
On April 28, Mainichi Shimbun reported that Satoshi Uematsu, the 32-year-old man convicted in 2020 of killing 19 people at a facility for the disabled in Sagamihara, Kanagawa Prefecture, had applied to the Yokohama District Court for a retrial. Mainichi’s scoop, as it has been called, was quickly picked up by other media who looked around for a motive, because two years ago he had rejected his lawyer’s decision to appeal his death penalty sentence, thus giving the impression that he accepted both the verdict and the sentence. The application for retrial, which the Yokohama District Court is now studying, thus came as a complete surprise, and one that has so far had no explanation.
One of the first persons the media contacted was Hiroyuki Shinoda, the editor of the monthly magazine So and one of the journalists who was in close contact with Uematsu during his trial. If anyone could shed light on Uematsu’s motives for changing his mind and pursuing a retrial it would be Shinoda, but as he explained in detail in a May 2 post for Yahoo! News, he hasn’t been in touch with Uematsu since the end of the trial in the spring of 2020, though not for want of trying. Though the two haven’t subsequently communicated directly, he has been trying to find a lawyer who might take his case in order to apply for a retrial, but has been unsuccessful, so he was just as shocked as the rest of the media when he read the Mainichi article. “Somehow,” wrote Shinoda, “he had found another route to apply for a retrial.” Consequently, Shinoda had nothing to say to the dozens of reporters who called him up following the Mainichi scoop, which isn’t to say he didn’t have an opinion about it.
At the moment, he says, he doesn’t know who is representing Uematsu, and then goes on to explain his own efforts between March 2020, when Uematsu decided to forego an appeal, and June 2020, when he lost touch with him. He says that once a death sentence is finalized, the condemned is not permitted to have visits with anyone except family and lawyers who are handling the person’s case, and since Uematsu refused to appeal his sentence he basically has had no visitors except family, whom Shinoda doesn’t talk about anyway. An exception to this rule is “acquaintances” (chijin), but they have to be approved by both the prisoner and the prison authorities. Shinoda is famous for his reporting on suspected and convicted killers, especially those on death row. In past cases, he has continued to meet with such people while they were on death row in order to document their crimes and thoughts. However, in Uematsu’s case he has been repeatedly denied access, and that seems to be the decision of the Tokyo Detention Center, where Uematsu is being held.
Continue reading







