Crime, Conspiracy, Cults and Murder - Ep. 98 | Tortured for 44 Days Straight | Junko Furuta
Episode Date: February 25, 2026Go to https://surfshark.com/kallmekris and use code kallmekris at checkout to get 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN! For a limited time, get 60% off your first order, plus free shipping, when you hea...d to https://Smalls.com/cccm Stop putting off those doctors appointments and go to https://Zocdoc.com/CCCM to find and instantly book a doctor you love today. Abducted by teenagers and held captive for weeks, this tragic case reveals how fear, silence, and missed chances to intervene allowed horror to unfold in plain sight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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A 17-year-old girl finishes her shift at a factory in a quiet Japanese suburb,
and she heads home riding her bike through the dark streets.
But she would never arrive.
And for the next 40 days, she endures suffering that defies comprehension.
This is the case of Junco Feruta.
Crime, conspiracy, cults, serial killers, and murder.
All things that I love to consume, and I know you do too, you sick, twisted, beautiful,
intellectually minded freak.
Listen, today, this is going to be a very, very, very rough case.
This is, I believe, the most recommended case that you guys have asked me to cover.
So I am covering it, but just giving you all the warnings right now,
this video contains detailed descriptions.
So viewer discretion is advised.
So if you're sticking around for this case, let's unbuckle their seatbelts,
go back by down the highway, slam of the brakes, and bustle the windshield into this highly
disturbing case together.
Junco Feruta came into the world on January 18th, 1971, and she was born into a household that,
while not wealthy, was rich in terms of love.
Her father, Akira, worked as a business director at a canning factory, and her mother stayed
home to raise the children.
And the family's finances were modest, and Akira carried the weight of providing for everyone
on his shoulders.
And Junco was the middle child, with an older and younger
brother. And by all accounts, the Faruta home was a happy one. And her parents encouraged Junco to chase
her dreams. And she would. And Junco was the type of girl to help her mother with chores around the
house without being asked. She was very devoted to her family. And she adored them and they adored her back.
And the Farutas lived in Misato, a town in Saitama Prefecture. And I just want to apologize
quickly if I'm saying anything wrong. I have all the pronunciations up for my
myself, but I'm sure I'm still saying them slightly off,
so apologies in advance for that.
But Saitama sits in the southeastern part of Japan
within the greater Tokyo metropolitan area.
But it was a relatively nice community,
and Junco would greet her neighbors politely
whenever she saw them, always considerate and respectful.
So it had been clear that she was raised right.
And everyone who knew Junco described her in the same way,
friendly, kind, beautiful, and popular.
She had a lively,
and a charm that just drew people into her.
And her classmates and teachers all liked her,
by all accounts.
Yet, unlike many teenagers her age,
Junco stayed away from drinking, smoking, and drugs.
And this earned her a reputation
among some of the rowdier kids at school.
Because they saw her as naive, a good girl, if you will,
and her close friends would call her Jun Chan,
which from my research is a term of endearment in Japanese.
But correct me if I'm wrong.
But Junco was also known to be
very generous as well. In which she visited friends homes, she would bring small gifts for their families
just because she could. At 17 years old, Junco was a senior at the Yeshio Manami High School in the
Saitama Prefecture. And she was an excellent student. Her grades were high and her attendance was
nearly perfect. She belonged to Class 3-8, a group of 47 students who had grown close over the years.
In that fall, her class had worked together to make Happycoats, which are traditional Japanese
festival jackets for the school's cultural festival. And it was a memory her classmates would hold
on to in the years to come. But Junco had a secret dream. She wanted to become an idol singer.
But it was the kind of aspiration she only shared with her closest friends, something precious
and private. Because her hobbies were quieter, simpler things. Like she loved to bake and to knit,
and she loved going to the beach. And she also had a boyfriend and his name, or at least that pseudonym used
to protect his identity was Kawamura.
And when Junco was with him,
he quit drinking and smoking because she asked him to.
So clearly, she was a great example to other people.
Because that was the effect she had on all the people around her.
Basically, she just made them want to be better.
And just two days before everything changed on November 23, 1988,
Junco celebrated Kawamura's birthday,
and she gave him a black sweater she had knitted herself,
saying, quote,
please wear this."
And she had also baked him a cheesecake,
which he later said was delicious.
And they went bowling that day,
and they made plans to go skiing together that winter.
So in October of 1988,
Junco took a part-time job at a plastic molding factory,
and she also worked as a salesperson
at a household goods store,
because Dunco wasn't the type of person
to just sit around and let life happen.
