Showing posts with label CRIME. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CRIME. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

Do The Colonel Williams!


The trial of Col. Russell Williams is near ubiquitous in the media this week, and with it, there has been much self-reflexive discussion of media's role in handling repellent subject matter.

John Cruickshank of the Toronto Star speaks to the matter with the CBC, and I thought his description of Williams as, "both enormously frightening and tremendously pathetic", was unusually astute -- a rare bit of insight into how media plays out its self-serving, bent-over-backwards dance of bad news.

Friday, 23 April 2010

The Photographs of Rodney Alcala!


US serial killer and amateur photographer Rodney Alcala -- dubbed the Dating Game Killer for a successful appearance on the show -- was recently sentenced to death for the third time (the first two convictions were overturned).

In an unusual move, police have released some 215 photographs found in a storage locker of Alcala's, photographs believed to be taken by him & quite possibly containing many as-yet-unknown victims. To date, 21 women from the pictures have been identified, all of them still alive (though one says Alcala did molest her).


If the amount of photos is unprecedented, it's only fitting: Alcala may be the US' most prolific serial killer, suspected of killing more than 34 people. Often compared to Ted Bundy, and similarly possessed of great charm and a high IQ, Alcala strangled and resuscitated those he was killing so as to prolong their deaths. Afterward, he often posed the dead bodies into positions for more photographs.


Because Alcala's killings took place in the 1970s - he's been in custody since 1979 - the released photos are filled with evocative touches of a by-gone era: flares, long straight hair, huge headphones, groovy fashions, now-vintage LPs, a t-shirt bearing the slogan "I'm in debt but I love my Vette".

Not to mention that you are, when viewing these pictures, very literally seeing things from a killer's point of view. What would Laura Mulvey say?

Wednesday, 9 December 2009

Torture Museum!


Down in the basement of Meiji University is a very unusual collection of artifacts, a museum dedicated to torture implements of ages past.

What is the rationale behind displaying such devices? According to the museum's own website, "it is hoped visitors will be exposed to the world of crime and punishment, and gain a deeper appreciation of human dignity."

Hmmmm...


Have a look at this recent post by Tokyo Scum Brigade on the museum, and see if that makes you any more appreciative of human dignity.

If you're still not appreciative enough, you may want to check out this short video featuring seiza torture (or ishidakizeme) actually being performed on a young woman (as prelude to a blowjob, no less) - please be aware this video is most definitely NSFW and may offend those of a non-sleazy constitution.

Friday, 26 June 2009

Myra Made a Pottery Pig in the Poke!


So you may have read about Myra Hindley's little 'China Pig' with the wasp on its nose? Its creators' name now known to all, is this pottery piece destined for some sort of rehabilitative artistic re-evaluation? Will it become the subject of ceramic pilgrimages by thano-tourists? Vandalism and smashing by would-be do-gooders?


Did making this pig help Myra at all? Was it healing? Therapeutic? Were the insects her idea? How is the pig supposed to feel about all this, hypothetically? Is it funny? Did it make her laugh? Was she proud of it when it was finished?


The Galleries of Justice Museum in Nottingham will likely continue to have the attention of the UK for the next few days at least, and it may be interesting to see what fate befalls this most unlikley focus of outrage.

Tuesday, 31 March 2009

Criminal Investigation!


In the early 1890s, Austrian professor and magistrate Hans Gross wrote the book on investigating criminals -- System der Kriminalistik (or Criminal Investigation). Gross is in fact often credited with creating the very field of criminology, establishing the first institute dedicated to the subject in 1912.

Criminal Investigation, according to The Encyclopedia of Crime & Punishment, "helped to establish the science of forensics, especially in terms of a cross-transfer of evidence; dirt, fingerprints, carpet fibres, or a strand of hair..." The book was considered the bible of criminal investigation throughout the 20th century, and is still used by police forces the world over.


Incidentally, Gross' son Otto was a friend of Franz Kafka (Kafka was also a former student of Professor Gross) and it is said that Kafka made use of Criminal Investigation in writing his classic novel The Trial. Police kudos aside, I don't think there could possibly be any higher recommendation than Kafka cribbing your book for notes. Except basing a character in his novel on you as well, I guess.



