Quantcast
Article Index |Advertise | Mobile | RSS | Wireless | Newsletter | Archive | Corrections | Syndication | Contact us | About Us| Services
 
  Breaking News :    
Advertisement
Robinsons Land Corp.
Sta Lucia Realty

INQUIRER ALERT
Get the free INQUIRER newsletter
Enter your email address:

 
Breaking News / World Type Size: (+) (-)
You are here: Home > News > Breaking News > World

  ARTICLE SERVICES      
     Reprint this article     Print this article  
    Send as an e-mail     Send Feedback  
    Post a comment   Share  





imns


POLICE SAY
Man arrested after Japan stabbings


Agence France-Presse
First Posted 16:16:00 11/23/2008

Filed Under: Crime, Murder, Wages & Pensions

TOKYO--Japanese police said Sunday they have arrested a man who turned himself in and admitted to the murder of a former top pensions bureaucrat.

Takeshi Koizumi, 46, was said to bear a grudge over the death of his pet at a health center, but investigators said they were treating his confession with caution.

Japan, which has one of the world's lowest crime rates, was shocked after the discovery Tuesday of the dead bodies of a 61-year-old former vice-welfare minister and his wife at their home in Saitama, north of Tokyo.

"I killed the (former) vice-minister," Koizumi was quoted as telling a police officer when he turned himself in.

A police spokesman said he was arrested on suspicion of violating the swords control law, which bans possessing or carrying knives without permission or proper reasons, but that he had not been arrested for the murders as yet.

"A knife with a 20-centimeter (eight-inch) blade was found in the car he drove here," the spokesman said.

Media reports said the knife was bloodstained.

The wife of another 76-year-old former vice-welfare minister was seriously wounded on her doorstep late Tuesday, attacked by a man pretending to be from a parcel delivery service.

Both officials once served as directors at the welfare ministry's troubled pensions division, raising the possibility that the attacks are linked to the loss of millions of pension payment records.

Koizumi also admitted he had attacked the wives, reports said.

Japanese media also aired footage of Koizumi's father, who said "I never dreamed my child might do this kind of thing."

The father said he received a telephone call from his son Saturday, hours before Koizumi turned himself in to police, after a decade of no contact.

"He told me that he sent me a letter. As he didn't sound strange and was actually speaking cheerfully, I thought he may have got a wife," the father said.



Copyright 2009 Agence France-Presse. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Share


OTHER STORIES:



  ^ Back to top

© Copyright 2001-2009 INQUIRER.net, An INQUIRER Company

The INQUIRER Network: HOME | NEWS | SPORTS | SHOWBIZ & STYLE | TECHNOLOGY | BUSINESS | OPINION | GLOBAL NATION | Site Map
Services: Advertise | Buy Content | Wireless | Newsletter | Low Graphics | Search / Archive | Article Index | Contact us
The INQUIRER Company: About the Inquirer | User Agreement | Link Policy | Privacy Policy

Advertisement
Megaworld
Filinvest
Property Guide
Xoom
Inquirer VDO