And her father worked hard to support the family,
and Junco wanted to help him out too,
because that was just the type of person.
the type of person that she was. And she also wanted to save money for a graduation trip,
which is a beloved tradition for Japanese students as they finish high school. But Junco was thinking
even further ahead. And she had already accepted a position at an electronics retailer. And after
graduation, she would begin her career there. So on November 25th, 1988, everything would change.
Because Junco would be finishing her shift at the plastic molding factory. And she would clock out
around 8.20 in the evening and climb onto her bike and head home through the dark streets of
Masato. And her mother was expecting her home by around 8.30. But by 10 o'clock, Junco had not come home.
And by 11, her family was frantic. And they called her workplace, but co-workers confirmed she had
left on time. And they walked her usual route, calling her name into the night. But they found
only one thing, her bicycle lock that had been discarded near a park. So the Faruta family reported
their daughter missing the next day. The police took the report and made a note in the file saying,
quote, teenage rebellions are common. She'll probably return home when she's ready. Unquote. That was
their assessment. And as we know, Junco was not that type of teenager. It's just if they thought to
ask any questions about her, they would know that. But she was just kind of brushed aside. And
meanwhile, two young men on motorcycles had been circling the streets of Masado that night.
and they were hunting as they've done multiple times before.
And when they spotted a young girl riding her bicycle home from work,
they saw exactly what they were looking for.
And four teenage boys would be responsible
for what would become one of the most heinous crimes
in Japanese history.
18 year old Hiroshi Miyano, 17 year old Joe Ogura,
16 year old Shinji Minato,
and 17 year old Yasushi Watanabe.
And two other boys would play smaller roles,
And their names were Tetsuo Nakamura and Koichi Ihara, and they were both 16.
So Miyano was the oldest and the one in charge, the ringleader, if you will,
and he gave the orders and made the decisions, and he set the tone for everything that was going to happen.
And Ogura seemed to be the second in command, and when he made a suggestion, Miyanu listened.
And one of his suggestions would be the one to seal Junco's fate.
Yaminato was the youngest of four, but his family's home would become their base of operations.
And Watanabe rounded out the group, and he would play a supporting role of all the horrific things that were going to happen to Junco.
So, Miyano was born on April 30, 1970, in Adashi, Tokyo, and his family appeared respectable on the surface.
His father worked at a securities company while his mother taught piano, but there was another side to the family,
because Miyano's grandfather had reportedly being a soldier with political connections to the Yakuza,
and his uncle was said to be a high-ranking official within the organized crime syndicate.
And at school, Mianu was known as a bully, and he openly bragged about his Yakuza connections.
And whether those ties were as strong as he said or they were exaggerated, the reputation served him well,
and people were afraid of him.
And a psychological evaluation conductor later revealed that Mianu had a learning disability,
well. And according to the assessment, it did not impair his brain function but delayed his emotional
development, which I don't think is an excuse for anything that's going to happen at all.
Um, but it's worth note. But it would have some effect on his choices. Amiano was living with his
girlfriend at the time, who happened to be the older sister of Yasushi Watanabe. And she eventually
ended the relationship after he joined a gang and started committing horrible estherable.
crimes. But all four boys had dropped out of high school by the summer of 1988. But Mianu's troubles
had started long before. And he had already been shoplifting and damaging school property at that
point. And the pattern only continued and escalated as he got older. But Minato's background was
different. And he was born in 1972 and his parents were reportedly Communist Party members
who raised him strictly. But that didn't matter in the end. Because by 16, he had fallen in
with Miano's crowd. And they were scum of the earth. And they would collectively become
Chimpera or low-ranking yakuza, essentially street-level bugs. And starting in October of 1988,
they drove right into a spree of criminal activities, including purse-snatching, car theft,
extortion, assault, and rape. And they would become serial essay predators. And they would have
a system. They knew how to identify targets, and most of the time, they let their
victims go afterward.
But Junco would be different.
So on November 8th, they abducted a 19-year-old woman in Adachi.
And they would take her to a hotel, gang rape her, and then let her go.
And this was their pattern, abduct, assault, and release.
So once they had all dropped out of school, they needed a place to hang out.
Aminato offered his family's home in Adachi, and it became their base of operations.
And it was a place where the adults seemed unwilling or unavailable to
stop whatever was happening under their roof.
So they are just as complicit in my opinion.
And they operated as a unit committing crimes together,
just covering for each other.
And on the night of November 25th, 1988,
Miano and Minato climbed onto their motorcycles.
And they rode through the streets of Misato
looking for a woman to rob and then abuse.
So as we know, Junco had just finished her shift
at the plastic modeling factory
and headed home on her bike.
