So, Roger got me thinking ...
The June 8 incident in Akihabara, in which seven people died, was the worst street stabbing in Japan since the war but, according to the National Police Agency, there have been 67 such "daredemo daijobu" ("anyone will do") knife frenzies in the last ten years.
The Akihabara attacks occurred seven years to the day since 37-year-old former janitor Mamoru Takuma walked into Ikeda Primary School in Osaka prefecture armed with a kitchen knife and began randomly stabbing school children and teachers. He killed eight children, mostly between the ages of seven and eight, and seriously wounded thirteen others and two teachers.
The 'High Score' still belongs to Mutsuo Toi however:

On the evening of 20 May 1938 21-year-old Toi cut the main electricity line to his village of Kaio, close to Tsuyama city in Okayama prefecture, leaving the community in darkness and without telephones. Before embarking on his rampage, at around 1:30am on 21 May, he first killed his 76-year-old grandmother by decapitating her with an axe. He then strapped two electric torches to his head and prowled through the village, entering the homes of his neighbours and proceeding to kill 29 of them over the course of an hour and a half, using a shotgun, a sword and an axe, finally shooting himself at dawn. This was almost half of the residents of the small community, and the incident became known as The Tsuyama massacre. Until the 1982 killing by Korean policeman Woo 'Power' Bum-kon (58 dead, 35 wounded) it was regarded as the world’s worst spree killing by an individual.
Yes, it's true that there are currently upwards of 30,000 suicides a year in Japan (new figures out Friday put the 2007 total at 33,093 - 10% of them in their 20s, and over 500 of them aged 19 or under), but there are murders too
- and some of them are fascinating.
Who can forget Sada Abe who erotically asphyxiated her lover Kichizo Ishida on May 18 1936, then cut off his penis and testicles and carried them around with her in her handbag?
The lovers' story was immortalized in Nagisa Oshima's 1976 film "Ai No Korida"
("In The Realm Of The Senses"/"L'Empire Des Sens").
Here we see Ms. Abe enjoying a joke with some policemen shortly after her arrest:

Or Issei Sagawa

who, whilst a student in Paris in 1981 (okay, so not actually IN Japan), killed - and subsequently ate portions of - his Dutch girlfriend. "When I met this woman in the street," he later said to British reporter Peter McGill, "I wondered if I could eat her." Owing to some confusion between the French and Japanese authorities Sagawa was freed shortly after his repatriation to Japan, where he then became something of a celebrity.
And hanged here this last Tuesday, June 17, (the 13th death row prisoner to be executed since last August, and the 10th so far this year) was Tsutomu Miyazaki,
the 'Otaku Murderer':

For his story please refer directly to Wikipedia :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsutomu_Miyazaki It's not pleasant reading. This guy was truly a monster, acting out what he saw in horror movies (including the 'Guinea Piggu' series), and posting the charred remains of his child victims back to their parents.
You have been warned.
Most of the following have occurred since I've been here:
The Tokyo Subway Sarin Gas Attack carried out by members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult in which 12 people died and over 1000 were injured. Three cult members are still wanted in connection with this attack and the cult is known to have been involved in other incidents, most notably the murder of a prominent lawyer and his family.
The case of Futoshi Matsunaga and his accomplice Junko Ogata:


Another real-life horror story :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futoshi_Matsunaga Called "Japan's most heinous criminal ... without comparison in the criminal history of our country", Matsunaga's crimes were so atrocious that most mass media were not willing to report the details at the time.
... And seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.
The Wakayama curry poisoning: Four people (including two children) were killed and 63 injured after eating curry laced with arsenic at a community festival in Wakayama prefecture. A woman, Masumi Hayashi, was arrested and sentenced to death based on circumstantial evidence, but she has never confessed.
The still (technically) unresolved Lucy Blackman case.
The sexual assault and murder of Kaede Ariyama, a seven year old first-grade student from the city of Nara, by Kaoru Kobayashi, a newspaper deliveryman who already had a record as a sex offender.

