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Kiyotaka
KATSUTA
Serial killer
obberies
August 29,
On January 31, 1983, he was arrested.
He might have killed 22 people but the police accused 8
murders. In prison, he wasn't able to trust people, and
he didn't meet any people except a female Christian, who
uses pen name Yūko Kurusu. She became sister-in-law of
him, so he was renamed Kiyotaka Fujiwara.
On January 17, 1994, the Supreme
Court sentenced him to two death penalties for the first
time in the history of the Japanese Supreme Court. One
was for 7 murders between 1972 and 1980, and the other
was for killing a man in 1982. He was executed on
November 30, 2000.
Biography
Katsuta committed several murders and
robbed several houses before being apprehended. The
exact number of murders he committed is unknown. He
killed his victims by strangling and shooting them.
His last crime occurred in 1982. On
October 27, he hit a police officer with a car and stole
a handgun. On October 31, he attempted to commit a
robbery, but killed a man with a handgun during the
failed attempt. On November 1, he shot another man, who
survived. Because he was armed, Katsuta continued to
elude capture. The incident was officially named
Metropolitan Designated Case 113.
On January 31, 1983, he was arrested
while threatening a man with a handgun. He was initially
thought to have only killed his victims while robbing
them, but later confessed to seven other murders.
He may have killed as many as 22
people, but the police charged him with only eight
counts of murder. The police suspected that Katsuta
raped some of his victims before killing them, but were
not able to prove this. His crimes greatly shocked Japan
because he was a firefighter.
The 1984 film Renzoku satsujinki:
Reiketsu(連続殺人鬼
冷血,Renzoku satsujinki:
Reiketsu) was based on his
crimes. In the film, the murderer was named Kiyoshi
Tatsuta. Kazuya Nakayama, who has a criminal record of
his own, played the role of Tatsuta.
In prison, he was mistrustful of his
fellow inmates. While incarcerated, he met a Christian
woman, who was also known as Yūko Kurusu. She became his
sister-in-law, after which he changed his name to
Kiyotaka Fujiwara.
On January 17, 1994, the Supreme
Court upheld his two death penalty convictions, a first
in the history of the Japanese Supreme Court. One was
for seven murders between 1972 and 1980, and the other
was for killing a man with a handgun in 1982. He was
executed on November 30, 2000.