Sataro Fukiage
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sataro Fukiage | |
---|---|
Birth name: | Sataro Fukiage |
Alias(es): | Shinshūmaro, Erotomania |
Born: | 1889 Kyoto, Japan |
Died: | September 28, 1926 |
Cause of death: | hanging |
Penalty: | Death |
Killings | |
Number of victims: | probably 7 |
Span of killings: | 1906 through 1924 |
Country: | Japan |
State(s): | Kyoto, Gunma, Nagano, Saitama, Chiba |
Date apprehended: | 1924 |
Sataro Fukiage (吹上 佐太郎 Fukiage Satarō?, February 1889 - September 28, 1926) was a Japanese rapist and serial killer. He killed at least seven girls.[1] He murdered his first victim in 1906, and killed six girls between 1923 and 1924. He was tried for three out of six cases, but his exact number of victims is unknown.
He raped a number of women besides the murder victims. According to one theory, he raped at least 93 girls.[2] Some estimates say he raped more than 100 women.[3]
Contents |
[edit] Early life
He was born in Shimogyō-ku, Kyoto. His family forced him to work at the age of nine under the East Asian age reckoning[4] (The description of the East Asian age reckoning is omitted in the following). He frequently changed jobs. At the age of 11, he had sex with a girl about 17 years old, for which he lost his job.[2] At 12, he was arrested for theft. Fukiage learned kana and math during the two months he spent in jail. He was arrested again for theft soon after his release, but learned classical Chinese while in jail the second time.
Fukiage had sex with a 54-year-old woman at the age of 17. With its rebound, he raped the woman's 11-year-old daughter and some girls in their neighborhood.
[edit] First murder and imprisonment
On September 24, 1906, he raped and murdered an 11-year-old girl at Kinkaku-ji.[4] The victim was an old acquaintance of his. He was 18 years old, but he was 17 years old under the western age system. In jail, he studied the works of Confucius, Mencius, Socrates, Aristotle and Nichiren.[2] He was released in 1922 and found employment, but he was fired again due to his criminal history. In April 1923, he was arrested for molesting a four-year-old girl, but was released.
[edit] Later murders and arrest
Between June 1923 and April 1924, he raped and murdered six girls, ages 11 to 16. He was arrested on July 28, 1924. He confessed to 13 murders, but he later recanted his story, and insisted that he had murdered only six girls and that a police officer asked him a leading question. He wrote a book, The Street (娑婆 Shaba?). He was sentenced to death on May 17, 1925. Top court upheld his death sentence in July 2, 1926.
[edit] Death
He was executed by hanging on September 28, 1926. The media reported that he went to die nobly, unlike many prisoners.[3] In his book, he requested that parents take care of their children.[2]
[edit] Books
- 娑婆 (translation The Street, publisher Ganshodo-shoten, Japan 1926) by himself
- ドキュメント・連続少女殺人―孤高の鬼・吹上佐太郎 (translation Document; Serial Girl Murders—The Isolated Devil, Fukiage Sataro, publisher PAROL-SHA, Japan 1993)
- 身の毛もよだつ殺人者たち (translation Horrible Murderers, publisher Takarajimasha, Japan 2006) - One chapter in the book treats Sataro Fukiage.
[edit] References
- ^ Atsushi Hachisu (January 1994). Sataro Fukiage (Japanese). Retrieved on 2007-10-29.
- ^ a b c d yabusaka (July 19, 2007). Sataro Fukiage Incident (Japanese). Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ a b CHILDREN KILLERS (Japanese). MONSTERS. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ a b Eruo Kanga. Sex Crimes (Japanese). Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
[edit] See also
- The Apprentice (book) - A novel written about then Japan by Lewis Libby.
- No Longer Human - A novel written about then Japan by Osamu Dazai.
- Kiyoshi Okubo
- Tsutomu Miyazaki