Yokohama
A Japanese court hands down its verdict Monday in the case of a man accused of murdering 19 disabled people at a care home in 2016, in one of the country’s worst mass killings.
Satoshi Uematsu, a former employee at the facility, does not dispute his involvement in the grisly stabbing rampage that shocked Japan where violent crime is rare. He faces the death penalty if convicted.
His lawyers have entered a plea of not guilty, arguing the 30-year-old was suffering a ‘mental disorder’ linked to his use of marijuana.
But prosecutors say Uematsu was capable of taking responsibility for the attack at the Tsukui Yamayuri-en centre in Sagamihara town outside Tokyo and should be executed for his crimes.
The rampage was ‘inhumane’ and left ‘no room for leniency’, prosecutors argued last month.
Uematsu’s behaviour in court, including apparently trying to put something in his mouth, disrupted proceedings in the first hearing in January, with the judge calling a recess and then resuming without him.
He faces six charges including murder and has reportedly said he will not appeal whatever decision the court hands down.
But he has also defended himself, arguing his actions do not deserve the death penalty.
Long lines formed outside the court in Yokohama, outside Tokyo, for seats inside when the trial opened in January.
But space was expected to be more limited for the verdict, with new rules intended to limit the spread of the coronavirus requiring spectators sit apart, possibly leaving an empty seat between them.
Uematsu has reportedly said he wanted to eradicate all disabled people in the horrifying attack that also left 26 people wounded.
He turned himself in to police after the assault, carrying bloodied knives.—APP