Japan’s ‘Black Widow’ death-row inmate dies

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Chisako Kakehi was sentenced to death for the murder of three men and the attempted murder of another man about a decade ago.

Chisako Kakehi was sentenced to death for the murder of three men and the attempted murder of another man about a decade ago.

PHOTO: AFP

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Tokyo – A Japanese death-row inmate, dubbed the “Black Widow” after she used cyanide to kill her elderly lovers, has died in a detention centre at age 78, officials said on Dec 27.

Chisako Kakehi was sentenced to death for the murder of three men, including her husband, and the attempted murder of another man about a decade ago in a case that gripped Japan.

“Her death was confirmed at a hospital on Thursday (Dec 26)” after she was found lying in her cell at the Osaka detention centre, a Justice Ministry official told AFP.

The cause of death has yet to be determined, he said. Japanese media said it could be from an undisclosed illness.

Kakehi’s death sentence was upheld in 2021, with Supreme Court Judge Yuko Miyazaki saying she had “used cyanide on the men after making them trust her as a life partner”.

“It’s a calculated, cruel crime based on a strong intent of murder,” Judge Miyazaki said.

Kakehi reportedly amassed one billion yen (S$8.6 million) in insurance payouts and inheritance over 10 years, but subsequently lost most of the money through unsuccessful financial trading.

She had relationships primarily with elderly or ill men, and met some through dating agencies, where she reportedly stipulated that prospective partners should be wealthy and childless.

The poison was found in the body of at least two of the men she was involved with and police reportedly found traces of cyanide in the rubbish at her Kyoto home.

Her partners’ deaths were not investigated immediately because police initially determined that they died from illnesses, with no autopsies being performed on most.

Her arrest only came after police discovered that her most recent husband, 75-year-old Isao Kakehi, died from cyanide poisoning. Police then began looking into the earlier cases and found a pattern. AFP

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