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COLD CASE. Japanese businessman Kazuyoshi Miura leaves a Tokyo detention center in this 1998 file photo, after being acquitted of the fatal shooting of his wife in Los Angeles in 1981. The Los Angeles Police Department announced Miura’s arrest in Saipan. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File)

From The Asian Reporter, V18, #10 (March 4, 2008), page 8.

U.S. authorities work to bring Japanese businessman back to L.A.

By Thomas Watkins

Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES — A Japanese businessman’s surprise arrest in his wife’s killing in a Southern California parking lot a quarter-century ago dominated front pages in Tokyo recently as authorities worked to bring him back to Los Angeles.

Kazuyoshi Miura was detained in Saipan, a U.S. commonwealth in the Pacific, and was being held on suspicion of the murder of his wife. The crime caused an international uproar, in part because he blamed the 1981 attack on robbers, reinforcing Japanese perceptions of America as a violent country.

Miura, 60, had already been convicted in Japan in the 1994 murder of his wife, Kazumi Miura, but that verdict was overturned by the country’s high courts 10 years ago.

"Why now?" the Mainichi newspaper asked in a headline. "His turbulent life entered a new phase."

Miura, a clothing importer, and his 28-year-old wife were visiting Los Angeles on November 18, 1981, when they were shot in a parking lot. She was shot in the head, went into a coma, and died the following year in Japan.

Her mother said she never gave up hope of a resolution to the case.

"I burned incense for my daughter and prayed at a family Buddhist altar, telling her that Americans will put an end to the case, so let’s hold onto our hopes and wait," Yasuko Sasaki told Japan’s public broadcaster NHK.

Miura, shot in the leg, railed from his hospital bed against what he called a violent city, criticism that came as Los Angeles was preparing to host the 1984 Summer Olympics. The LAPD vowed to find the attackers.

Daryl Gates, who was police chief at the time of the killing, said Miura was a key suspect even then.

"I remember the case well. I think he killed his wife," Gates said. "We had Japanese police come over; they believed he was guilty, we believed he was guilty, but we couldn’t prove it."

In 1984, Miura’s image as a grieving husband was tarnished by a series of news articles in Japan. He reportedly collected about $1.4 million at today’s exchange rate on life insurance policies he had taken out on his wife. And an actress who claimed to be his lover told a newspaper that he had hired her to kill his wife in their hotel room on a trip to L.A. three months before the shootings.

Miura was arrested in Japan in 1985 on suspicion of assaulting his wife with intent to kill her for insurance money in the hotel incident. He was convicted of attempted murder and while serving a six-year sentence was charged under Japanese law in 1988 with his wife’s murder.

Miura was convicted of that charge in 1994 and sentenced to life in prison. Four years later, however, a Japanese high court overturned the sentence, throwing out a lower court’s determination that Miura conspired with a friend in Los Angeles to kill his wife.

Miura’s attorney, Junichiro Hironaka, told Japan’s Fuji TV that the latest arrest astonished him.

"My understanding was that the case was already closed both in Japan and the U.S., especially after their joint investigation," Hironaka said.

The LAPD said Miura was awaiting extradition. The department did not provide further details.

Kenji Yazawa, a Japanese consul in Saipan, said his office was informed of Miura’s detention but is awaiting permission from authorities before meeting with him.

Hideo Arai, president of Alpha Japan Promotion, an entertainment management company Miura is associated with, wrote on his blog that the arrest was "outrageous" because of the previous acquittal.

"Japan’s Foreign Ministry should lodge a strong protest," Arai wrote.

Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.