Japanese Court Sentences Two Cultist to Death for 1995 Subway Attack

A Japanese court sentenced two former leaders of a doomsday cult to death Monday for spraying nerve gas in a deadly 1995 attack on the Tokyo subways.

Toru Toyoda, 32, and Kenichi Hirose, 36, were accused of taking a direct role in the morning rush-hour assault, which killed 12 people and sickened thousands of others, the Tokyo District Court said.

The two were members of the Aum Shinri Kyo cult. The cult's former guru, Shoko Asahara, is on trial for masterminding the subway attack and other crimes, including an earlier nerve gas attack in central Japan.

Cult driver Shigeo Sugimoto, 41, was sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the subway attack.

The three admitted to their crimes, but argued during their trial that they had been brainwashed by Asahara, Kyodo News agency reported.

Two other cultists convicted of taking a direct role in the 1995 attack, Masato Yokoyama and Yasuo Hayashi, have also been sentenced to death. In Japan, the sentence is carried out by hanging.

The three sentenced on Monday were accused of other crimes. Toyoda was charged with attempting to kill a former Tokyo governor by mailing a parcel bomb to city hall in May 1995, Kyodo reported.

Toyoda, Hirose and Asahara also allegedly planned to manufacture 1,000 automatic rifles modeled on the Russian-made AK-74 between 1994 and 1995. They succeeded in producing one rifle, the report said.

Sugimoto allegedly conspired with Asahara and other Aum members to kill two Aum followers in 1994, Kyodo said.





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