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Pizzicatoblue wrote:All because he was speaking his mind...It sickens me to my stomach.
... The attackers put diving weights around his waist, coiled a chain around his body and tied his arms before dumping the corpse into the sea. His body was found on Friday morning
Brick Top: You're always gonna have problems lifting a body in one piece. Apparently the best thing to do is cut up a corpse into six pieces and pile it all together.
Sol: Would someone mind telling me, who are you?
Brick Top: And when you got your six pieces, you gotta get rid of them, because it's no good leaving it in the deep freeze for your mum to discover, now is it? Then I hear the best thing to do is feed them to pigs. You got to starve the pigs for a few days, then the sight of a chopped-up body will look like curry to a pisshead. You gotta shave the heads of your victims, and pull the teeth out for the sake of the piggies' digestion. You could do this afterwards, of course, but you don't want to go sievin' through pig shit, now do you? They will go through bone like butter. You need at least sixteen pigs to finish the job in one sitting, so be wary of any man who keeps a pig farm. They will go through a body that weighs 200 pounds in about eight minutes. That means that a single pig can consume two pounds of uncooked flesh every minute. Hence the expression, "as greedy as a pig."
jim katta wrote:You'd think if they were professionals that they would make him vanish quiety.
.... At least then his memory won't just fade away meaninglessly and the fruit of his work would get some exposure.
Taro Toporific wrote:Tokyo Bay corpse identified as underworld writerMainichi / Sept. 13, 2003---A chained body found in Tokyo Bay with weights attached has been identified as a freelance writer who recently published a book exposing foreign mafia infesting the Kabukicho underworld...The victim, Satoru Someya, wrote in the postscript of his book, "Kabukicho Underground," that he felt he had put his life in danger because of his work.
"I may have turned the whole of Kabukicho against me because I wrote this book ... I am having my work obstructed by mainly foreigners"....
Taro Toporific wrote:Tokyo Bay corpse identified as underworld writer
Mainichi / Sept. 13, 2003---A chained body found in Tokyo Bay with weights attached has been identified as a freelance writer who recently published a book exposing foreign mafia infesting the Kabukicho underworld...The victim, Satoru Someya, wrote... I am having my work obstructed by mainly foreigners"...
Taro Toporific wrote: JAPAN: Writer pays the ultimate price for his best-seller
--Tapping into growing public concern in Japan over a recent wave of burglaries by locksmiths, Satoru Someya's book Kagi no Seisho (The Key Bible) quickly became a best-seller. It also cost him his life.South China Morning Post / Wednesday, January 14, 2004...
According to Tokyo police, about 11,000 homes in the city had their locks picked last year, an 81 per cent increase over 2002.
kurohinge1 wrote:
[/quote]According to Tokyo police, about 11,000 homes in the city had their locks picked last year, an 81 per cent increase over 2002.
GomiGirl wrote:Call me crazy, but I think I had somebody in my apartment yesterday. I got home from work around midnight and the cat was completely spooked about something and a few things were amiss around the place. But nothing has been stolen.
Taro Toporific wrote:GomiGirl wrote:Call me crazy, but I think I had somebody in my apartment yesterday. I got home from work around midnight and the cat was completely spooked about something and a few things were amiss around the place. But nothing has been stolen.
Reminder: Japanese burglars ONLY steal cash. If you didn't have cash, nothing would have been taken by a traditional Japanese crook.
GomiGirl, Taro, I'm curious, where are Japanese keeping their life savings physically if they aren't in bank accounts-safe deposit boxes at banks etc? Surely not station lockers? I heard that so many Japanese are just hoarding mondo amounts of cash at home because they don't trust the banking system?GomiGirl wrote: Never keep cash at home (not in my bank either).
Maybe some people in other places had hidden stuff down there?GomiGirl wrote: But why would the drain in my bath be moved?
Alcazar wrote:Maybe some people in other places had hidden stuff down there?GomiGirl wrote: But why would the drain in my bath be moved?
Or maybe, 'Is that where that live web-feed is coming from'?.........![]()
http://www.livegaijindrainhentai.com
GomiGirl wrote:Guess who clicked on that link??? D'oh - one born every minute.. Got me Alcazar!!![]()
Prosecutors on Tuesday demanded that a middle-aged man who conspired with two others to abduct a freelance writer and murder him before dumping the victim's body into Tokyo Bay be sentenced to 18 years in prison.
Keizo Sakurai, 43, former president of a lock firm, was the ringleader of the abduction and murder of writer Satoru Someya in 2003, according to prosecutors.
Sakurai, with two others, confined Someya, 38, in an apartment in Tokyo's Shinjuku-ku in September 2003 after the victim allegedly wrote a story in disfavor of the former president, prosecutors said in the Tokyo District Court.
One of the two accomplices later stabbed Someya on a boat on Tokyo Bay and dumped the victim into the sea.
"He intended to erase a man he disliked through violence. Therefore, there is no room for leniency," a prosecutor told the court when demanding Sakurai be sentenced to an 18-year prison term.
Lawyers for Sakurai claim that he has shown regret over the killing and asked for a lenient ruling. (Mainichi Shimbun Japan, March 1, 2005)
Prosecutors on Tuesday demanded that a middle-aged man who conspired with two others to abduct a freelance writer and murder him before dumping the victim's body into Tokyo Bay be sentenced to 18 years in prison.
A hit man who brutally stabbed a freelance writer to death and threw his body into the sea in revenge for a defaming article was Tuesday handed a 14-year prison sentence in the Tokyo District Court.
In handing down the ruling on Yoshihiro Kumamoto, 33, Presiding Judge Shoji Ogawa blasted Kumamoto's actions.
"After binding the victim with chains, he stabbed him several times in the back and threw him into the sea. It was absolutely brutal," Ogawa said.
Kumamoto was approached by 44-year-old office worker Keizo Sakurai, who asked him to murder 38-year-old writer Satoru Someya for writing an article in a magazine that defamed Sakurai, according to the ruling.
In the predawn hours of Sept. 7, 2003, Kumamoto led Someya onto a boat in Tokyo Bay and stabbed him to death, the court heard. Sakurai was sentenced to 16 years imprisonment for the crime and is in the process of appealing his sentence.
Big Booger wrote:14 years for murder seems a bit light. What are typical sentences for murder here?
For such a brutal murder, certainly a life sentence or even death would be more appropriate?
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