The
above quote is accurate. The Shan State Progress Party (SSPP) has publicly
executed a man for raping and killing a six-year-old girl. While I do not endorse
their political party at all, I feel that that paedophile should be executed
and it was done in a swift and sure manner.
The paedophile does not deserve to live.
And Clint Eastwood is absolutely right when he said:
Crimes against children are the most heinous crime.
That, for me, would be a reason for capital punishment because children are
innocent and need the guidance of an adult society. –
Clint Eastwood
Child Rapist-Killer Publicly
Executed by Shan Ethnic Armed Group
Yangon — The Shan State Progress
Party (SSPP) has publicly executed a man for raping and killing a six-year-old
girl.
24 December 2020Nan Lwin Hnin Pwint
Burma
Child Rapist-Killer Publicly Executed by Shan
Ethnic Armed Group
Shan State Progress Party members. / SSPP
Yangon — The Shan State Progress Party (SSPP) has
publicly executed a man for raping and killing a six-year-old girl.
The SSPP is one of at least 21 ethnicity-based
armed groups in Myanmar fighting for equality and self-determination. The armed
group is still in the process of negotiating with the central government to
sign the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA).
Ethnic groups control governance and judicial
processes in their territories.
“He confessed and there was evidence against him.
We delivered the verdict at the trial in front of community leaders and
observers. We gave the sentence to protect the rule of law and as a deterrent,”
said Sai U Hein, a legal officer at the SSPP’s central court.
The six-year-old from Wan Nwat village in Hsipaw
Township was raped and killed by a 30-year-old from the same village on Dec. 9,
the court heard. The perpetrator then disposed of the body.
He was arrested by the SSPP the following day and
handed the death sentence on Tuesday.
“This is the first child rape case [in
our territory] and the first death sentence given for child rape. Under the
Penal Code applied by [Myanmar’s] government, life sentences are given for rape
and murder. Our citizens were deeply shocked by the crime. We give the death
sentence in cases that disrupt community peace and tranquility,” said Sai U
Hein.
Hsipaw Township state parliamentarian Nan San San
Aye said: “We cannot intervene in the verdict. As the
victim is a child, harsh action must be taken as a deterrent.”
It is uncommon for ethnic armed groups to publicly
announce trials and death sentences. However, the SSPP released a statement
about the execution.
Myanmar amended Article 376 of the Penal Code in
March last year, increasing the prison sentence for the rape of under-12s and
disabled women to at least 20 years.
Civil society organizations and the public have
frequently called for death sentences for child rapists. A proposal submitted
to the Union Parliament to allow the execution of child rapists was rejected.
No death sentence has been carried out in Myanmar
since 1988, although it remains on the statute books.
The Shan State Progress
Party said the death penalty was 'the only option' for the 30-year-old, who
assaulted the girl before throwing her body off a cliff. (Shwe Phee Myay News
Agency)
Shan armed group sentences child murderer to death
December
23, 2020
“The girl’s parents demanded we give him the death sentence – just
like he did to their daughter,”
a party spokesman said.
By
AFP
An
ethnic Shan armed group that unofficially controls a swathe of Shan State in
northeastern Myanmar has sentenced a man to death for the kidnap, rape and
murder of a six-year-old girl.
An
official from the Shan State Progress Party said Wednesday the death penalty
was “the only option” for the 30-year-old, who assaulted the girl before
throwing her body off a cliff.
Shan
State is home to several armed ethnic groups who are allowed unofficial
autonomy in an uneasy agreement with Myanmar’s military.
The
region is part of the golden triangle – including Thailand and Laos – that is
frequently described as lawless, and where huge quantities of the world’s
heroin, speed and crystal meth are produced.
“This is the lesson to give to the people, so they don’t commit the
same crime in the future,”
said party spokesman Sai Than Aung.
“The girl’s parents demanded we give him the death sentence – just
like he did to their daughter.”
Yangon-based
lawyer and women’s rights activist Hla Hla Yee said the crime was abhorrent, but
said the death penalty was a severe punishment.
“There’s scope with the death penalty that it can be handed to
an innocent person and injustice can be carried out,” she said.