And the streets were done,
dark, but she knew the way. But little did she know that Miyano and Minato were out hunting.
So as they were riding on the streets, they would spot Junco. She was alone and she was vulnerable,
just the type of person they were looking for. And what happened next was extremely coordinated.
Because Miyano gave the order and Minato executed it. So as Junco peddled along,
Minato drove his motorcycle toward her and kicked her off her bike and she would fall to the
ground. And before she could process what was happening, Minato sped away into the night.
His job was done. Now it was Miyano's turn. So Mianu approached Junco as if he had witnessed the
attack by coincidence, and he played the concerned stranger helping her to her feet. And he asked if
she was okay, and she was shaken and vulnerable. And here was this helpful guy offering to walk her
home safely. So naturally, Junco would accept. She had no way of knowing. She had no way of knowing.
that the stranger who had attacked her and the stranger helping her were actually working together.
So Miano walked her away from the street, away from home, and toward a nearby warehouse.
And once they reached the warehouse, the mask came off.
And Miano told Junco, he was a member of the Yakuza.
And he would only spare her life if she did exactly what he said.
And that is when he would essay her for the first time and threatened to kill her if she made any noise.
And afterward, Mianu took Junco by taxi to a hotel in Adachi, where he would essay her again.
And from the hotel room, he called Minato's house and bragged to Agura about what he had done.
And any other scenario for them would have ended there.
Again, they never held their victims after what they did what they wanted.
But Agura's response would determine everything that came next, saying quote unquote, don't let her leave.
So around 3 a.m. on November 26,
Miyano brought Junco to a park near the hotel.
And there, the three others were waiting in the darkness,
Agura, Minato, and Watanabe.
And they would surround her and told her that they knew where she lived,
and that the Yakuza would murder her family if she tried to escape.
And then, according to some accounts,
the other three boys would essay her there in the park.
So Junco was completely alone,
terrified for her life and the lives of her family, just surrounded by her attackers in the
middle of the night absolutely petrified. I can't even imagine how she was feeling. But the boys needed
somewhere else to take her because they weren't done yet. And Minato offered his family house.
The same house the group had been using as a hangout since they dropped out of school.
And he agreed to let them hold Junco in a room on the second floor. So they smuggled her into
the house under the cover of darkness. So Juncoe,
would be held captive and confined to a room on the second floor of the Manato family home.
And the house sat in the Ayase district of Adachi in north central Tokyo.
And it was, by all accounts, an ordinary residence in an ordinary neighborhood.
So there was really nothing to suggest the horrors that would be happening inside.
But from November 26, 1988 to January 4, 1989,
Junco remained trapped in that upstairs room.
So two days after Junco vanished, her parents went to the police.
And the boys knew an investigation could unravel everything.
So they forced Junco to call her mother.
Three times she was made to pick up the phone and perform their script.
Amiano allegedly held a knife to her throat once while she spoke, saying, quote,
Mom, I'm sorry, I worried you.
I've run away, but I'm safe with friends.
Please don't look for me.
Unquote.
And her mother heard her.
daughter's voice and then the line went dead but it didn't sound quite right and she was not convinced
and junco was also forced to tell her mother to call off the police investigation and the deception
did work and when police heard that the missing girl had contacted her family they reclassified the
case as a voluntary disappearance and the search for junco effectively ended before it began so in the
beginning the boys forced junco to act as monato's girlfriend when his boyfriend when his
parents were around. And the parents, of course, did not believe the story. And they knew something
was going on, but they said nothing. And they did nothing. And eventually, the boys stopped even
bothering with the charade once it became clear that Manato's parents weren't going to report them
anyway, which just makes me so sick to my stomach to think that these people didn't save this girl.
It's just, it's just gonna get rough from here, so forewarning.
So Junco was not completely hidden from the world as we know.
And Manato's parents obviously knew a girl was in the house
and that she hadn't left for an extended period of time.
And Manato's brothers knew too.
And the brothers' only action was to later inform Manato
that Junco appeared to be dying.
Dying and no one said anything.
But the parents would later offer explanations,
claiming they were afraid of their own son,
that he had become increasingly violent toward them.
Then lock him up.
Get him investigate.
You could call the police.
They could see that he's torturing someone.
Like, I don't know.
I don't know.
I just, this infuriates me.
This case infuriates me.
But they said they feared retaliation from Miyano and his Yakuza connections.
