1 case tagged “Japan true crime”
Convicted: Sada Abe (阿部 定, Abe Sada)
When Tokyo police finally cornered their fugitive at a Shinagawa inn on May 20, 1936, they didn't believe she was who she claimed to be. The woman in the kimono was too calm, too composed, nothing like the monster the nation's newspapers had conjured over two days of breathless coverage. Then she reached into the folds of her robe and produced the severed genitalia of Kichizō Ishida, wrapped in a magazine cover, and the officers had no more questions about her identity. Sada Abe had strangled her lover to death in the small hours of May 18, carved her name into his arm in blood, and spent the subsequent forty-eight hours shopping, attending a cinema, and writing farewell letters at a series of Tokyo inns. She had planned, with characteristic precision, to kill herself one week later. Her arrest photograph, published across Japan's major newspapers, showed a woman who appeared almost serene. The nation could not look away. The case became known as the 'Abe Sada panic,' flooded police switchboards with thousands of false sightings, and inspired satirists to compare it to a military coup that had shaken the government just months before. Here was a life shaped by assault, exploitation, and a system that offered women like her no protection and no language for what had been done to them — and here, finally, was the story they couldn't stop reading.