Non-governmental
organisations say child rape is common in Myanmar, and Hla Hla Yee called for a
ramp-up in child protection and sex education programs – particularly targeting
online pornography.
“People here don’t have sex education knowledge, so they target the
kids around them,” she
said.
Armed
groups drawn from marginalised ethnic minority communities control an estimated
third of Myanmar’s territory. Civilian and legal administration in these areas
often sits outside the government’s jurisdiction.
On
this date, December 15, 2020, Takahiro Shiraishi
(白石隆浩) AKA the ‘Twitter
Killer’ was sentenced to death for the murdering and dismembering nine 'suicidal'
people he met online in Kanagawa, Japan.
Takahiro Shiraishi (白石隆浩)
'Twitter
killer' is sentenced to death in Tokyo for murdering and dismembering nine
'suicidal' people he met online
·Takahiro Shiraishi, 30, killed and butchered
nine victims, 15 to 26, in Kanagawa
·Lawyers argued for prison time because the
victims expressed suicidal thoughts
·He was sentenced to death after judge ruled
victims did not consent to death
·Tokyo police found heads, limbs and bones when
they searched his apartment
A Japanese serial killer dubbed the 'Twitter
killer' was sentenced to death by a Tokyo court today for murdering and
dismembering nine people he met online.
Takahiro Shiraishi, 30, admitted killing and
butchering eight women and one man, aged between 15 and 26, who he met on the
social media platform.
The female victims were also found to be have been
sexually assaulted.
His
lawyers had argued he should receive a prison sentence rather than the death
penalty because his victims expressed suicidal thoughts on social media and so
had consented to death.
But the
death sentence was handed down to Shiraishi today after the court found him
criminally responsible for their deaths.
'None
of the nine victims consented to be killed, including silent consent,'
Presiding Judge Naokuni Yano said, according to public broadcaster NHK.
'It
is extremely grave that the lives of nine young people were taken away. The
dignity of the victims was trampled upon.'
Yano
described the murders as 'extremely vicious in crime history' and
ruled Shiraishi was mentally fit to be held responsible for them.
The
father of one 25-year-old victim said in court last month that he 'will never
forgive Shiraishi even if he dies', NHK reported.
He
said 'Even now, when I see a woman of my daughter's age, I mistake her for my
daughter. This pain will never go away. Give her back to me.'
Police
uncovered a grisly house of horrors behind Shiraishi's front door in Zama,
Kanagawa, on the morning of Halloween in 2017.
Nine
dismembered bodies, with as many as 240 bone parts stashed in coolers and
toolboxes, had been sprinkled with cat litter in a bid to hide the evidence.
On
Twitter, his profile featured a manga drawing of a man whose neck and wrist
were scarred, with a rope around his neck, the Japan Times reported.
His
Twitter handle roughly translated as 'hangman', and his bio described his
expertise in the practice of hanging.
The
profile explained: 'I want to help people who are really in pain.
'Please
DM me anytime.'
In
a post made on October 21, Shiraishi wrote: 'Bullying is everywhere, in
school and at work.
'There
must be many people in society who are suffering after attempting suicides,
though their cases are not reported in the news.
'I
want to help such people.'
Some
435 people turned up to watch the verdict today, even though the court only had
16 seats available for the public.
Reports
in 2017 said his first victim was a woman whom he got in touch with via
Twitter, offering to assist her suicide wish, then killing her boyfriend to
silence him.
They
said Shiraishi used similar tactics to kill seven other women.
The
reports explained one of the women contacted Shiraishi via Twitter in late
September, seeking a partner for a suicide pact and saying she was afraid to die
alone.
The
two were recorded by security cameras walking together outside railway stations
near her residence and the suspect's apartment, the reports added.
Japan
has the highest suicide rate among the Group of Seven industrialised nations,
with more than 20,000 people taking their lives annually.
While
the suicide rate has been falling since it peaked in 2003, it remain
particularly high among young adults and schoolchildren.
The
woman's brother reported her disappearance to police the next day.
When
he sought information about his sister's disappearance on Twitter, an
unidentified woman replied that she had met Shiraishi and agreed to cooperate
with police by setting up a fake appointment.
