Human Wreckage True Crime

The Osaka Sister Killer – Yukio Yamaji

Thomas W
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Yukio Yamaji was just 16 years old when he beat his mother to death with a baseball bat in the apartment they shared in Yamaguchi, japan. He turned himself in to the police and was transferred to the family court. When asked why he killed his mother, he simply stated she did not tell me what she would use her borrowed money for and she complained about my father. Welcome to this episode of Human Wreckage. In this episode, we look at the case of Yukio Yamaji's life, including the death of his father and the fact that they had struggled financially. The court decided that it would be possible to reform him, so he was sentenced to the juvenile detention school in Akiyama. Here, yamaji gained a number of qualifications, including those for welding and hazardous materials engineering. He also underwent a number of psychological tests, which indicated that he had a developmental disorder which prevented him from forming lasting relationships. The juvenile law in Japan states that juveniles aged 16 or older are to be sent back to the prosecutor's office in cases where they have committed crimes that result in death. However, this law was only reinforced in April of 2001, six months after Yamaji was sent to the juvenile detention school. Therefore, he served just three years before being released back onto the streets, allegedly a changed man. Shortly before his release, he told his lawyer, shingo Uchiyama, that he was sorry for killing his mother, adding that it could not be helped. Following Yamaguchi's release, he visited his grandmother. She suggested he visit his mother's grave, to which he replied I won't go where my mother is. He was put on probation and housed in a correction and protection facility in Yamaguchi Prefecture. Then, three months after his coming of age ceremony, yamaji vanished.

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The court would soon come to discover that they had made a grave mistake in releasing Yamaji. On the 17th of November 2005, a fire was reported at an apartment building in western Osaka Prefecture. Once the blaze was extinguished, two bodies were discovered 27-year-old Asuka Yuhara and her 19-year-old sister Chihiro. They had both been raped and then stabbed in the chest and face with a butcher knife. Suspicion soon fell onto Yamaji, who lived in the same apartment block. When police brought him in for questioning, he readily confessed I can't forget the feelings I felt when I killed my mother and I wanted to see blood, he said. He told police he left the murder weapon at a shrine several hundred meters away.

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Following his arrest, yamaji was charged with the two murders and the prosecution accused him of committing the murders for nothing more than pleasure. His defense, however, tried to argue that he could not differentiate between right and wrong when he committed the crime and raised the question as to whether he was competent to stand trial. They ordered that Yamaji undergo a psychiatric evaluation as well as other tests to develop a greater understanding of his character as well as his upbringing. During the opening statements of Yamaji's first court hearing, the prosecutors said that following his release from juvenile detention school, he moved from place to place and stole money from Pachinko parlors detention school. He moved from place to place and stole money from Pachinko parlors. They described how he had moved into the same apartment building as the sisters on the 11th of November, just days before the murders. According to prosecutors, yamaji had intended on living off the money he stole from the sisters while hiding from the police. Yamaji's defense informed the court that Yamaji had been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome and suggested that he was unfit to stand trial. The judge, however, accepted other testimony that Yamaji was mentally competent and should stand trial for the murders.

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In May of 2006, yamaji pleaded guilty in the Osaka District Court to the murders of the sisters. Now it was up to the judge to determine his sentence. According to Yamaji, he speculated that he would be sentenced to death. Obviously, I will be sentenced to death. I am not afraid of death, he stated. According to his defense counsel, he has no desire to live and his feelings do not extend to the life of another person either. It will probably be impossible for him to sincerely repent from the bottom of his heart.

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The judge subsequently sentenced Yamaji the bottom of his heart. The judge subsequently sentenced Yamaji to die for his crimes. The defendant is demonically possessed with killing people. The victims were killed amid unimaginable fear and pain, and it is inevitable to hand down capital punishment. According to the judge, one of the reasons behind the sentencing was because Yamaji did not reflect on his crime. He suggested that if Yamaji had shown remorse for his actions, he would have received a more lenient sentence In 2009,. Yamaji was executed at just 25 years old. He was hanged alongside two other murderers. Thanks for joining me. He got what he deserved a little too late. If you like what I do, please like and subscribe Till next time. Take care of yourselves. The Thank you you.