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Japan’s prosecutors again seek death penalty for ex-boxer, 88, over 1968 murder saga

  • Iwao Hakamada, now 88, spent 46 years on death row – a stretch recognised by the Guinness World Records – after being convicted in 1968 of murdering a family
  • He was freed in 2014 and a retrial was ordered. The retrial began last year and the court is due to announce the verdict in late September

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Iwao Hakamada, now 88, spent 46 years on death row – a stretch recognised by the Guinness World Records – after being convicted in 1968 of murdering a family. Photo: AFP

Japanese prosecutors again sought the death penalty in the retrial on Wednesday of an ex-boxer who was the world’s longest-serving death row prisoner until his release in 2014.

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Iwao Hakamada, now 88, spent 46 years on death row – a stretch recognised by the Guinness World Records – after being convicted in 1968 of murdering a family.

He was freed in 2014 and a retrial was ordered after a court said investigators could have planted evidence, sparking relief among his supporters who included other boxers and the rights group Amnesty International.

However, prosecutors argued at the retrial in Shizuoka, south of Tokyo, that Hakamada’s guilt could be proven “beyond reasonable doubt”, the Asahi newspaper daily said.

Defence lawyers are seeking an acquittal for Hakamada, whose case has become a famous saga in Japan.

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Japanese man who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate to hear fate in 58-year-old case

Japanese man who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate to hear fate in 58-year-old case

“I believe Iwao is innocent,” his sister Hideko Hakamada, 91, said on Wednesday.

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