Two
investigators then followed Shiraishi back to his apartment and knocked on the
door, public broadcaster NHK said.
When
they asked him if he knew where the missing woman was, Shiraishi pointed to one
of eight coolers, saying 'She is in here', NHK said, quoting investigative
sources.
Japan
is one of few developed nations to retain the death penalty, and public support
for it remains high.
Years
usually pass between sentencing and execution, and the last execution was in
December 2019, when a Chinese man was hanged for the murder of a family of
four.
Some
500 Japanese people under 20 years of age kill themselves each year and a
Nippon Foundation survey last year showed that one in four people had seriously
considered suicide.
In
some cases, victims have committed mass suicide after meeting on so-called
'suicide websites', a phenomenon that has prompted the government to crack down
on people using the internet to post their death wishes.
The
issue first hit the headlines in 2005, with 91 people in total committing
'group suicide' after contacting each other online.
'It
has long been a taboo in Japan to talk about death and suicide... but it's easy
to talk about it on social media,' Akiko Mura, an executive member of
Befrienders Worldwide Tokyo, told AFP in 2017.
She
said Shiraishi would have likely gained the victims' trust by convincing them
that he understood their desire to die.
'They
might have thought he was the only person who would sincerely listen to their
problems,' she said.
Although
Shiraishi was able to exploit social media to target his victims, Mura warned
that depressed people need an outlet for their feelings amid calls at the time
to restrict suicide posts on social media.
'People
need a place where they can be heard,' she said. 'Without it, I'm afraid the
number of suicides might even increase.'
Four
days after the bodies were found in Shiraishi's apartment in a Tokyo suburb,
Twitter unveiled new rules stating that users 'may not promote or encourage
suicide or self-harm' but it stopped short of banning tweets expressing a wish
to kill oneself.
The nine suspected
victims of Japanese serial killer Takahiro Shiraishi, who dismembered them in
his apartment. Picture: masamasakoro.com.Source:Supplied
Japan 'Twitter killer' sentenced to death for nine murders
16
December 2020, MVT 10:56
A
Japanese man dubbed the "Twitter killer" was sentenced to death by a Tokyo
court Tuesday for murdering and dismembering nine people he met online.
Takahiro
Shiraishi, 30, admitted killing and butchering his young victims -- all but one
of whom were women -- who he met on the social media platform.
His
lawyers had argued he should receive a prison sentence because his victims,
aged between 15 and 26, expressed suicidal thoughts on social media and so had
consented to death.
But on
Tuesday "the death sentence was handed down" to Shiraishi, a court
official told AFP.
"None
of the nine victims consented to be killed, including silent consent," the judge said, according to public broadcaster
NHK.
"It
is extremely grave that the lives of nine young people were taken away. The
dignity of the victims was trampled upon," the judge reportedly added.
NHK said
435 people turned up to watch the verdict, even though the court only had 16
seats available for the public.
Shiraishi
used Twitter to contact users who posted about taking their own lives, telling
them he could help them in their plans -- or even die alongside them.
The
father of one 25-year-old victim said in court last month that he "will
never forgive Shiraishi even if he dies", NHK reported at the time.
"Even
now, when I see a woman of my daughter's age, I mistake her for my daughter.
This pain will never go away. Give her back to me!" he said.
Japan is
one of few developed nations to retain the death penalty, and public support
for it remains high.
Years
usually pass between sentencing and execution, and the last execution was in
December 2019, when a Chinese man was hanged for the murder of a family of
four.
What made Takahiro Shiraishi kill nine people
and how did he lure them to their deaths? Walter Sim Japan Correspondent In Tokyo
In June, one month after he was given a suspended
prison term for being a scout for a prostitution ring, Takahiro Shiraishi told
his father that he saw no meaning in life.
Jobless, the 27-year-old cocooned himself further
in the dark recesses of social media. He used Twitter, a medium he once used to
lure girls into the sex trade, to meet people with suicidal thoughts.
The gruesome Halloween find of nine human heads and
240 bones in his studio apartment in Zama city, an hour and a half from central
Tokyo, has spooked Japan and again shone a light on suicide and mental health
issues in a country that even has a "suicide forest".