And some accounts suggest that they were also worried about their reputation in the community,
which I'm going to assume is the biggest.
reason, to be honest, because you bet your sweet ass I would lay my life down on the line to help
save a girl that I know is being tortured. Are you fucking kidding me? Like, I can't believe it. Anyway,
but the Manato family were not the only ones aware of Junco's presence. Because at one point,
a boy was invited to the house by Miyano, and he saw her. And he went home and told his brother,
who told their parents, who then contacted police. And officers were dispatched to the Monot.
residents. But the Manantos told police there was no girl inside because they're pieces of shit
even offering to let the officers look around. Because they had no reason to doubt the parents,
the police declined to search. They left. Everyone failed Junco in this scenario.
Junco would remain trapped upstairs and the torture would continue. And what Junco endured
over those 40 days defies all comprehension
because the abuse was relentless
and only got worse as the days went by.
Physically, she would be beaten repeatedly
with fists, bamboo sticks, golf clubs, iron rods,
and at some points Junco would be hung from the ceiling
and they used her as a punching bag.
Not to mention, they would drop dumbbells onto her,
which destroyed her internal organs,
she would remain alive.
And they would also drop those weights on her hands and her fingers,
which naturally would shatter her fingernails and bones.
And they also burned her repeatedly using lighter fluid,
setting multiple body parts on fire.
And they would drip hot wax onto her face and her eyelids,
and they would stab her chest with sewing needles.
But they would torture her in ways too horrific to fully describe.
and the sexual violence was constant.
They would S-A. her as a group repeatedly,
and during these S-As, they would use foreign objects,
including a metal rod, a bottle, scissors, skewers, lit matches,
and lit fireworks.
This is a hard one to get through, sorry.
And according to some accounts,
as many as 100 different men were invited to the house
over the course of her captivity.
They treated her suffering as entertainment.
And as if the physical torture wasn't enough, they tortured her psychologically as well.
And they would force her to dance unclothed while playing music.
And they made her do things to herself while she was in front of them.
And she would remain unclothed for almost the entirety of this entire time.
And sometimes they would make her stand on the balcony when it was freezing outside.
and when they grew bored,
they actually would put her inside a freezer for hours.
And they would force her to eat live cockroaches
and would make her drink her own urine
and would make her consume large quantities of alcohol, milk, and water.
And they would force her to smoke two cigarettes at once
and to inhale paint thinner fumes.
And they would tell her lies designed to break her spirit further.
Like that, her father had died in an accident,
which wasn't true.
I just, I can't.
The level of evil in this specific case just,
it makes me physically ill.
I've had to stop multiple times while filming this.
So I apologize.
I'm trying to keep myself together.
But this one just has impacted me a lot.
Not that all of them don't.
It's just this one in particular
has been very tough to get through.
And in December, Junco would try to escape,
but unfortunately she would fail.
Because later on, during a night
when her captors had gotten wasted,
Junco saw an opportunity.
And she crawled downstairs
and found a phone and called the police.
But before she could say a single word,
Miyano caught her,
and he snatched the phone away
telling the officers it was a mistyel.
And the police called back to verify,
but Miano assured them the call
had been an accident.
And the police flat out just accepted his word and didn't even check on what was going on in that flat.
So Junco's desperate attempt to save herself had fallen through.
And sadly, there would be consequences.
And the punishment was severe.
And the punishment would be setting her on fire and placing her head on concrete and stomping on it.
And he would punch her in the face over and over.
So the message was clear.
There would be no escape for Junco.
And within days of this torture, her body was already beginning to fail.
And it was around December where Junco began pleading with her captors to just end her.
Because she could not bear anymore.
Because by December 10th, the burns on her legs were so severe that she could no longer walk properly.
And after 20 days of captivity, she had lost the ability to walk entirely.
And by late December, Junco was dying because she was severely malnourished, because her captors had given her only small amounts of food, eventually reducing her diet to nothing but milk.
And her body couldn't process even basic sustenance.
And dehydration caused her to vomit, which just upset her captors and led to more abuse.
And eventually she couldn't even keep water down.
Not to mention she can no longer walk, she couldn't walk to the toilet.
So she just laid on the floor too weak to move.
And due to the abuse, she was almost not recognizable.
And her wounds were getting infected, and the burns covering her body had begun to rot.
And the smell of decaying flesh filled the room.
And the stench became so overpowering that the boys soon lost sexual interest in her,
which led them to go out and kidnap another 19-year-old woman on December 27th instead.
And it would be this crime that would eventually lead to their arrest.
So the final attack would happen on January 4th, 1989, and the night before, Miyano had allegedly lost money playing Meijong.
And when he woke up, he was angry and he needed an outlet.
So he chose Junco.
