He spent 46 years on death row, making him the world's longest-serving death row inmate.
The compensation amounts to 12,500 yen ($83) for each day that the 89-year-old spent in detention, making it the highest payout of its kind in Japan.....
Hakamada, a former boxer, was exonerated last year of a 1966 quadruple murder after years of campaigning by his sister and supporters.
He was convicted of robbing and murdering his boss, the man’s wife, and their two teenage children.
During his trial, he maintained his innocence, saying his confession was coerced.
His case drew international attention to Japan’s criminal justice system, where retrials are rare and death row inmates are often notified of their executions just hours before they are carried out.
In a latest decision the Shizuoka District Court ruled that “the claimant shall be granted 217,362,500 yen ($1.44 million),” a court spokesperson told AFP.
The same court had acquitted Hakamada in September, ruling that police had tampered with evidence. The court also noted that he had endured "inhumane interrogations meant to force a statement (confession),” which he later retracted.
Hakamada’s legal team welcomed the compensation but argued that it was insufficient given the suffering he endured from his 1966 arrest to his 2014 release when he was granted a retrial.
Decades on death row—living under the constant threat of execution—have significantly affected Hakamada’s mental health, his lawyers said, describing him as “living in a world of fantasy.”
Hakamada now lives with his sister, supported by activists and legal advocates.
from AFP
Wow!
ReplyDeleteThe compensation is truly insufficient!
My thoughts exactly! The compensation doesn’t come close to making up for the years he unjustly spent behind bars. He has lost some of the most valuable years of his life, time that can never be returned, suffering for a crime he didn’t even commit! Offering him $1.4 million as compensation almost feels insulting when compared to the pain, missed opportunities, and emotional toll he endured. No amount of money can truly restore what was taken from him, but I pray this is just one part of a much larger effort to support and properly compensate him.
DeleteThe amount of money given doesn't commensurate the number of years he jas spent for what he know nothing about..
ReplyDeleteThe wasted years, money can never replace them....at least he was vindicated.All the best to him.
ReplyDeleteOmo.....46years in jail for a crime he didn''t commit
ReplyDeleteThank God he was spared from an unjust execution but the compensation is nothing compared to all the wasted years he spent in prison
ReplyDeleteJapan really cheap. a whole lifetime is worth only that? Mtsscchhwww
ReplyDelete