Los Angeles Times

KNIFE ATTACK LEAVES 19 DEAD

In Japan, a former employee says he stabbed residents of a home for the disabled because of a ‘grudge.’

- By Jake Adelstein Adelstein is a special correspond­ent.

TOKYO — A man armed with a knife stormed into a home for the disabled in Sagamihara, just outside Tokyo, early Tuesday and stabbed at least 19 people to death while injuring about 20 more.

“I did it,” 26-year-old Satoshi Uematsu announced to authoritie­s upon turning himself in at a police station at 3 a.m., half an hour after the attack, according to police in Kanagawa prefecture.

He was arrested on charges of trespassin­g and attempted murder — because the deaths had not yet been confirmed.

The attack has been reported as Japan’s largest mass slaying by a lone killer since World War II.

Uematsu was wearing a black shirt and slacks when he turned himself in, and had dyed blond hair, police reported.

Detectives escorted him back to the scene of the killings in a search for weapons and were interrogat­ing him about the motivation and circumstan­ces of the attack.

Uematsu, who identified himself as a former employee at the facility, told police in his initial statement that “it would be better if all the damn disabled just went away.”

Nippon News Network reported that Uematsu used a hammer to break a window and enter the facility. He tied up a staffer who tried to stop him, then took the worker’s keys and used them to enter residents’ rooms, stabbing whomever he found.

He told police that he had been forced out of his job. “I held a deep grudge against them,” he told the authoritie­s, according to the network.

Several residents are in critical condition, according to Japanese media. News reports showed ambulances surroundin­g the facility as police and fire department personnel carried out the injured.

The home for the disabled, Tsukui Yamayurien, is in a residentia­l neighborho­od near several city schools. It houses up to 160 people who require help with bathing, eating and daily functions, according to its website.

The facility, constructe­d by the local government, is run by a social welfare organizati­on called Kanagawa Kyodokai. Residents there have varying degrees of physical disability, with some requiring extensive assistance. The facility also provides day care, offering a swimming pool, gym and a medical clinic.

Satamoi Kurihara, a Sagamihara Fire Bureau spokesman, confirmed that 19 were dead and at least 24 people severely injured as of 9 a.m. Tuesday, several hours after the attack. Some victims had been stabbed, while others had been sliced with a sharp weapon.

Gun violence in Japan is extremely rare. However, mass killings with knives and other weapons have occurred before.

In 2001, Mamoru Takuma, a former soldier and janitor with a history of mental illness, murdered eight children at an Osaka elementary school with a knife. He was found guilty and hanged in 2004. In 2008, Tomohiro Kato, plowed a truck into a crowd, killing three. He then stabbed others, killing four more.

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