And according to court testimony, Miyano challenged her to a game of Meijong that day.
And this was the 40th day of her captivity.
And as we know, she could barely move at this point.
Yet, despite everything, Junco was barely aware enough to play, but she would actually beat him at the game.
And Miano and the others went into a rage.
And what followed was the most brutal assault of her entire captivity.
And they would repeat the abuse they had done before with candles and wax and beatings
and making her drink her own urine,
and eventually she would fall onto a stereo unit
and begin having convulsions.
And by this point, her body was so decayed
that they didn't want to even touch her directly.
But at this point, she was bleeding heavily.
So they covered their hands with plastic bags
before continuing, making sure they wouldn't be stained by her blood.
And this is when they would continue to beat her.
Until finally, Mianu,
house Junco with lighter fluid and set her on fire.
And she apparently made weak attempts
to extinguish the flames,
but shortly after it happened,
she would stop moving.
So this final assault lasted approximately two hours long.
So Junco had finally died from the injury sustained
during that final assault.
And she died at approximately 10 a.m. on January 4th, 1989.
And less than 24 hours later,
Manato's brother,
called to deliver the news.
The girl upstairs appeared to be dead.
And she would be only months away from graduating high school
and achieving everything that she wanted to achieve.
But these fucking scum monsters,
just waste of oxygen people took that away from her.
And she'd never have the chance to realize her dreams of becoming an idol singer
and she would never go on that ski trip with her boyfriend.
And these things were stolen from her by these evil human beings.
But these boys did not feel any remorse for what they did to Junco.
And all they felt now was fear, fear of being caught, fear of being charged with murder.
And now they had to deal with her body.
So they would wrap the corpse into a blanket and then stuff her into a large travel bag.
But before sealing the bag, Miano added one final item.
him because during her captivity, Junco had mentioned something to her captors.
She regretted not being able to watch the last episode of Tonbo with her family.
Amiano found that videotape of the final episode and placed it in the bag alongside her body.
And he would later claim he did not do this out of pity or remorse.
He was just afraid she would come back as a ghost to haunt him.
And this travel bag wouldn't be enough.
So the boys got a 55 gallon metal drum and put the travel bag containing Junco's body inside.
And they filled it with wet concrete to seal her away, fully hidden from discovery.
Or so they hoped.
Now, the drum needed to disappear.
So they found a spot to hide it.
And they found a vacant lot near construction site on the island of Wakasu in Koto, Tokyo.
And it was a popular illegal dumping ground for all sorts of junk.
Like refrigerators, washing machines, rusted equipment,
surely one more oil drum wouldn't attract any attention, they thought.
So on January 5th, 1989, the day after Junco passed away,
the boys loaded the concrete-filled drum into a vehicle.
And at approximately 8 p.m., they dumped it in that vacant lot
among the other discarded items.
And they drove away.
So Junco had been reduced to garbage, left to be forgotten.
And Junco Feruta's body lay in.
encased in concrete for nearly three months.
And no one found her because no one was looking.
And as far as the police were concerned,
she had just run away from home.
Case closed.
And the discovery would come not through investigation,
but by an accidental slip of the tongue.
So in early 1989, police caught up with Miyano and Agura.
And the woman they had abducted on December 27th,
while Junco was still suffering in the upstairs room,
went to the police.
And on January 23rd, 1989,
Miano and O'Gura were arrested for the kidnapping and S.A. of this woman.
And they were in custody and facing charges.
But nobody knew about Junko, the girl they threw away, at least not yet.
So two months passed. And on March 29th, 1989,
two police officers arrived to question Miano and Agura further.
And during searches of their residences,
investigators had discovered women's underwear and they wanted answers.
Because they were investigating a different murder.
A woman and her seven-year-old son had been killed nine days before Junco's abduction,
and the case remained unsolved.
So during the interrogation, the officers mentioned this was an open murder investigation,
and they meant the mother and son.
But Miyano heard something else, and he panicked, believing Ogura had already confessed to
killing Junco, he assumed the police knew everything, and as we know, he was wrong.
So thinking the game was over,
Mianu told the officers where to find the body.
and the police were confused since they were still asking about a completely different crime.
But now they knew, and it couldn't be taken back.
So Miano had accidentally turned himself in for the murder of Junco Feruta.
The police were recovering the body.
So armed with Miano's confession, investigators went to Wakasu,
and they found the vacant lot and the 55-gallon drum.
And on March 29th, the 1989, police recovered Junco's body.
And that's when they would break through the concrete,
extracting the travel bag and the blanket wrapped around her remains and the videotape of Tonbo.
