Current:Home > FinanceMan gets death sentence for killing 36 people in arson attack at anime studio in Japan -InvestTomorrow
Man gets death sentence for killing 36 people in arson attack at anime studio in Japan
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:12:48
A Japanese court sentenced a man to death after finding him guilty of murder and other crimes Thursday for carrying out a shocking arson attack on an anime studio in Kyoto, Japan, that killed 36 people.
The Kyoto District Court said it found the defendant, Shinji Aoba, mentally capable to face punishment for the crimes and announced his capital punishment after a recess in a two-part session on Thursday.
Aoba stormed into Kyoto Animation's No. 1 studio on July 18, 2019, and set it on fire. Many of the victims were believed to have died of carbon monoxide poisoning. More than 30 other people were badly burned or injured.
Authorities said Aoba, who screamed "You die!" during the attack, was neither a current nor former employee of Kyoto Animation Company, a renowned producer of hit TV series.
Judge Keisuke Masuda said Aoba had wanted to be a novelist but was unsuccessful and so he sought revenge, thinking that Kyoto Animation had stolen novels he submitted as part of a company contest, according to NHK national television.
NHK also reported that Aoba, who was out of work and struggling financially after repeatedly changing jobs, had plotted a separate attack on a train station north of Tokyo a month before the arson attack on the animation studio.
Aoba plotted the attacks after studying past criminal cases involving arson, the court said in the ruling, noting the process showed that Aoba had premeditated the crime and was mentally capable.
"The attack that instantly turned the studio into hell and took the precious lives of 36 people, caused them indescribable pain," the judge said, according to NHK.
Aoba, 45, was severely burned and was hospitalized for 10 months before his arrest in May 2020. He appeared in court in a wheelchair.
Aoba's defense lawyers argued he was mentally unfit to be held criminally responsible.
About 70 people were working inside the studio in southern Kyoto, Japan's ancient capital, at the time of the attack. One of the survivors said he saw a black cloud rising from downstairs, then scorching heat came and he jumped from a window of the three-story building gasping for air.
An expert interviewed by CBS News partner network TBS TV said at the time that the compactness of the approximately 7,500-square-foot structure and the fact that there was only one exit made it especially vulnerable to an attack on the building's entrance. The perpetrator apparently went to great lengths to plan the crime and obtain gasoline, the sale of which is tightly controlled in Japan; it is not sold in containers.
The company, founded in 1981 and better known as KyoAni, made a mega-hit anime series about high school girls, and the studio trained aspirants to the craft.
Japanese media have described Aoba as being thought of as a troublemaker who repeatedly changed contract jobs and apartments and quarreled with neighbors.
The fire was Japan's deadliest since 2001, when a blaze in Tokyo's congested Kabukicho entertainment district killed 44 people, and it was the country's worst known case of arson in modern times.
- In:
- Capital Punishment
- Arson
- Japan
veryGood! (3147)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- How to watch the Oscars on Sunday night
- In 'Everything Everywhere,' Ke Huy Quan found the role he'd been missing
- Here are six podcasts to listen to in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Newly released footage of a 1986 Titanic dive reveals the ship's haunting interior
- Natasha Lyonne on the real reason she got kicked out of boarding school
- A collection of rare centuries-old jewelry returns to Cambodia
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Netflix's 'Chris Rock: Selective Outrage' reveals a lot of anger for Will Smith
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Curls and courage with Michaela Angela Davis and Rep. Cori Bush
- Wattstax drew 100,000 people — this 1972 concert was about much more than music
- Is the U.S. government designating too many documents as 'classified'?
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Novelist Julie Otsuka draws on her own family history in 'The Swimmers'
- Italy has kept its fascist monuments and buildings. The reasons are complex
- Bret Easton Ellis' first novel in more than a decade, 'The Shards,' is worth the wait
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
In 'Everything Everywhere,' Ke Huy Quan found the role he'd been missing
'Camera Man' unspools the colorful life of silent film star Buster Keaton
Tom Sizemore, 'Saving Private Ryan' actor, has died at 61
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
'El Juicio' detalla el régimen de terror de la dictadura argentina 1976-'83
George Saunders on how a slaughterhouse and some obscene poems shaped his writing
In 'The Last of Us,' there's a fungus among us