Japan has the sixth highest suicide rate in the
world. Some 21,897 killed themselves last year - a 22-year low, while there
were 257 reports filed with the Internet Hotline Centre about suicide attempts.
Shiraishi grew up in Zama with his parents and a
younger sister in a house roughly 2.5km from his loft apartment.
He was a quiet, inconspicuous boy who
went to local elementary and junior high schools in the city, acquaintances
told Japanese media.
His grades were not stellar, but he was a
conscientious student who did not miss a day of school. News pictures show a
scrawny teenager with thin-rimmed spectacles who joined his junior high's
baseball team as a freshman, and then the track team as a senior.
He went on to study at the prefectural high school
in the city of Yokohamaand it was around this time that things fell apart at
home. His parents divorced, and his mother and sister moved out.
After graduating from senior high, Shiraishi took
on a series of odd jobs - including at a supermarket, food factory and pachinko
parlour - before becoming a scout for a prostitution ring.
He was active in Shinjuku's seedy Kabukicho
district, and was once described as an "ambitious, dangerous man who is
capable of betrayal".
One woman, who cohabited with him for three months
earlier this year, said Shiraishi was "unusually more gentle than ordinary
people" despite a morbid fascination with death and suicide.
He had sent her messages such as "Let's commit
suicide together", and once texted "I have killed a hostess who said
she wanted to die", which the former girlfriend dismissed as a joke.
Shiraishi was close to his father, who works at an
automotive design workshop, neighbours said. The son frequently helped out at
the workshop, and occasionally had dinner and drinks with his father.
In August, he confessed to his father that he had
met the love of his life and would urgently like to have his own space. His
father acted as guarantor for an apartment in the neighbourhood that rents for
19,000 yen ($227) a month.
On Aug 22, Shiraishi moved into the 13.5 sq m
apartment which Japanese media has described as the "house of
horrors".
While living on his own, Shiraishi built up a small
following on Twitter through at least two accounts - "I want to die"
and "A professional at hanging".
Under the first account, he cast himself as a forlorn
victim seeking company for his misery. "I want to forget everything,"
he wrote in an Aug 25 post. "I want to disappear."
Under the second account, he took on the persona of
someone who is skilled at helping people die. "I want to spread my
knowledge in hanging," he said. "I really want to become the source
of strength for everyone who is in pain."
"If you are at a dead end, please consult
me," he wrote.
He also sought out his victims using the hashtag
"suicide recruitment" on Twitter, preying on young girls who wanted
to take their own lives. He told them via direct messaging on Twitter:
"Let's die together."
To ensure his victims would not back out at the
last minute, he would arrange to meet them at a train station near their homes,
then travel together to his apartment.
He said he gave them alcohol, tranquilisers and
sleeping pills "to make them relax", before assaulting them.
He confessed to killing one person in August, four
in September and four in October - mostly on the same day he met them. Eight of
the nine victims were women, mainly in their late teens to early 20s.
"It was difficult at first. It took me three
days to get rid of the first body, but after that I could deal with them within
one day," Shiraishi told the police.
He said his motives had been sex and money. He is
alleged to have choked his victims - whose real names and ages he did not know
- until they passed out, before sexually assaulting some of them.
"There is no doubt that I sliced up the bodies
in my bathroom with the intention of destroying evidence," he said.
Police have recovered two kitchen knives, scissors,
a saw, binding rope and a gimlet, all with traces of blood on them.
Shiraishi said: "I disposed of their flesh and
internal organs like garbage, but kept their bones out of fear that I would be
caught."
<< GOT USED TO IT
It was difficult at first. It took me three days to
get rid of the first body, but after that, I could deal with them within one
day.
TAKAHIRO SHIRAISHI, speaking to the police.
>>
Police also found three cooler boxes and five large
storage boxes in his apartment. They checked the eight boxes and found body
parts, including heads, legs and arms, in seven of the boxes.
He reportedly used cat litter to cover the body
parts to mask the smell.
His neighbours in the two-storey, 12-unit apartment
block said they had neither seen nor heard anything amiss, despite complaints
of a persistent "pungent smell" emanating from his apartment.
