Nach einer Reihe von Skandalen werden ab 2026 alle japanischen Staatsanwälte eine Ethikschulung absolvieren. Einer von ihnen erhielt von einem Zeugen, den er zuvor vernommen hatte, Unterhaltung im Wert von über einer Million Yen, einschließlich Mahlzeiten und Getränken.

https://www.sanyonews.jp/article/1875915?rct=global_syuyo_c&kw=%C3%A3%20%E2%80%A0%C3%A3%E2%80%9A%CB%86%C3%A3%E2%82%AC%E2%82%AC

9 Kommentare

  1. toxictoastrecords on

    It amazes me that Japanese corruption, racism, and the wealthy literally purchasing politicians, is even worse than in the USA. The insane conviction rate, that is statistically impossible to accept without KNOWING that you’re putting innocent people in jail.

    This is coming from an American citizen who studied politics, economics, and international relations at an international school in Tokyo.

    The world SEES how bad it is in the USA right now, Japan is very good at hiding their dirty laundry.

  2. UnintendedPunther on

    What? You’re telling me that having essentially the same people in charge of a country for 65 years breeds corruption? Who would have thought.

  3. GeriatricusMaximus on

    99% conviction rate? Only pick cases they can win? With forced confessions aside, should be way lower if there were no collusions or straight up faking evidence.

  4. peacemongler on

    I don’t understand how these chaps do not instinctively just sort of know that this kind of behaviour is a bit naughty?

    I mean, at my company, we get annual training on how to not bribe people, how to avoid overthrowing governments, and sexual harassment. Surely these guys would be well up on that sort of thing too.

  5. Glum-Supermarket1274 on

    training is not the answer here. Prosecution for corruption is.

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