Parade Magazine Articles
What We Can Learn From Japanese Prisons
January 15, 1984

FUCHU PRISON, near Tokyo is home to 2500 of Japan's most
hardened criminals. Ed Arnett is an alumnus who thinks of Fuchu
daily. The dank, unheated buildings, the harshness of the guards'
reports to their superiors, the high stone walls—these are as near
to him as the scars on his legs, from the frostbite he picked up in
his Fuchu cell.
"I didn't know I could still cry until I went to prison in
Japan," says Arnett, convicted in 1979 for possession of two
kilograms of marijuana. "I wouldn't put that experience on anybody."
Arrested on Okinawa, Arnett was kept in pretrial
confinement for a month. He endured days of intense interrogation
without an attorney and signed a confession--written in
Japanese-that he could not read. He met his lawyer for the first
time at his trial. The trial took 30 minutes. He was not allowed a
jury.
At Fuchu, Arnett lived in a 9-by-5-foot cell furnished with
a hard, narrow bed, a sink that also was his desk and a toilet that
he could flush only when permitted by the guards. His mail was
censored, and he was not allowed writing materials. The books he
read were the few approved by his guards. Gifts from home were kept
from him until his release. Despite his diabetes, Arnett's diet was
dominated by seaweed, fish and rice. He lost 55 pounds in 18 months.
Fourteen of those months were spent in solitary, in a room where a
camera recorded his every move. His scalp was shaved every two
weeks. He was forbidden to look out the window or to communicate
with other inmates. He worked eight hours a day, even in solitary,
making paper bags in his cell. He could not touch his bunk during
the day, but when the lights went out at night, if he was not lying
down, he was punished. On his release, due to improper treatment of
his diabetes, an doctor called him "a walking dead man."
Arnett's experiences were not unusual for Japanese prison
inmates, about 100 of whom at any time are Americans serving
sentences for crimes ranging from minor drug offenses to murder.
But, surprisingly, Arnett, home in Omaha, Neb., says he prefers
Japan's legal system to ours. Why? "Because it's fair," he says.
"The never tried to trick me, even in interrogation. They were
always trustworthy. 1 could have got five years and they gave me
two. The Americans who were helping them wanted me to get 20. The
guards at Fuchu were hard, but they never messed with you unless
there was a reason. You didn't have to worry about the other
prisoners coming after you, either. And the laws of Japan are for
everybody. That's the main thing. The laws in this country depend on
how much you can pay. I'd rather live under a hard system that's
fair."
In 1981, Japan, with about half our population, had only
922 homicides; we had 1832 in New York City alone. An American is 12
times more likely to be murdered than a Japanese, 14 times more
likely to be raped and 20 times more likely to be the victim of a
property crime. Although recidivism rates are similar-50 percent in
Japan, 64 percent here-our problem with criminal repeaters is
actually nine times greater than Japan's because our crime rate is
so much higher.
A defendant's lack of counsel during interrogation and the
absence of a jury trial, a U.S. Constitutional right, raises no
hackles. "There are scholars who criticize this, but they have no
social or political support," notes Kotaro Ohno of Japan's Ministry
of Justice, who studied law at Harvard. " A Japanese believes the
judge is more knowledgeable about his situation than a collection of
citizens." Ohno defends Japan's very narrow use of the exclusionary
rule and says the U.S. "goes too far" in excluding illegally
obtained evidence.
Japan' has a low crime rate without either a police state
or excessive litigation. Only 50,000 prisoners, including pretrial
detention inmates, are presently con- fined in Japan, and fewer than
4 percent of the prisoners are sentenced for longer than three
years. In the U.S., there are 580,000 adult inmates, and 80 percent
of those in state institutions have been sentenced for longer than
five years.
Observes Yoshio Suzuki, until recently director general of
the Correction Bureau in Japan's Ministry of Justice: "The law in
Japan is severe in the attitude toward offenders as a whole. This
allows it to be lenient in the punishment of an individual. We
involve the victim in the criminal process. If the accused has shown
proper penance to the victim through repayment or an expression of
grief, and the victim tells this to the court, it will go much
easier on the accused."
Japan brings 70 percent of its crimes to conviction. The
U.S. brings only 19.8 percent of its crimes to arrest. But the
contrast in prisons themselves is most startling. Americans familiar
with the horrors of Attica and New Mexico and the routine tales of
brutality and homosexual rape would find the orderly corridors of a
Japanese prison mind-boggling.
"They don't coddle them, but they don't abuse them,
either," says U.S. Navy Capt. Everette Stumbaugh, a lawyer for the
commander of U.S. forces in Japan. "Japan plays it aboveboard all
the way."
There never has been a hostage crisis in a Japanese prison.
There has been only one "prison disturbance" -30 years ago. There
never has been a reported case of homosexual rape, or of prisoner
gang wars. No guard ever has been killed by inmates; there has been
only one inmate death in the last 10 years at the hands of another.
There have been only 35 escapes from Japanese prisons in the last
seven years (the U.S. average is more than 8000 escapes a year).
Almost 94 percent of Japan's prisoners perform labor that is geared
to their aptitude and rehabilitative potential, rather than based on
the crime committed. Guards typically are unarmed. There are 58
major prisons in Japan. In addition ~o Fuchu, I toured prisons in
Yokosuka and Okinawa. Only Fuchu had armed guards. There, fewer than
10 percent carry weapons-police sticks.
