Warning of reenactment of Akihabara murder case…Convicted copycat “vague plea” first trial.

On January 13, the Tokyo District Court convicted Junichi Yuri, 23, of defaming Takuya Matsunaga, 36, who lost his wife and daughter in a car crash in Higashi-Ikebukuro, Tokyo, on social networking services, and sentenced him to 29 days in jail, one year in prison, and a five-year suspended sentence. The court also sentenced the defendant to a year in prison and a five-year suspended sentence. The November 26, 2010 edition of Friday Digital reported in detail on the defendant’s first trial. Here is a reintroduction of the defendant’s vague defense, which lacks sincerity (some content has been redacted).
It seems to me that he is fighting against the perpetrator of the Ikebukuro accident for money and repercussions.
Do you think such a father would please Riko Matsunaga, 3, and Mana Matsunaga, 31, in heaven? The man should just make a new woman and start over.
Defendant Junichi Yuri, 23, repeatedly slandered Takuya Matsunaga, who lost his wife and daughter in the Higashi-Ikebukuro car crash in ’19, on Twitter. The first trial of the defendant, who is charged with insult and obstruction of business by deception, was held at the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office on November 16.
The Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office indicted Yuri at home in June ’22 in response to the above-referenced replies. In an interview with a TV station prior to his arrest, he answered that the slander was “for the purpose of inflaming the flames. Just two months later, Yuri was arrested again for malicious posts on Twitter.
In retaliation for the police’s ineffectiveness, he wrote, “Remember what happens in Shinjuku or Akihabara on August 14.
There are no firework festivals in Akiba, so I will bring a lot of fireworks with me.”
(The same), and a series of other tweets that smacked of terrorist acts. In several of the tweets, the names of Tomohiro Kato, a convicted murderer in the 2008 Akihabara massacre, and Tetsuya Yamagami, the suspect who shot former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe this year, were also mentioned. According to the indictment and other charges, he is charged with insulting Ms. Matsunaga by slandering her, and obstructing the operations of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department by posting a warning that imitated the crime in Akihabara, and is charged with false pretenses.
The defendant Yuri appeared in court wearing a suit with no tie, his hair reaching down to his eyes, and a mask worn deeply. The trial was held with Ms. Matsunaga present for the prosecution, but the defendant’s answers did not appear to be in a manner that was flattering or sincere.
According to testimony by the prosecutor, the defendant Yuri started social networking when he was 16 years old. He also revealed that when he was a student, he had grilled meat on campus and relayed on SNS how the security company was alerted and security guards were dispatched to the scene.