Head of Japan's Kudo-kai crime syndicate sentenced to death
A court in western Japan has sentenced the head of a
notorious crime syndicate to death for killing or injuring four people.
The death sentence is believed to be the first handed down
to a yakuza leader.
The Kudo-kai group, based in Kitakyushu City, Fukuoka
Prefecture, has been designated by authorities as a particularly dangerous
gangster organization.
Its members shot dead a former head of a fishing cooperative
and assaulted three people, including a former police officer and a nurse, with
guns and knives between 1998 and 2014.
Police attempted to take down the group. They arrested its
head Nomura Satoru on charges including murder.
Nomura's trial focused on whether he ordered the attacks.
Prosecutors had no direct evidence that Nomura did so, but
stressed his absolute status in the organization and said he masterminded the
attacks against members of the general public. They demanded that Nomura be
sentenced to death.
The defendant denied involvement in the crimes.
His defense team described the prosecution's claims as
groundless speculation that ignored evidence.
At the Fukuoka District Court on Tuesday, presiding judge
Adachi Ben ruled that Nomura was involved in all four cases, saying the attacks
could not have been carried out without his decision in the tightly controlled
crime syndicate.
The judge sentenced Nomura to death, calling his actions
extremely vicious.
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