff argued that the DNA recovered from the garments didn’t match his – and alleged that the proof was planted.
In 2014 they had been capable of persuade a choose to launch him from jail and grant him a retrial.
Extended authorized proceedings meant it took till final October for the retrial to start. When it lastly did, it was Hideko who appeared in court docket, pleading for her brother’s life.
Mr Hakamata’s destiny hinged on the stains, and particularly how they’d aged.
The prosecution had claimed the stains had been reddish when the garments had been recovered – however the defence argued that blood would have turned blackish after being immersed in miso for therefore lengthy.
That was sufficient to persuade presiding choose Koshi Kunii, who declared that “the investigating authority had added blood stains and hid the gadgets within the miso tank nicely after the incident passed off”.
Decide Kunii additional discovered that different proof had been fabricated, together with an investigation report, and declared Mr Hakamata harmless.
Hideko’s first response was to cry.
“When the choose stated that the defendant will not be responsible, I used to be elated; I used to be in tears,” she says. “I’m not a tearful individual, however my tears simply flowed with out stopping for about an hour.”
Hostage justice
The court docket’s conclusion that proof in opposition to Mr Hakamata was fabricated raises troubling questions.
Japan has a 99% conviction price, and a system of so-called “hostage justice” which, based on Kanae Doi, Japan director at Human Rights Watch, “denies folks arrested their rights to a presumption of innocence, a immediate and truthful bail listening to, and entry to counsel throughout questioning”.
“These abusive practices have resulted in lives and households being torn aside, in addition to wrongful convictions,” Ms Doi famous in 2023.
David T Johnson, a professor of sociology on the College of Hawaii at Manoa, whose analysis focuses on felony justice in Japan, has adopted the Hakamata case for the final 30 years.
He stated one cause it dragged on is that “vital proof for the defence was not disclosed to them till round 2010”.
The failure was “egregious and inexcusable”, Mr Johnson instructed the BBC. “Judges saved kicking the case down the highway, as they often do in response to retrial petitions (as a result of) they’re busy, and the legislation permits them to take action.”
Hideko says the core of the injustice was the compelled confession and the coercion her brother suffered.
However Mr Johnson says false accusations do not occur due to a single mistake. As an alternative, they’re compounded by failings in any respect ranges – from the police proper by to the prosecutors, courts and parliament.
“Judges have the final phrase,” he added. “When a wrongful conviction happens, it’s, in the long run, as a result of they stated so. All too usually, the accountability of judges for producing and sustaining wrongful convictions will get uncared for, elided, and ignored.”
In opposition to that backdrop, Mr Hakamata’s acquittal was a watershed – a uncommon second of retrospective justice.
After declaring Mr Hakamata harmless, the choose presiding over his retrial apologised to Hideko for the way lengthy it took to attain justice.
A short time later, Takayoshi Tsuda, chief of Shizuoka police, visited her residence and bowed in entrance of each brother and sister.
“For the previous 58 years… we triggered you indescribable anxiousness and burden,” Mr Tsuda stated. “We’re really sorry.”
Hideko gave an sudden reply to the police chief.
“We consider that every thing that occurred was our future,” she stated. “We won’t complain about something now.”
The pink door
After practically 60 years of tension and heartache, Hideko has styled her residence with the specific intention of letting some gentle in. The rooms are shiny and alluring, crammed with photos of her and Iwao alongside household mates and supporters.
Hideko laughs as she shares reminiscences of her “cute” little brother as a child, leafing by black-and-white household images.
The youngest of six siblings, he appears to all the time be standing subsequent to her.
“We had been all the time collectively after we had been kids,” she explains. “I all the time knew I needed to maintain my little brother. And so, it continues.”
She walks into Mr Hakamata’s room and introduces their ginger cat, which occupies the chair he usually sits in. Then she factors to photos of him as a younger skilled boxer.
“He wished to turn out to be a champion,” she says. “Then the incident occurred.”
After Mr Hakamata was launched in 2014, Hideko wished to make the condo as shiny as potential, she explains. So she painted the entrance door pink.
“I believed that if he was in a shiny room and had a cheerful life, he would naturally get nicely.”
It is the very first thing one notices when visiting Hideko’s condo, this shiny pink assertion of hope and resilience.
It is unclear whether or not it has labored – Mr Hakamata nonetheless paces forwards and backwards for hours, simply as he did for years in a jail cell the dimensions of three single tatami mats.
However Hideko refuses to linger on the query of what their lives might need regarded like if not for such an egregious miscarriage of justice.
When requested who she blames for her brother’s struggling, she replies: “no-one”.
“Complaining about what occurred will get us nowhere.”
Her precedence now’s to maintain her brother snug. She shaves his face, massages his head, slices apples and apricots for his breakfast every morning.
Hideko, who has spent the vast majority of her 91 years preventing for her brother’s freedom, says this was their destiny.
“I do not need to take into consideration the previous. I do not know the way lengthy I’ll reside,” she says. “I simply need Iwao to reside a peaceable and quiet life.”
Extra reporting by Chika Nakayama