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Jul 16
2008
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77 percent in favor of abolishing statute of limitations on murder in JapanPosted by Tomoko in Untagged |
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Seventy-seven percent of people in Japan think that the statute of limitations on murders should be abolished, a Mainichi poll has found.
Under Japan's current statute of limitations, legal proceedings cannot be initiated for murder cases after 15 years, or 25 years for murders committed after 2005.
However, 77 percent of respondents in the Mainichi poll said the statute should be eliminated for murder, while just 15 percent said it should be kept. By gender, 75 percent of males and 78 percent of females were in favor of abolishment.
Under a 2004 revision to the Code of Criminal Procedure, the statute of limitations on murders that occurred from 2005 onwards was increased to 25 years. The period on outstanding cases remained at 15 years so as not to cause sudden unfairness to people accused in crimes. However, 68 percent of the people questioned in the telephone survey said they thought it was strange for the time period to be split depending on when the murder was committed. Only 21 percent said the difference stood to reason.
The adoption of a U.S.-style John Doe charge system for crimes such as rape -- under which charges can be filed without knowing a person's identity if DNA evidence is left at the scene, thereby halting the statute of limitations -- was supported by 69 percent of respondents, while 15 percent said such a system should not be implemented.
In May this year, the National Association of Crime Victims and Surviving Families approached the Liberal Democratic Party's Research Commission on the Judiciary System over abolishment of the statute of limitations on murders.
The issue came into focus recently when Kazuyoshi Miura, 60, was taken into custody by U.S. authorities in Saipan in February over a shooting in Los Angeles that occurred about 27 years earlier, and it was reported that for heinous crimes in the United States there is no statute of limitations.
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