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In December 1999, a 33-year-old officer of Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force visited his family in Tokushima Prefecture, a quiet region in western Japan. On December 25, he suddenly went missing, and two days later, his body was found near a river under a bridge in the nearby city of Anan. The local police quickly concluded that he had died by suicide.
However, the officer’s family and some journalists noticed several strange details that didn’t match a typical suicide case. His car had roof damage, but no one could explain how it happened. There were no footprints leading from the car to the bridge, and no fingerprints were found on the bridge railing, even though it was tall enough that someone would likely have to grab it to climb over. An autopsy showed injuries that seemed to have occurred before the fall, including a serious chest injury that wasn’t clearly explained.
Witnesses also said they saw a car like his being chased by people with metal pipes on the night he disappeared.
Despite these strange clues, police re-investigated twice and still said it was suicide. The officer’s family didn’t give up. They asked a review board to take another look, but the result did not change. Even today, the family is still searching for the truth.
This case made many people in Japan think about how difficult it can be to get answers when things don’t add up—and how important it is to ask questions, even when officials say a case is closed.
https://bit.ly/42peobn
CC BY-SA 4.0
In December 1999, a 33-year-old officer of Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force visited his family in Tokushima Prefecture, a quiet region in western Japan. On December 25, he suddenly went missing, and two days later, his body was found near a river under a bridge in the nearby city of Anan. The local police quickly concluded that he had died by suicide.
However, the officer’s family and some journalists noticed several strange details that didn’t match a typical suicide case. His car had roof damage, but no one could explain how it happened. There were no footprints leading from the car to the bridge, and no fingerprints were found on the bridge railing, even though it was tall enough that someone would likely have to grab it to climb over. An autopsy showed injuries that seemed to have occurred before the fall, including a serious chest injury that wasn’t clearly explained.
Witnesses also said they saw a car like his being chased by people with metal pipes on the night he disappeared.
Despite these strange clues, police re-investigated twice and still said it was suicide. The officer’s family didn’t give up. They asked a review board to take another look, but the result did not change. Even today, the family is still searching for the truth.
This case made many people in Japan think about how difficult it can be to get answers when things don’t add up—and how important it is to ask questions, even when officials say a case is closed.
https://bit.ly/42peobn
CC BY-SA 4.0