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  1. death for 24 defendants, and as of April 12, 17 defendants out of 24 have been sentenced to death. This means that in more than 70% of all the capital cases (70.83%), prosecutors achieved the death penalty.

  2. Japans lay judge system requires only a majority of a nine-judge panel, and not a unanimous decision, to determine guilt and impose a death sentence, as long as at least one of the three professional judges agrees. Finally, Japan does not have a mandatory appeal system for death sentences.

  3. the Japanese population demand the death penalty and would never accept its abolition is dubious, over-stated, and a result of policies that surround the death penalty with much secrecy. In early 2008, following the resolution at the UN General Assembly in December 2007 to call for a universal

  4. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. Since Japan’s 2017 Universal Periodic Review, despite a brief respite from 2019 to 2021, Japan has continued to carry out executions and sentence people to death. Japan’s Penal Code does not limit the death penalty to the most serious crimes. Defendants can be sentenced to death

  5. The Death Penalty: Summary of Concerns. The use of the death penalty in Japan is a major concern for Amnesty International. Some 90 people are currently imprisoned under sentence of death. Fifty-three of these sentences have been confirmed by the Supreme Court and the prisoners concerned can therefore be executed at any time.

  6. Mar 13, 2012 · In 2011, Japan for the first time in 19 years carried out no executions, and the number of convicts on death row reached its highest level ever. Law professor Kawai Mikio analyzes the degree of...

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  8. At least 87 prisoners currently remain on death row in Japan. The last execution took place on 16 September 2005, when Kitagawa Susumu was hanged for two murders committed in the 1980s.