UN Japan to reinforce police gun holsters to prevent firearm theft

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2...-holsters-prevent-firearm-theft/#.WzNtt_kvzIU

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The National Police Agency is accelerating plans to reinforce police officers’ gun holsters and safety straps so their firearms cannot be stolen, agency officials said Wednesday.

The move comes in the wake of an incident in the city of Toyama the previous day where a 21-year-old man stabbed an officer, stole his gun and shot a school security guard nearby, killing both.

The agency had intended to make improvements to the standard-issue firearm holder by around 2020, but will move up the plan in response to the Toyama incident, the officials said.

On Tuesday, Keita Shimazu, a former member of the Self-Defense Forces, stabbed the 46-year-old officer at a police box, took his gun before moving on to an elementary school in the neighborhood and gunning down a 68-year-old security guard.

Shimazu was arrested after being shot by another police officer who arrived at the elementary school in response to the incident.

According to agency statistics, before the Toyama incident there had been six cases since 2013 in which local police officers were robbed of their pistols. Of those, the gun was fired in three of the cases.

In the past, police have made improvements to officers’ gun holsters by reinforcing the elastic cords that attach the revolvers to belts. That change was made following a 2005 incident in Gifu Prefecture where two Japanese-Brazilian brothers robbed a policeman of a loaded gun by cutting the cord with a knife, and fled in a vehicle. They were arrested three weeks later.
 
If a dude tries to steal your gun, why not draw it and shoot him with it? It will probably ruin his whole day.
In this case, the poor policeman was stabbed to death before the gun was taken, so I assume he had no chance, since he was either attacked from behind or from such a close range that could not defend himself.

But in any other case, yeah.

Dunno about their holsters, but in Germany, you can't just draw the gun from a cop's holster, you need to lift it up in a special way, otherwise it gets wedged in.

Japanese officers supposedly used to use them for a variant on the old road agent's spin.
I guess that's a "supposedly" as in: Never actually happened (or at least not in any significant number).
 
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Wasn't there an similar incident that occurred in Yokosuka back in 2016?
 
The japanese police are supposed to be fucking brutal, I think this article is whitewashing that. I'm pretty sure after they wrap you up like a burrito they beat you like a pinata for a while.

They also have something like a 99% conviction rate, so the law in Japan will fuck you hard. I guess it probably won't shoot you though.
Meh, define "brutal." A couple weeks ago, I recall reading something about a detained Turkroach suing the police for hurting his widdle achy back when pinning him down because he attacked a cop in the first place.

This is a country that only criminalized possession of child pornography a few years ago, and it was a fight to get even that through parliament.
I don't think 'easy enough fix' is the way to describe it...

(And now I have time, I'll see if I can find some more sources)
It doesn't help the Japanese government was designed to be extremely slow and inefficient, even by American checks and balances standards, with red tape folded over 1,000 times.
 
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@heathercho Your third link isn't working. Very interesting reads.
Fixed, it's a PDF though. Still, their "low crime" rates are a combination of things. As others have mentioned - lack of prosecuting, lack of reporting etc.
Korea is much the same, however they have a sort of... pay your way out of trouble system for a lot of things.
 
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Meh, define "brutal." A couple weeks ago, I recall reading something about a detained Turkroach suing the police for hurting his widdle achy back when pinning him down because he attacked a cop in the first place.

Yes, just because the cops are brutal doesn't mean no actual criminals exist. By brutal I mean they beat you up after you're already subdued.
 
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To be fair, it'll be like trying to find a needle in a haystack to identify and find chikan on packed trains in cities of millions. Even with cameras, which were a bitch to get installed over "muh privacy," it's quite futile. Instead, they're cars reserved for women only (with elementary school students as an exception) during rush hour.
 
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