Article by Raw Story: It reports on the trial of a man who has plead guilty to setting fire to the offices of Kyoto Animation in 2019, which devastated the mostly female-staffed studio and cost the lives of 36 employees.

  • @Hoomod
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    121 year ago

    Intentionally starts a fire, tells the people to drop dead, kills 36 and injures 30+ more. Now he says he thinks he maybe went too far?

  • @ALilOff
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    111 year ago

    I remember the event in 2019 and my heartbroken. Kyoto Animation is one of the best studios there is and what they’ve created were always amazing. The lives lost will be remembered in their work and family.

    The guy who did it claims the reason he did it was he thought that Kyoani was stealing his ideas.

    Currently his legal team is trying to plead insanity.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 year ago

      I didn’t think so many people would die and now I think I went too far," said the 45-year-old.

      Seems unlikely they will get away with insanity as this statement implies he knew people may get injured.

      Insanity pleas only work when their mental illness prevented them from understanding it was a crime.

      If depression makes someone so angry they kill they are still culpable.

      If someone had a psychotic break and genuinely believed the building was full of zombies that’s different.

  • resurrexia
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    11 year ago

    Reposting from my misskey:

    In view of the Kyoani case progressing, I want to talk about Dr Ueda Takahiro, the doctor who was in charge of the skin grafting of arsonist Aoba Shinji.

    Not a single piece of Western media has named Dr Ueda for his work in advancing skin grafting, and in particular, the technique called Cultured Epithelial Autografts (CEA), which I think is what was used for Aoba.

    For starters, this is Dr Ueda’s Researchgate and Researchmap profiles with his papers. At this point there doesn’t seem to be a specific case report talking about Aoba’s medical progress, but it can be inferred that he may have been included in studies that included multiple patients. I also don’t have access to the Japanese-only research papers (and my Japanese ability isn’t at an academic level) and only what was originally published in English, but for an idea of what the skin grafting procedure entailed, you can read one of his older English-first publications that are available online (this predates Aoba so the technique is likely even more refined now). I’m sure much of what has been learned has also been incorporated into the Japanese Society for Burn Injuries (JSBI) Clinical Practice Guidelines for Management of Burn Care (3rd Edition), which Dr Ueda contributed to.

    What did Aoba’s skin grafting process entail? English news sources didn’t talk about it, but Mainichi did in this article (my interpretation):

    Aoba had 90% body surface area of 3rd degree burns. It seems that at the time of the arson, he was wearing a fanny pack around his waist, which kept some skin from being too injured. Part of that intact skin was taken for cultures and placed on top of an artificial dermis, for a duration of 4 weeks. He underwent 9 surgeries for the burns (likely including the original debridement and graft harvesting procedures).

    Asahi Shinbun has an article on Dr Ueda’s reflections about the incident in English.

    You can also find some of his own thoughts and retweets about the case on his Twitter/X