Will the murderer who attacked Abe be sentenced to death? The murderer of Shinzo Abe should not be sentenced to death. In the end, the murderer is likely to be sentenced to life imprisonment. What if

Will the murderer who attacked Abe be sentenced to death? The murderer of Shinzo Abe should not be sentenced to death. In the end, the murderer is likely to be sentenced to life imprisonment. What if the defense proposed it? No criminal responsibility? If the plea of not guilty is finally adopted by the Japanese court, it proves that the murderer may even be acquitted. That's because Japanese laws are different from those in China. Japan does have the death penalty, but there are two kinds of death penalty in Japan, one is the statutory death penalty and the other is the optional death penalty. Usually only? Collaborate with foreign countries and use force against Japan? Will be sentenced to death by law. Generally speaking, only those Japanese who betray Japan will be defined as legal death penalty. Obviously, the assassin of Shinzo Abe does not belong to this article. This killer belongs to intentional homicide at most. In Japan, intentional homicide actually belongs to the choice of death penalty, and it is generally sentenced to life imprisonment or fixed-term imprisonment of more than five years. Only when more than two people are killed at the same time will the death penalty be considered. According to the process of the murderer's crime, the Japanese prosecutor is likely to sue the murderer for intentional homicide and ask the court to sentence him to death. However, in the actual trial process, the murderer's defense lawyer will also defend his innocence or misdemeanor. In addition to the above reasons, there is another reason that it will be influenced by the Japanese abolitionist movement. In fact, before this, the defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment in both the assassination of a member of the Democratic Party and the assassination of Ichiro Ito, mayor of Nagasaki. In addition, in Japan, the Bar Association will begin to discuss the abolition of the death penalty in recent years. Although the subsequent legal provisions are not perfect, in fact, many people have begun to support the abolition of the death penalty. Perhaps the assassination of Shinzo Abe will really bring the discussion of abolishing the death penalty in Japan to a crossroads.