Japanese True Crime

035 Murder Above the Bar: The 1953 Shimbashi Crime That Exposed the Dark Side of Japan's Post-War Recovery. How the Killing of a Broker in Tokyo's Bar Mecca Unveiled the Perils of Ambition


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The Bar Mecca Murder Case, which occurred in July 1953 in Tokyo's Shimbashi district, became emblematic of postwar "après-guerre" crimes, reflecting the moral decline among Japan's youth following World War II. On July 27, 1953, patrons at Bar Mecca noticed blood dripping from the ceiling. Upon investigation, the bludgeoned body of a 40-year-old securities broker was discovered in the attic, with ¥410,000 missing from his belongings. The primary suspect, 24-year-old Akira Shoda, a former securities company employee, was identified alongside two accomplices: a 20-year-old bar employee and a 22-year-old associate. Shoda was apprehended in Kyoto on October 12, 1953, after a nationwide manhunt. He confessed to the crime, citing financial desperation due to misappropriated funds from unauthorized stock sales. In 1956, the Tokyo District Court sentenced Shoda to death, the bar employee to 10 years in prison, and the associate to 5 years. Shoda appealed the verdict, but the Tokyo High Court rejected the appeal in 1960, and the Supreme Court upheld the decision in 1963. Shoda was executed on December 9, 1969, at the age of 40. Shoda, a Keio University graduate, was portrayed by the media as a symbol of the declining moral standards among the educated youth. His indulgence in nightlife and substance abuse highlighted the societal issues of the time. During his incarceration, Shoda took up writing novels, but his lack of remorse and failure to apologize to the victim's family influenced the severity of his sentence.


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Japanese True CrimeBy Osamu Yamamoto