
Japan enacts laws to introduce digital arrest warrants by FY2026
The revisions of laws including the Code of Criminal Procedure are expected to ease the burden on investigators who currently must be physically present at court to apply for and receive warrants. Under the revisions, the slips can be requested and received online and executed by displaying them on tablet devices.
Criminal complaints, testimonies and other legal documents will also be digitized, and defense attorneys will have online access to documents they currently obtain by making hard copies following indictments.
The changes will also expand remote court participation via video link for defendants or witnesses unable to appear due to circumstances such as illness, and for victims and bereaved relatives seeking to avoid direct contact with defendants.
In Japan, video link use in court proceedings has been limited to certain cases such as sexual abuse.
The legislation will allow investigative authorities to issue online orders requesting telecommunications operators to disclose emails and other electronic data. At present, they need to visit the operators' offices and save the data onto physical memory devices when seizing them as part of investigations.
Failure by the operators to provide requested data would be penalized.
The revisions stopped short of allowing lawyers' interviews with suspects and defendants to be conducted online despite calls for introduction by the Japan Federation of Bar Associations.
© KYODO

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Mainichi
14 minutes ago
- The Mainichi
Japan PM Ishiba poised to announce resignation by Aug. following dismal election results
TOKYO -- Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is preparing to announce his resignation by August following the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)'s review of its poor performance in the July 20 House of Councillors election, he informed those around him on July 23. Ishiba is expected to have discussions the same day regarding his future with Taro Aso, the party's supreme adviser, Yoshihide Suga, the party's vice president, and former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida -- all former prime ministers. However, there is a possibility that the timing of his decision could change due to growing demands for his resignation and criticism from within the party. Ishiba had initially expressed his intention to stay on as prime minister following the LDP's major setback in the election. Local organizations in various regions are calling for Ishiba's resignation and a renewal of the party's structure. Additionally, mid-career and junior lawmakers are calling for the convening of a joint plenary meeting of party members of both houses of the Diet, the decision-making gathering next in line to the party convention, to vote on moving up the party leadership election. In light of these circumstances, the prime minister aims to exchange views with the three former prime ministers, and to seek understanding for his move. It is unusual for an incumbent prime minister to meet with former prime ministers collectively. A government insider commented, "Prime Minister Ishiba is adopting a stance of bowing his head to the three." The LDP leadership plans to move forward a joint informal meeting of party members of both houses, initially scheduled for July 31, to July 29 to start the election review. After the review is summarized in August, the party's leadership will determine how to take responsibility. Seiji Kihara, the LDP's election strategy committee chairman, has indicated his intention to resign after the review and summary, and then a decision will also be made on the prime minister's future. A senior government official emphasized, "Once the review is out, the leadership must make a firm decision regarding responsibility." If Ishiba resigns as prime minister this month, an election to select the next prime minister will be held during an extraordinary Diet session to be convened in August. However, given that the LDP is now part of a minority government, there is no guarantee that the LDP president will be picked as prime minister. To secure time for discussions with opposition parties regarding the prime ministerial nomination, Ishiba is considering announcing his resignation next month or later. Ishiba had earlier cited Japan-U.S. tariff negotiations as a reason for staying in office. Regarding the effect of a newly announced accord on tariffs, he told reporters at the prime minister's office, "I cannot comment without thoroughly examining the content of the agreement."


The Mainichi
4 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Japan, US reach deal on 15% auto, 'reciprocal' tariffs: PM
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japan and the United States have agreed on a trade deal under which tariff rates on Japanese cars and other products will be set at 15 percent, lower than those initially proposed by President Donald Trump, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Wednesday. Speaking to reporters, Ishiba said Japan will also increase rice imports from the United States within what is known as a "minimum access" quota. But he emphasized that Japan made no concessions that would undermine the country's agricultural sector. The agreement came after Japan's chief negotiator Ryosei Akazawa held another round of tariff talks in Washington. Trump imposed a 25 percent levy on cars from Japan and other countries, and threatened to introduce a country-specific 25 percent "reciprocal" tariff on Japan from Aug. 1.


Yomiuri Shimbun
14 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Exoneree Calls for Retrial System Reform After Acquittal; Help Sought from Sister of Acquitted Death Row Inmate
A man acquitted on Friday of the 1986 murder of a teenage girl in a retrial expressed a strong commitment to reforming Japan's retrial system. Shoshi Maekawa, 60, was sentenced to seven years in prison for the murder of a junior high school student, a crime for which he consistently asserted his innocence. He is now appealing for help from Hideko Hakamata, the 92-year-old sister of 89-year-old Iwao Hakamata, who in a retrial was acquitted of the 1966 murder of a family in Shizuoka Prefecture. Maekawa spoke with Hideko in an online call from his home in Fukui on Monday. He reported the news of his acquittal and asked for her 'cooperation in bringing about a review of the retrial system.' In January, Maekawa visited Hideko's home in Hamamatsu and was given a blue hat belonging to Iwao. Maekawa wore that hat on the day of his verdict at the Kanazawa branch of the Nagoya High Court. 'Thanks to the hat's protection, I was acquitted,' Maekawa told Hideko during the online call. Hideko happily responded, 'That's truly wonderful.' Issues remain in Japan's retrial system, including a lack of legal obligation to disclose evidence. 'We can't let this end here,' Maekawa stressed. 'We need to connect it to a review of the system.' Referring to a draft to revise the Criminal Procedure Code jointly submitted to the House of Representatives by six opposition parties, Hideko said, 'I want to see the debate gain serious momentum and [the law] enacted in the Diet session in autumn.' 'Hideko is a close companion; we both share the same aspirations,' Maekawa told reporters after the online call. 'I'm glad I could report this news to her.'