San Francisco Chronicle

Woman wins #MeToo case against prominent journalist

- By Motoko Rich and Hisako Ueno Motoko Rich and Hisako Ueno are New York Times writers.

TOKYO — A Tokyo court on Wednesday sided with a woman who accused a prominent television journalist of rape, ordering him to pay her damages worth about $30,000 in a ruling that the victim called a milestone in Japan.

In the closely watched civil case, the Tokyo District Court ordered Noriyuki Yamaguchi, a former Washington bureau chief of the Tokyo Broadcasti­ng System and a biographer of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, to pay the damages to Shiori Ito, a journalist who has become a feminist icon in Japan for being one of the few women willing to speak out about sexual assault there.

Judge Akihiro Suzuki said in his ruling that he found Ito “highly trustworth­y” and accepted her account of being assaulted in Yamaguchi’s hotel room after he took her to dinner in Tokyo in 2015 to discuss job prospects.

The judge said Yamaguchi had committed “an illegal act” by engaging in sexual intercours­e with Ito without her consent while she was inebriated and unconsciou­s, and continuing even after she awoke and refused him.

Ito had sought damages of about $100,000 after the police had conducted an investigat­ion and decided against arresting Yamaguchi, and prosecutor­s had not indicted him on criminal charges.

Yamaguchi had countersue­d for damages of about $1.2 million, but the court said his claims were “groundless.”

Speaking in front of the court building after the judgment, Ito, who is now working as a freelance journalist, thanked her supporters.

“It has been a long time,” she said. “But even little by little, a big change is happening. The scene I am witnessing is completely different from the one I used to see before.”

At a news conference after the ruling, Yamaguchi accused Ito of “telling lies” and said he would appeal.

The judge’s finding in Ito’s case was notable in that Japan’s sex crime laws do not mention consent.

In 2018, police confirmed 1,307 cases of rape in Japan. That figure most likely undercount­s the number of assaults: A survey by the central government’s Cabinet Office in 2017 found that close to 60% of women who are victims of rape do not report the crime.

Ito said she hoped that Japan’s rape laws would be revised to include consent, making it possible for other victims to pursue criminal charges.

“If nonconsens­ual sexual intercours­e is defined as rape in the law,” she said, “the hurdle to prosecute would be much lower.”

Ito added that she wanted to send a message to others who have experience­d sexual assault. “I want to tell them, ‘Thank you so much for surviving until today,’ ” she said. “When you feel better, I hope to take action together.”

 ?? Takashi Aoyama / Getty Images ?? Journalist Shiori Ito holds a sign declaring victory in front of a Tokyo courthouse. She called the ruling a milestone in Japan.
Takashi Aoyama / Getty Images Journalist Shiori Ito holds a sign declaring victory in front of a Tokyo courthouse. She called the ruling a milestone in Japan.

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