One of them pointed out that it was strange that
his bathroom ventilation fan was kept on at all times.
Shiraishi even brazenly used the neighbourhood
garbage collection point to dispose of the evidence. A neighbour has noted - in
hindsight - his frequent trips to the chute.
It was the online trail he left on social media
which eventually led the police to his doorstep.
The brother of his ninth and final victim - a
23-year-old woman from the Tokyo suburb of Hachioji - hacked into her Twitter
account, and was offered help by a woman who had met Shiraishi before.
She agreed to be the bait to lure Shiraishi out for
the police, who then followed him home on Oct 30.
When asked if he knew where the missing 23-year-old
woman was, he pointed at a chiller box near the entrance and said: "In
there."
On this date, December 10, 2020, Brandon
Bernard was executed in U.S. prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, by the US Federal
Government. He was convicted of the 1999 murders of Texas Couple, Todd and
Stacie Bagley in 1999.
Brandon Am Bernard
(July 3, 1980 – December 10, 2020) was an American man who was convicted for
the 1999 robbery, kidnapping, and murder of two people. He was sentenced to
death for the murders and remained on death row until his execution in December
2020.
Bernard
spent most of his childhood in Killeen, Texas. In his
early teens, he began committing crimes such as burglary and joined a
neighborhood gang. His crimes and rebellious behaviors lead him to being kicked
out of several schools and prosecuted in the juvenile criminal justice system.
In 1999, Bernard and a few of his friends robbed, kidnapped, and murdered two
youth pastors, whom they shot burned inside a car.
Christopher
Andre Vialva was
executed on 24 September 2020, and Bernard was executed on 10 December. The
remaining teens received a range of different prison terms; some remain
incarcerated.
In
the time leading to his execution, politicians, celebrities, and the prosecutor
and several jurors who convicted Bernard advocated that his sentence be
commuted.
Brandon
Bernard was born on July 3, 1980, to Army nurse Thelma Bernard in San Antonio, Texas.
He had 2 younger siblings. Due to the Army transferring Bernard's mother to
Alaska, the family moved briefly to Fairbanks, Alaska
between 1982 and November 1984, they then moved to Killeen, Texas. He
would spend the majority of his childhood in Killeen. As a child, Bernard was
suffering from asthma. In
1986, Bernard began attending school at the Seventh-Day Adventist Academy. The
family spent the summer of 1987 in Colorado for his mother's
medical training. In September 1992, Bernard's intoxicated father sprayed his
mother Thelma in the face with mace; the couple later divorced in 1993.
In
1994, Bernard's cousin Melsimeon Pollock joined the household. Pollock began
promoting Bernard to burglarize houses in early 1995. Bernard's new rebellious
and criminal behavior led him to be bounced between his parent's households,
multiple school changes, and 5 months in a juvenile detention facility in Brownwood, Texas in
1995. Bernard then became a member of the organized neighborhood gang known as
"212 Piru Bloods". In 1996, Bernard attempted to gain employment but
failed to do so. He would later complete his GED in 1997 and enroll as a senior
at Killeen High
School for the 1997-1998 school year. While attending Killeen High School,
he managed to receive decent grades and had good class attendance. In the
summer of 1998, Bernard attempted to enroll in the United States Army
but was rejected due to his juvenile offenses.
Christopher Vialva, 40,
is set to receive the death penalty on Thursday at a federal prison in Terre
Haute, Indiana. He was convicted 20 years ago for the 1999 murders of two youth
ministers
On
the afternoon of June 21, 1999, Brandon Bernard, age 18, Christopher Vialva,
age 19, Terry Brown, age 15, and Christopher Lewis, age 15, and Tony Spark, age
16, approached Todd and Stacie Bagley, two youth pastors, and asked them for a
ride at a gas station–with plans to rob them. Once the Bagleys agreed to give
them a ride, Vialva held the couple at gunpoint and forced them into the trunk.
