(Page 3) Rape and Drug Incident Report on 10 Female Job Hunting Students One after Another “as an outlet of sexual desire”…Rape and Drug Incident “Raw Reality | FRIDAY DIGITAL

Rape and Drug Incident Report on 10 Female Job Hunting Students One after Another “as an outlet of sexual desire”…Rape and Drug Incident “Raw Reality

Nonfiction writer Kota Ishii delves into the depths of Japanese society!

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An additional factor contributing to the crime is the ease and affordability with which rape drugs can be bought and sold, as evidenced by the fact that Maruta, a 30-year-old office worker, was in possession of 700 pills of 10 different kinds.

The crime involves the use of sleeping pills that are so powerful that they can render the person taking them unconscious for hours. The pills are not the kind of drug that can be easily prescribed, even at a hospital, but they are widely traded privately on the Internet.

I once covered this trade, and a dealer in his twenties not only told me about the potency of the drugs, but also told me where and how to use them to commit the desired crimes. It was like a social circle.

The perpetrators felt little guilt for selling and buying rape drugs. However, they are just as vicious as methamphetamine and other illegal drugs in that they tear the lives of their victims to shreds.

Despite this, the police do not enforce this type of drug dealing as strictly as they do with illegal drugs. If they were to crack down as hard as they do on illegal drugs, or at least make it impossible for people to buy drugs over the Internet, it would probably reduce the number of victims.

The same lack of effort goes for the companies.

Some pharmaceutical companies have colored their drugs when it was pointed out that their drugs were being used for rape drugs. When put in water, they dissolved and turned blue. They thought that would make people realize that their drinks had been laced with drugs.

Destroying Women’s Hearts and Minds

However, when an assailant laces a drink or food with a drug that is difficult to distinguish by its color, it may not work as a warning. In fact, one of Maruta’s female victims testified that she woke up in the morning with her upper body naked and her tongue stained blue. It is highly possible that this “blue” is due to the medication.

Even so, this kind of innovation in medicine may have a certain deterrent effect on crime. The problem is that only a handful of pharmaceutical companies are making such efforts. Many sleeping pills do not have such innovations. In other words, some companies know that sleeping pills are being used as rape drugs, but do nothing about it.

Sex crimes involving sleeping pills have been occurring for decades. It has been said for decades that this is just the tip of the iceberg and that there is a huge number of victims in our society.

Nevertheless, why is this crime on the rise?

It is because the police, businesses, and society have neglected this problem for so long. So it can be said that we have allowed the crime to increase more and more as private sales through the Internet spread.

It is known that many female victims of sex crimes suffer from some kind of aftereffects, including PTSD. Some of them are unable to even survive, let alone reintegrate into society. One of Maruta’s female victims also testified that she suffered from mental and physical abnormalities.

Murder of the soul.

Sexual crimes are so called because they destroy the victims from the inside out.

In October, the state of emergency was lifted (as of October ’21). With this, there is no doubt that opportunities to drink outside will increase. It is precisely because of this that society as a whole needs to think squarely about how to stop sexual crimes such as the one committed by Maruta.

  • Interview and text Kota Ishii

    Born in Tokyo in 1977. Nonfiction writer. Graduated from Nihon University College of Art. He has reported and written about culture, history, and medicine in Japan and abroad. His books include "Kichiku" no Ie - Wagakko wo Kajiru Oyasato Tachi" ("The House of 'Demons' - Parents Who Kill Their Children"), "43 Kichiku no Kyoi: In Depth in the Case of the Murder of a Student in Kawasaki," "Rental Child," "Kinship Murder," and "Kakusa to Segregation no Shakai Chizu" ("Social Map of Disparity and Division").

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