![World's longest-serving death row inmate — an 88-year-old former boxer — is acquitted of 1966 murders in Japan](https://assets3.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2023/03/13/4c248db5-f8e8-47dd-a5bb-edd4f97d3977/thumbnail/1200x630g4/cc74699b41baa721502819afc1e80505/gettyimages-1184523391.jpg?v=05e1d8b62a2ebbf0c759b67223fa87f8)
World's longest-serving death row inmate — an 88-year-old former boxer — is acquitted of 1966 murders in Japan
CBSN
A Japanese court ruled Thursday that an 88-year-old former boxer was not guilty in a retrial for a 1966 quadruple murder, reversing an earlier decision that made him the world's longest-serving death row inmate.
Iwao Hakamada's acquittal by the Shizuoka District Court makes him the fifth death-row convict to be found not guilty in a retrial in postwar Japanese criminal justice. The case could rekindle a debate around abolishing the death penalty in Japan.
The court's presiding judge, Koshi Kunii, said the court acknowledged multiple fabrications of evidence and that Hakamada was not the culprit, Hakamada's lawyer said.
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