And when they weighed her body, it registered just 44 kilograms, approximately 97 pounds.
And visual identification at this point was impossible since Junco's face had been beaten so severely.
Not to mention, the weeks of decomposition sealed in concrete left nothing recognizable of the girl who had once smiled in pictures.
So investigators returned to her fingerprints, and they confirmed her identity, and the autopsy
revealed the full extent of what she had suffered.
And it also revealed that Junco had been pregnant at the time of her death, making the situation
just that much more horrific.
So the investigation moved quickly after Miyano's confession, and on April 1st, 1989, Ogura was
arrested for yet another essay, and he was subsequently re-arrested for his role in Jukko's murder.
and Manato and Watanabe were taken into custody shortly after.
And Manato's brother, who had known what was happening and did nothing, was also arrested.
And Tetsuo, Nakamura, and Koichi Ihara were identified as participants in the essays as well.
His DNA evidence found on and inside Junco's body confirmed their involvement.
And prosecutors decided that Nakamura and Ihara would face charges of rape only.
And the four main perpetrators would face the full weight,
of Japanese justice for juvenile offenders for her confinement and murder.
So the first trial began in July 31st of 1989 in Tokyo.
And under Japanese law at the time, anyone under 20 was considered a juvenile.
And this meant that all four main perpetrators qualified, but the court would hide their
identities at the time. And in official documents, they became letters.
Mianu was A, Ogura was B, Manato was C, and Watanabe was D. But
Jumko Furuta received no such protection.
And she was reportedly designated as E.
But that anonymity ultimately meant nothing for Junco.
Her real name and photograph were splashed across every newspaper
and television program in Japan.
So the court protected the identities of the killers.
But it did not protect the identity of their victim.
But luckily, given the severity of the crime,
the four boys were actually tried as adults
in Tokyo's district criminal court.
And this was very rare for juvenile offenders.
But even that exemption came with caveats,
because the court still granted them protections
normally reserved for juveniles,
which is juvenile, honestly.
And the trial itself was difficult to endure.
And as prosecutors described what had been done to Junco,
some people in the courtroom fainted,
but all foreign defendants entered guilty pleas,
but not to murder.
They instead pleaded guilty to,
committing bodily injury that resulted in death.
And this distinction mattered in terms of intent
because murder implied intent to kill.
And bodily injury resulting in death
suggested something less deliberate
and thereby earned a lesser sentence
because somehow 40 days of systematic torture
only added up to bodily injury that resulted in death
in the eyes of the law of Japan.
So on July 20th, 1990, the court announced its verdict.
And Mianu, the ringleader who orchestrated the abduction,
led the torture, and set Junco on fire received 17 years.
That's it.
That's disgusting.
And during his trial, a prosecutor reportedly told him
that if he had committed the crime just a short while later,
when he was no longer a juvenile in the eyes of the law,
he would have faced the death penalty.
Yet he was being tried as an adult,
but they still treated him as a juvenile.
It will never make sense.
to me and I think it is abhorrent. And Miyano's response was cold, saying, quote, in this country,
there is no chance to do something like this other than when you are a minor, unquote. And he dismissed
Junco with indifference. She, quote, was just unlucky enough to get caught, unquote. An Agora who told
Mianu not to let her go received five to ten years. And Manato, who supplied the torture room,
received five to six years.
And Watanabe, still a full participant in everything that they did to her, received three to four
years.
But the defendants were not satisfied.
They wanted even less time.
So Miyano, Manato, and Watanabe appealed their sentences.
And the appeals went to the Tokyo High Court.
And the higher court disagreed with the original sentences, but not in the way the defendants
hoped.
The Tokyo High Court instead increased the punishments, luckily.
Miyano's sentence was raised for 17 years to 20.
Still not enough, which is the longest sentence typically handed down in Japan short of life imprisonment.
Manato's sentence was increased to five to nine years and Watanabe's sentence was increased to five to seven years.
And the presiding judge, Ryugi Yanase explained the court's reasoning.
The sentences were increased because of the nature.
of the crime and the effect on the victim's family and the broader effects on society.
Now, Watanabe appealed to Japan's Supreme Court, and in July of 1992, his appeal was denied.
The sentences were final. So how did the perpetrators of one of the most horrific crimes in
Japanese, just the history of the world, received such lenient sentences? Well, Japan's juvenile law
was built on rehabilitation. The goal was not to punish young offenders.
but to educate and reform them.
And there was also something known as the Nagayama standard.
And under Japanese legal precedent,
the death penalty was rarely applied in cases with only one victim.
