Iwao Hakamada boxer
- bouts
- 29
- won
- 16
- lost
- 11
- draw
- 2
- Status
- inactive
- Division
- featherweight
- Debut
- 1959-11-06
- Height
- -
- Reach
- -
- Age
- -
- Born
- 1937-03-10
- Death
- -
- Nationality
- Japan
Iwao Hakamada (袴田 巖, Hakamada Iwao, born March 10, 1936) is a Japanese former professional boxer who was sentenced to death on September 11, 1968, for a 1966 mass murder that became known as the Hakamada Incident. On March 10, 2011, Guinness World Records certified Hakamada as the world’s longest-held death row inmate. In March 2014, he was granted a retrial and an immediate release when the Shizuoka district court found there was reason to believe evidence against him had been falsified.Iwao Hakamada was born March 10, 1936, in Shizuoka City, Japan. He has an older sister, Hideko; his older brother Shigeji died in 2001. From 1959 to 1961, Hakamada fought in 29 professional boxing matches. A featherweight, he was ranked as high as sixth in his weight class. He finished his career with a 16–11–2 record, including one win by TKO. All of his losses were on points. After his boxing career, he worked at a Shizuoka-based miso manufacturer.On June 30, 1966, there was a fire at the home of one of Hakamada's bosses. According to Hakamada, he helped extinguish the fire only to find the bodies of the executive, his wife, and two children, all stabbed to death. About ¥200,000 in cash was stolen from the victims' residence.Hakamada was interrogated and, in August 1966, he was arrested based on his confession and a tiny amount of blood and gasoline found on a pair of pajamas he owned. According to his lawyers, Hakamada was interrogated a total of 264 hours, for as many as 16 hours a session, over 23 days to obtain the confession. They added that he was denied water or toilet breaks during the interrogation.At his trial, Hakamada retracted the confession, saying police had kicked and clubbed him to obtain it, and pleaded not guilty. "I could do nothing but crouch down on the floor trying to keep from defecating," he later told his sister. "One of the interrogators put my thumb onto an ink pad, drew it to a written confession record and ordered me, 'Write your name here!' while shouting at me, kicking me and wrenching my arm."Prosecutors put aside the pajamas and instead presented five pieces of bloody clothing that were found in a tank at the miso factory in August 1967, 14 months after the crime. They argued that the clothing came from the killer and said police had found the blood types of the victims on the clothing. They argued that Hakamada must have murdered the family in these clothes and then changed into pajamas to commit the arson. Hakamada supporters said the case was full of holes, arguing that the alleged murder weapon – a fruit knife with a 12.19-centimetre (4.80 in) blade – could not have withstood the forty stabbings of the victims without sustaining significant damage, and that the pajamas used to justify the arrest had disappeared and been replaced with the bloody clothing. The clothes were too small for Hakamada but the prosecution argued they had shrunk in the miso tank and the label had a "B" or medium size label on it which would have fitted Hakamada. However the B indicated the colour Black not the size. The blood stains on the clothes were too dark and the colour of the clothes too light to have been lying in the miso tank.
Date | Opponent | Last Opponents' Results | Place | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1961-08-24 | Ikko Toratani | DWWWWD | LOST Points |
|
1961-07-31 | Hisao Ikejima | WLWWLW | LOST Points |
|
1961-07-02 | Kenji Osawa | DWWWLL | LOST Points |
|
1961-04-19 | Marcing David | WDWLWL | Rizal Memorial Sports Complex, Manila | LOST Points |
1961-03-29 | Tetsuya Yamaguchi | WWWWLW | LOST Points |
|
1961-02-27 | Hideo Ide | LWWWLW | LOST Points |
|
1961-01-11 | Ikko Toratani | LWWLDL | WIN Points |
|
1960-12-30 | Minoru Akita | LLL | WIN Points |
|
1960-12-21 | Kazuyoshi Amada | WWWDWL | LOST Points |
|
1960-12-04 | Katsuo Yano | LL | WIN Points |
|
1960-10-28 | Kinichiro Toyama | WLLLW | WIN Points |
|
1960-10-20 | Hiroshi Oda | LLLWLL | Shimizu | WIN Points |
1960-10-10 | Noboru Yashio | L | WIN Points |
|
1960-07-21 | Shoshichi Yasuda | WLLWLL | WIN Points |
|
1960-06-16 | Masaki Fujita | WLWWWW | WIN Points |
|
1960-05-12 | Kenji Osawa | LLLWDW | WIN Points |
|
1960-05-01 | Kinichiro Toyama | W | Asakusa Hall | WIN Points |
1960-04-18 | Toshiyuki Hyuga | LDL | WIN Points |
|
1960-03-28 | Eijiro Saito | LWWLWW | DRAW Points |
|
1960-02-26 | Toshiyuki Hyuga | LD | WIN Points |
|
1960-02-15 | Eijiro Saito | WWLWWL | LOST Points |
|
1960-02-10 | Yasuo Fujita | LLW | LOST Points |
|
1960-02-03 | Osamu Noshiroya | D | LOST Points |
|
1960-01-13 | Hajime Taroura | WLW | WIN Technical knockout |
|
1960-01-03 | Teruo Atsumi | debut | Nagoya | WIN Points |
1959-12-21 | Hiroshi Nagata | LL | WIN Points |
|
1959-12-07 | Eijiro Saito | WWWWWL | Korakuen Gym | LOST Points |
1959-11-16 | Kenzo Shimamura | WDWLLW | DRAW Points |
|
1959-11-06 | Yutaka Kawaguchi | W | WIN Points |