While in the trunk for several hours driving around, the Bagleys spoke through
an opening in the backseat and urged their abductors to accept
Jesus Christ and to spare their lives. The perpetrators then robbed the
Bagleys by using their ATM card to withdraw cash, stealing money, stealing
jewelry, and seeking to pawn Stacie's wedding ring. Soon after, the teens
pulled to the side of the road and poured lighter fluid inside the vehicle while
the Bagleys sang "Jesus
Loves Us" among themselves. Vialva then shot both of the Bagleys in
the head, killing Todd and knocking Stacie out to later die of smoke
inhalation. Vialva then ordered Bernard to set the car on fire. Bernard has
claimed he thought that both of the Bagleys were already deceased when he
ignited the vehicle.
Legal proceedings
Bernards
trial was held in 2000, 1 year after the murders. Since the crimes took place
at Fort Hood, the trial
would be held in federal court and not in a state level court. He was convicted
of 2 counts of murder and sentenced to death.
Death row
Controversy
In
the time preceding his execution, there was substantial national and
international controversy on whether Bernard should have been sentenced to
death and executed.
Execution
Bernard
was executed by lethal
injection at the Federal
Correctional Institution in Terre Haute, Indiana.
While preparing for the execution, Bernard spoke his last words saying he was
"sorry" to the couple he murdered citing those words as "the
only words that I can say that completely capture how I feel now and how I felt
that day.” The chemical used during the lethal injection was pentobarbital. He was
pronounced dead at 9:27 p.m. EST on December 10,
2020.
After
watching the news broadcast this morning, I was both hurt and disappointed that
the death penalty was the issue, yet both sides of the story were not told. The
story was focused on Vialva’s life and the changes that he has made. This is
not about him and his changed life, but about the victims in this case.
At 19,
Vialva was aware of right and wrong and was trying to prove himself as a leader
of a gang. Vialva preplanned with the other members what would go down that
day. He personally shot both Todd and Stacie in the head, killing Todd
instantly. Stacie was shot in the mouth after watching her husband die. She
later died of smoke inhalation after Bernard set their car on fire. The gang
utilized Sparks, who at 15 was the youngest of the group, to ask Todd for a
ride home. In the course of trying to help, Todd and Stacie agree to give their
time to take him home, which was their practice to reach out to help anyone
they could, when given the opportunity.
Vialva,
Brown, and Bernard hid from sight until Sparks gave them the Ok. They then all
rushed out and jumped in the car, putting guns to Todd and Stacie’s head, and
Vialva said, “plans have changed.” Todd and Stacie were two innocent young
people who were deceived because they always saw the good in others. They were
then forced into the truck of their car and driven around for 7 horrific hours
on that hot day in June. They had no water, no restroom, they were robbed of
their belongings, they had all of their money withdrawn from their bank
account, they were driven around to other gang members houses, and slam banged
around on a dirt country road. They begged from the trunk of their car for
someone to call the police to help them at the different houses, but no one
would call for help.
Vialva now
says he has turned his life around and has influenced other lives since then,
but Todd and Stacie have also influenced many lives. They were willing to lay
down their lives to try and win their kidnappers to the Lord by quoting
scripture, praying, and singing praises to God before they died. We will never
know how many people they could have influenced for good if they had been given
the chance. I feel when these tragedies happen, both sides of the story should
be given. I believe when someone deliberately takes the life of another, they
should suffer the consequences for their actions.
Christopher’s
mother had the opportunity to visit him for the past 21 years. This execution
should have been carried out 3-5 years after a jury of 12 people found him
guilty. We have had to wait for 21 years for justice and closure. We cannot be
with our children for visits or to see them on holidays. We were denied that
privilege. Todd and Stacie were innocent victims. Please remember the victims
and their families whose lives have been shattered and are still trying to
cope. I have the assurance that Todd and Stacie were staunch Christians and are
now in heaven with Jesus, who will richly reward them for their willingness to
be his witnesses even unto death. I know without a doubt we will have a
glorious reunion with them one day!
I want to
make sure to thank everyone that participated in seeing that Todd and Stacie
received justice for this horrific crime, particularly: Our Federal Prosecutors
in Texas, The FBI, The Texas Rangers, The Ft. Hood Military Police, and The
Crisis Support Team in Indiana. We appreciate that President Trump felt
compassion to the victims and the families to reinstate the Death Penalty, and
allow us some closure and to give Todd and Stacie justice.