"What about the guard in the tower?" I asked Kaoru Kayaba,
Yokosuka's warden, as I stared at the juncture of two walls on the
far side of a large athletic field. "Doesn't he carry a rifle?"
Kayaba smiled. "We don't keep a guard in the tower. Except
when the prisoners play softball."
"In case a prisoner vaults the wall?"
"In case a ball goes over the wall."
Much of the success of Japan's prisons is due to
certificates in trades such as plastering and auto repair. The
"B"s-many of whom are members of the Yakuza, Japan's Mafia-might do
such mundane tasks as maintenance work or making toys.
Prison officials are highly trained. Last year, though
two-thirds of those who passed the national qualifying test for
prison guards were university graduates, only one-fourth were hired.
Successful applicants must spend two weeks as observers in a prison
and then complete eight months of intense training before they may
begin to work. Guards are transferred every few years to promote
standardization within the system.
All Japanese wardens began as guards. Their experiences
have given them both "hands on" time with prisoners and
philosophical depth. Yokosuka's Warden Kayaba affirms the good of
man. "All human beings are 98 percent good and 2 percent bad," he
says. "The men who end up in prison are not more evil than others in
our society. They are weaker. With the proper education, we
can make even the worst offenders as calm as the others.”
Guards do this not through force, but through intense counseling and
physical denial. A difficult prisoner is removed from the collective
environment and placed in an even more austere "punishment cell,"
where counseling continues. "We make them think," says Kayaba. "We
talk to them again and again about why they were sent to prison,
until gradually they understand."
"We are their caretakers, not their oppressors," says Fuchu
's present warden, Kiyoshi Taru, of Japan's most hardened criminals.
An aircraft gunner during World War II, Tam saw the corrections
field as a way to continue serving his country after Japan's
military was disbanded. "Criminals have violated the well-being of
others in order to satisfy their greed," says Tam. "We teach them
how to control their desires and still satisfy themselves. You
cannot do this unless you are unimpeachable yourself. We use our
example as the instrument for their rehabilitation. "
Tam says all guards are martial arts experts but adds, "If
a guard unfairly strikes a prisoner, he will himself be imprisoned
for a mandatory seven-year sentence."
Okinawa's warden, Yoshitaka Myojin, followed his father
into the field. He says the key to prison stability lies in the
workshop: "The guard who runs the workshop performs three
functions-instructor, disciplinarian and counselor-so the prisoner
does not direct his anger toward the guard purely as an authority
figure. The guard is part of the overall unit, the father figure."
Noting with irony that many fundamentals of the Japanese system were
adapted from the U.S. system, Myojin wonders, "What has happened in
America?"
His question is echoed by many here. If the U.S.
incarceration rate is one of the highest in the free world, so is
its crime rate. Overcrowding-our prison population has expanded by
30 percent in the last three years-contributes to abuse and acts of
violence. Sodoes idleness. Few prisoners work in the U.S. jails
because of trade-union pressure and "state use" laws that forbid
their making competitive products. Only about 10 percent of the
inmates in our state systems are allowed to work.
Our guards are often unskilled and untrained. Robert Fosen,
director of the commission on Accreditation for Corrections,
indicates that the "recommended levels of training" that his group
recently set for U.S. prisons consist of a mere 40 hours of
"orientation training," followed during the guard's first year by
120 hours of further training in supervision and the use of force.
He notes that standards had to rise "in well over half the states"
to meet these new requirements.
Could we adopt parts of the Japanese system? I asked three
Americans of markedly differing political views and
responsibilities: Norman Carlson, director of the Federal Bureau of
Prisons since 1970, who inspected the Japanese system in 1971; Fosen,
who was a New York prison official during the Attica riots; and
Edward Koren, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union's
National Prison Project.
All three support more inmates working, and Carlson and
Fosen favor a decrease in the length of sentences for nonviolent,
non dangerous offenders but longer sentences for others.
Carlson notes that all federal wardens begin as line
officers. Fosen argues that our varied institutions require a wider
range of training. Koren agrees.
Their greatest resistance to the Japanese system concerns
individual treatment. Says Koren: "No heat in a prisoner's cell is
outrageous. That would be a clear violation of the Constitution's
prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. The other living
conditions are quite extreme. The denial of reading materials
without clearly showing they are a threat to prison order, the
withholding of writing materials from in- mates and the censorship
of correspondence all violate the First Amendment,"
Koren says of Japanese trial procedures; "The exclusionary
rule is our way of enforcing Constitutional rights. Involving
the victim before a person is convicted should be done only at the
defendant's initiative, Eliminating plea bargaining would be
impractical,"
But is the present U.S. way fair?
"American jails are filled with hate," says Arnett, "If
their walls fell down today, do you think the prisoners would run
past you without stopping? An American prisoner might kill you; just
because you're the first person he sees. If the walls of the
Japanese prisons fell down, the Japanese prisoners would just go on
home,"
I told this to Toyofumi Yoshinaga, a legal assistant at the
Corrections Bureau in Tokyo who had spent several hours providing me
with statistics. His eyes lit up. Said Yoshinaga: "During the great
Kanto earthquake of 1923, the walls of one of our prisons did fall
down." He smiled, "No one escaped."
For more information, write to the American Correctional
Association, Dept. P, 4321 Hartwick Road, College Park, Md. 20740


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