And law professor Hiroshi Itakura later explained
that the difference between this case and harsher sentences
came down to victim count and demonstrable premeditation.
And in the Faruta case, the court found that the intent to kill was uncertain.
The torture had escalated over time.
time and death had been the results, but perhaps not the original goal. Who the fuck cares?
They killed her. They tore. I just don't. This case infuriates me and makes me so incredibly sad.
Like it's, ugh, the world can be a disgusting place. So despite the ever escalating brutality,
the court wasn't sure if they had meant to kill her or not. And Mayano's defense also presented
additional mitigating factors like the psychological evaluation showing his learning disability.
No words. And his parents reportedly sold their home and paid 50 million yen, roughly 350,000
at the time in compensation. And some would later argue that Miyano's Yakuza affiliations
influenced the verdict they received at trial, lessening their sentences to be far too lenient
compared to what they should have been. And naturally, the sentences ignited a firestorm. And
And legal professionals were divided.
And a survey by the Asashi Shimbun newspaper found that a majority of lawyers and judges consider
the sentences appropriate based on precedent.
But the public felt different.
Citizens were outrage, rightfully so.
And Tokyo's police department and courts received a wave of letters and calls demanding
life imprisonment or the death penalty.
And newspapers published editorials calling the verdict a failure of justice.
And victims' rights organizations demanded reforms
to Japan's juvenile laws.
And though the court had sealed the perpetrator's names,
and not everyone agreed with the law.
A journalist from Shukon Vunshun magazine
uncovered the identities of all four perpetrators, thankfully.
And on April 20th, 1989, they published the names.
We need somebody like this for the fucking Epstein files.
Seriously.
And Kazu Yoshihonata, the editor-in-chief
later explained the decision saying, quote,
To make a long story short, we decided that beasts don't have human rights."
Unquote.
Couldn't have said it better myself.
And Hanata acknowledged that publishing the names violated juvenile protection law.
But there were no penalty regulations in place to punish them for doing so luckily.
And the boys' names became public and the whole nation now knew who they were.
Sumiano served his full 20-year sentence and walked out of prison in 2009.
he's 39 years old at the time. And he changed his last name to Yokoyama in an attempt to create a
fresh start under a new identity. So there you go. Now you know his name. Here it is on screen.
And the man who emerged from prison, Shocker was not reformed. And in January 2013, Yokoyama
was arrested on suspicion of bank fraud and placing scam phone calls. And he refused to speak
during questioning and without sufficient evidence, he walked free again. And reports
paint a picture of a man living well despite his past.
And he wears expensive clothing and drives a BMW.
And according to a journalist who spoke with Jose, Seven Magazine,
he often visits a kickboxing gym surrounded by followers.
And he takes them to barbecue parties and hostess clubs.
And Mayano consistently boasts about his continued ties to the Yakuza.
And he brags about his involvement in pyramid screams and multi-level marketing operations.
So basically he is still.
the monster that he was years and years ago,
and he is just walking free.
But the ringleader of Junco's torture and murder
is just living freely.
And I hope to God that karma comes for him,
or Junco's ghost, comes for him,
because he deserves nothing.
He doesn't deserve air.
And Joe O'Gura was released in August 1999,
and he changed his last name
to Kamisaku, so this is his name now.
And at first, it seemed like he might build a normal life.
And in 2000, he married and moved to Chiba Prefecture,
though the marriage did not last.
And then his past would catch up with him.
And his colleagues discovered who he really was,
which caused him to lose his job and reconnect with the Yakuza.
And in July 2004, he committed another violent crime,
and Kamisaku believed a 27-year-old acquaintance
named Takatoshi Isono was involved with his girlfriend.
So he abducted Isono, forcing him into a trunk of a car and driving the man to his mother's bar in Misato,
where he beat him for four hours.
And during the assault, he told his victim that he had killed before, and he said that he knew how to get away with it.
So Kamisaku was sentenced to four years in prison for this offense.
And after his release in 2009, he lived alone in an apartment in Saitama, surviving on welfare.
and his father allegedly wanted to give his life savings to Junco's family out of shame.
The only good person in the story, basically besides Junco and her family.
But being the piece of shit that Kamisaku was, took that money and spent it on himself.
And his mother allegedly vandalized Junco's grave, stating that Junco had ruined her son's life.
So, she's a fucking piece of shit.
It just illustrates the twisted influence she had on her son.
But Kamusaku would luckily die on July 16th of 2002 at 51 years old.
And his head would become wedged between the toilet bowl and a tank, and he choked on his own.
Vomit.
So a fitting death for this piece of shit human being.