He used the girl's own cellphone to send messages to her mother, saying: "I've got your daughter", and "I'll take her baby sister next".
The murder of the mayor of Nagasaki by a deluded Yakuza,
and another Yakuza shooting in a hospital.
(Unfortunately, their target had been discharged the day before the attack and they killed the wrong man).
The swimming pool shootings ...

... 2chan still mourns.
The woman who killed her own child, and later a neighbour's,
drowning them both in the local river.
And still wanted is Tatsuya Ichihashi, the only suspect in the murder of young British English teacher Lindsay Ann Hawker. On Mar. 26 2007, the missing girl's body was discovered buried in a bath of sand on the balcony of Ichihashi's apartment in Ichikawa, Chiba Prefecture. Ichihashi was at home when police called investigating her disappearance, but when they tried to arrest him he ran away, evading 13 of them barefoot. Police believe he may now be dressed like a woman to avoid detection (though with the country's arrest rate at around 25-30%, I'd say he probably wouldn't need to bother).

In just the last month we've seen:
A disgruntled salaryman push a High School boy in front of a train.
A Junior High School girl's bound and naked body fished out of a rice paddy.
The case of the guy who, rejected by his extremely attractive neighbour, cut her up and flushed the pieces down her toilet. (An overly loquacious interview on national TV led to his arrest).
And a young Tokyo woman who was drugged and abducted in a car, but who managed to send distress calls from her cellphone. Both her alleged kidnapper and her cellphone have been found, but she is still 'missing' I believe.
Of course it's extremely upsetting when children are the victims, but the cases I find really disturbing are the ones where children are the perpetrators.
These are perhaps the two most infamous:
Sakakibara Seito :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakakibara_SeitoOn May 27 1997 the head of Jun Hase, a special education student at Tainohata Elementary School, was found in front of the school gate hours before students arrived for classes. Hase had been beheaded with a hand saw. A note, written in red pen, was found stuffed in his mouth. The nation was shocked when, on June 28, a 14-year-old junior high school student known only as "Shonen A" was arrested as a suspect. Shortly after his arrest, "Boy A" also confessed to the hammer-murder of 10-year-old Ayaka Yamashita, and assaults on three other girls. Boy A became eligible for parole in 2004 and was freed in 2005.
Nevada-tan :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nevada-tanNevada-tan is the Internet moniker of the 11-year-old schoolgirl who, on June 1 2004, murdered her 12-year-old former best friend, Satomi Mitarai, in an empty classroom during the lunch hour at Okubo Elementary School in Sasebo, Nagasaki. After slashing Mitarai's throat with a box-cutter knife she left the murder scene and returned to her own classroom, her clothes covered in blood. The girls' teacher, who had noticed that both were missing, found the body and called the police.
But there have been others:
The high school girl who took an axe to her sleeping policeman father.
The 12-year-old boy who forced an 11-year-old boy to strip naked, then pushed him from the top of a multi-storey car-park.
And the son of a dentist who killed his older actress/model sister when she teased him about his poor grades. (The way he mutilated her body has led some to suppose that his interest in her was more than just filial).
With my own eyes I have seen a young man draw a knife on two female clerks who tried to stop him leaving a drugstore with an armload of what looked like Chinese medicines. (He ran away, and no-one was hurt). And, amongst other problems the area has had, there was recently a string of muggings of foreign tourists in Akihabara.
And don't start me talking about rape. This is a country where, according to urban legend, a young girl can be attacked on a moving train while 20 or more other passengers just sit by and do nothing.
You can talk about the causes of these crimes, and the merits and demerits of the penal system, if you want to. It has not been my purpose to start or enter into such a discussion here, just to present you with some facts. Me, I stand firmly for freedom of expression, and I believe that those who have received the Death Penalty thoroughly deserved it. Some of these people, I would happily throw the switch myself.
Others, I feel sorry for ...
http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i85/A ... adatan.jpgInb4 "Amerika is worse",
LOL, Japan! Statistically, one of the safest countries in the world.
(My thanks to all the writers whose work I have shamelessly plundered,
and sincere apologies to any murderers I may have inadvertantly forgotten).