Ex-TEPCO Officials To Be Indicted Over Fukushima
AmiMoJo writes: Three former executives of Tokyo Electric Power Company will face mandatory indictment over the March 2011 nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. The prosecution inquest panel of randomly-selected citizens voted for the indictment on Friday, for professional negligence resulting in death and injury. "Tokyo prosecutors in January rejected the panel's judgment that the three should be charged, citing insufficient evidence. But the 11 unidentified citizens on the panel forced the indictment after a second vote, which makes an indictment mandatory. The three are former chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, 75, and former executives Sakae Muto, 65, and Ichiro Takekuro, 69. Citizens' panels, made up of residents selected by lottery, are a rarely used but high-profile feature of Japan's legal system introduced after World War Two to curb bureaucratic overreach."
The evidence is pretty clear that a lax attitude and cozy government-corporate-regulatory environment made this disaster much worse than it had to be. I am sure that they will all get off without any significant penalties or jail time, but at least they are going to have to go through the court system.
A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
The part that interests me is how this seems to differ quite radically from grand juries in the U.S., where the citizens on the Grand Jury are largely window dressing. If the prosecutor wants an indictment, they'll get it, and if they don't, they'll make sure the grand jury won't deliver one.
Here, though, it's clear the prosecutors didn't want an indictment, and the citizens forced one anyway.
fantastically sensible system.
Seriously, what deaths or even casualties could these guys possibly be responsible for? The exactly zero deaths caused by the plant disaster itself? The maaaayyyyybe one death from exposure during the clean-up afterward?
Professional negligence in construction and maintenance may have allowed the plant to be destroyed by the one-two Tsunami-Earthquake punches, but it was peoples' fear of the non-health-issue levels of radiation that caused the most injury to the populace.
For all of, what, 5-10 years of life these three poor bastards have left.
"But the 11 unidentified citizens on the panel forced the indictment after a second vote, which makes an indictment mandatory"
I've never heard of such a system but I think it should be incorporated into every legal system on the planet. Even though the prosecution is mandatory though I don't know how you could force the prosecutor to actually do their job, I think there is ample evidence that in such situations here in the US where prosecutors are forced to prosecute police/officials via public outrage they purposely sabotage the case by not calling witnesses, going easy on defense witnesses and levying few/ambiguous charges (IE "official misconduct" instead of involuntary manslaughter).
All this really does is cause these poor guys to face charges that prosecutors now must try to prove. Given that all the other methods of getting an indictment on these guys failed, one can easily infer that the chances they get convicted of anything is next to nil.
This is basically a political witch hunt by some PR hounds who want to make it look like the accused are somehow guilty of gross negligence because it was their plant (which satisfied the government's safety requirements) blew up and made a mess after some natural disaster that nobody foresaw or even considered possible happened. It's like holding the tornado shelter installer criminally liable for not protecting the occupants of the shelter from earthquake damage and chemical attacks.
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
All this really does is cause these poor guys to face charges that prosecutors now must try to prove. Given that all the other methods of getting an indictment on these guys failed, one can easily infer that the chances they get convicted of anything is next to nil.
This is basically a political witch hunt by some PR hounds who want to make it look like the accused are somehow guilty of gross negligence because it was their plant (which satisfied the government's safety requirements) blew up and made a mess after some natural disaster that nobody foresaw or even considered possible happened. It's like holding the tornado shelter installer criminally liable for not protecting the occupants of the shelter from earthquake damage and chemical attacks.
Do some research before commenting. Corporate TEPCO repeatedly lied to the public and the government, was incompetent (sending water needed to cool the reactor in drinking water bottles) and obstructive to the point of disregarding human life (ordering sea-water injection to be shut off based on how the prime minister's "mood").
The indictment is irrelevant and meaningless.
The prosecutors already decided they weren't guilty, which is why they didn't file charges previously. That mean that even when/if the case goes to trial, they're going to lose because they don't even think the defendants are guilty. And it's easy to lose a case if you don't want to win to begin with.
TEPCO c-suite suits also ignored engineering reviews that pointed out the problems that became all too obvious when the excrement hit the ventilator.
Negligence and reckless disregard.
How often does the US judiciary form a grand jury to examine the rich and powerful? When the minions do wrong, they are excused for following orders or enforcing their authority. It seems American jurors are told to protect the system, not examine abuses of power or demand responsibility.
This is an embarrassing process. It's the justice of the mob.
...as seen here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new... BUT they did this to us too, and the rest of the world... "A news report says Japan's tsunami-ravaged nuclear plant was so unprepared for the disaster that workers had to bring protective gear and instruction manuals from elsewhere and borrow equipment from a contractor. The report, released by operator Tokyo Electric Co, is based on interviews of workers and plant data. It portrays chaos in a desperate and ultimately unsuccessful battle to protect the Fukushima plant from meltdown, and shows that workers struggled with unfamiliar equipment." ap.org/ - "Scientists have found traces of radioactivity in fish off the California coast that migrated from the waters off of Japan, site of the Fukushima nuclear reactor disaster of 2011, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. The researchers say the evidence is unequivocal. The young tuna were found to be contaminated with two radioactive forms of the element cesium from Fukushima." http://content.usatoday.com/co... - "Japanese whalers caught 2 animals along the northern coast that had traces of radiation from leaks at a damaged nuclear power plant, officials said. 2 of 17 minke whales caught off the Pacific coast of Hokkaido showed traces of radioactive cesium, both about 1/20th of the legal limit, fisheries officials said. They are the first whales thought to have been affected by radiation leaked from the Fukushima nuclear plant since it was hit by a 3/11/11 earthquake and tsunami." nhjournal. com