Now Manato was released in 1998, and he moved in with his mother.
And years passed without incident.
Then in 2018, he resurfaced.
And Manato was arrested of suspicion of attempted murder.
And during a dispute over a parking spot in Kawaguchi, Satama, he struck a 32-year-old man in the shoulder with a metal baton and slashed the man's neck with a knife.
And when police arrested him, he said, quote, I certainly stabbed and beat him, but I did not intend to kill him, unquote.
And he told officers he kept the knife and baton in his vehicle for self-protection.
And the arrest should have been major news, considering one of Junco's killers had attempted murder nearly three decades later.
but the story received almost no mainstream attention.
And Chukon Shinsho noted that virtually no outlets reported that Manato was one of the four men who killed Junco.
And in 2019, Manato was sentenced to one year and six months.
For attempted murder!
I swear to go.
And he was suspended with probation for three years.
Now, Watanabe was released in 1996, and of the four, his path was the most different.
He moved into an apartment with his mother in four.
Tokyo living in isolation, rarely leaving his locked room.
And he had withdrawn from the world entirely.
And by 2005, Watanabe had developed a neurodegenerative disease, but his family could not
afford treatment.
And his mother described his condition as a disease that, quote unquote, turned his brain
into a sponge.
Womp, Wamp, Wamp, and Watanabe died in May of 2021 at 49 years old.
And he was the only one of the four who did not commit additional crimes after release.
That we know of.
You know, I don't trust the system at all.
So whether this was due to reform, his deteriorating health, or his complete withdrawal from society is impossible to know.
And Nakamura and Ihara had both been 16 when they participated in the assaults.
So they were sent to juvenile detention and were both released by 2000.
And in the years that followed, both got married and had children.
And according to reports, they disclosed their involvement in the case to their spouses.
So three of the four main perpetrators committed additional crimes after release.
And though the Japanese juvenile justice system was built on rehabilitation,
the Junco Feruta case put that belief to the test and it failed.
And an article in Shukon Shinsho described the subsequent arrests with a single phrase,
a defeat of the juvenile law.
So Junco Feruta's funeral was held on April 2nd, 1989.
And had she lived, the very next day would have been her first day of work at the electronics retailer that had hired her.
During the ceremony, one of her friends delivered a eulogy written by her classmates, saying, quote,
The happy we made for the cultural festival looked wonderful on you.
I'll never forget that, unquote.
And they acknowledged her suffering, expressed grief, and made a promise.
A vow to fight for a world where such crimes could never happen again.
And the electronics retailer brought the uniform Junco would have worn
and her parents placed it in her casket.
And at graduation, the principal presented
Junco's diploma to her parents.
And all 47 students in the class three eight
graduated together with her name among them.
And the impact on those closest to Junco was devastating.
Because after her mother learned the full details
of what had been done to her daughter,
she reportedly had to be admitted to psychiatric hospital.
And Jukko's boyfriend,
Kawamura did not attend the funeral, because he could not bring himself to go.
And instead, he went to the place where her body had been dumped.
And after her death, he started drinking and smoking again.
And years later, he spoke about the perpetrators, saying, quote,
I remember their faces, and when they come out, I want to kill them in the same eye.
But the criminal sentences had left Junco's family feeling betrayed,
because the price Japan's court placed on their daughter's life was far too,
small. But criminal court was not their only recourse. And the Faruta family filed a civil lawsuit
against Manato's parents because the crimes had occurred in their home and they did absolutely nothing
about it. And the Faruta family won and the court awarded them 50 million yen. And to pay the judgment,
the Manato family was forced to sell their home. But of course, the money could never restore what had
been taken. But at least it was something. But the murder of Junco Furuta is,
is considered the worst case of juvenile crime
in Japan's post-work history.
And the case forced Japanese society
to confront uncomfortable realities.
Four teenagers had committed acts
that defied comprehension.
And the case also raised awareness
about issues beyond this single crime,
things like bullying, violence among young people,
and the importance of bystander intervention.
And over a dozen people had known about Junco's captivity,
yet none of them saved her.
But online memorials continued to remember,
remember Junco, emphasizing something extremely important.
She was not just a victim.
She was a person with dreams, a family, and friends who love her.
The memorials ask us to remember Junco as she lived and not as she died.
And that is how I will choose to remember her and I hope that is how you will choose to
remember her for the wonderful human being that she was.
But that is the end of the case.
If you have any other cases, you want me to deep dive into
let me know down below. I always put the comments and take care of yourself, please,
and your mental health. But yeah, stay safe out there and I will see you a beautiful face
in the next one. All right? Bye.