That said, it is none too surprising that much of Criminal Investigation might strike the reader all these years later as quaint or otherwise amusing. In any case, Gross. To wit:

"It is often stated, especially in continental treatises on the habits of criminals, that the wrongdoer deposits excrement at the scene of a crime, believing that by doing so he tends to ward off discovery. Whilst this may be, on rare occasions, the explanation of such behaviour it is explicable in many instances by the fact that sheer nervousness and fear render the criminal incontinent so that he leaves traces of this kind at the 'scene' because he cannot help himself."

And here I figured it was for kicks.




Included here are some scans from the 1962 5th edition of the book.









I also have a gallery up at flickr featuring one of the book's highlights, Chapter 8: Slang Expressions Commonly Used By Thieves. So head's up you gymers! Quit sucking the monkey and check it out!

Monday, 30 March 2009

Monday, 12 May 2008

Chikan!


[NSFW links ahead - actual chikan sites restricted to Part 4]

One may argue that modern public transportation creates a particular public space all its own, wherein traditional notions of civility and personal space are forcibly erased, allowing a sort of twentieth-century deviance heretofore unimaginable.

As a criminology journal article entitled "Sex Crimes In The Subway" puts it:

"although neither exhibitionism nor genital rubbing (frottage) are confined to the subways, a quality peculiar to the physical setting of the subway makes it a preferred site for both of these types of sex offenders".

The pressed mob lets individuals within it lose their sense of proper socialization and responsibility; crushed together, the normal rules may appear not to apply, and amoral temptations flourish in this atypical environment.

Simply put, it is a frotteur's paradise.



The phenomenon of unwanted groping or sexual assault on public transit is not a new one, and not one limited to any particular place or culture; Dan Hoyt and Freddie Johnson, both out of New York City, are proof enough of that.

Still, as interesting as New York's rubbers or grinders may be, the particular form of groping known in Japan as chikan is particularly fascinating for many reasons, and there is a deep (indeed seemingly endless) pool of resources on the subject online should one choose to have a look.

Suffice it to say that I've had a look and this is some of what I've found.


Chikan [wiki] is a term originally denoting pervert, and later understood to refer specifically to groping on usually crowded subway trains; in addition, the word is properly a noun but can now be used as a verb as well. The female equivalent term would be chijo, or lewd woman.

Chikan are so well-known in Japan that they have become a stock manga character, and even inspired a hit song [video].

1.

Japan has an extremely popular public transportation system, so much so in fact that oshiya (or 'pusher's) are required to cram people into each last little bit of available space onboard subway trains.

In this packed environment, tensions are already high. It is not natural or comfortable (in the physical or psychological sense) to be so constrained, and in such proximity to strangers for what are often lengthy periods of time. In such a situation, your personal space is invaded as it is. But when someone takes advantage of that enforced proximity to grope or molest, the ride to and from work can be a terrible experience, an ordeal to be endured.


What can one do? There are words and pictures available on how to protect oneself from chikans. Women have also organized workshops roleplaying likely situations. More recently, text display messages on a cellphone have been suggested as being helpful. There is of course also the route of danger signs (or, in the U.S., consciousness-raising campaigns). Placing video cameras on every subway car has been rejected as being too expensive. The conventional suggestion is to grab the offender's arm and raise it in the air, yelling "chikan" as you do so.

Perhaps the most innovative solution to the problem however has been the introduction of women-only public transit, whether by bus, train or subway. If the men are absent, the logic goes, so is the chance of being flashed or groped by one; for the duration of the ride at least, the fear is abated.


2.

Japan has had railways since 1872 and subways since 1927. It may surprise you to learn that all the way back in 1912, even before the subways had started, there were women-only railcars known as hana-densha (or flower train).

By 1973, the women-only railcars ceased, and it was not until the 21st century dawned that the practice came back into effect - driven by the alarming failure of previous campaigns and increased police presence alone, and by statistics suggesting the problem affected two-thirds of the trains' female passengers and had increased triple-fold in the previous decade.

This measure has been introduced around the world over the last decade in places like Cairo, Moscow, Mexico City, Rio De Janeiro, and most recently Seoul.

In Tokyo, trailblazing efforts to solve what seemed a hopeless cause took the form of a throw-back then, women-only subway train cars, usually the first and last car on a train. The cars are identified by pink mats on the station platform.

The riders of these josei senyou sharyou (women-only railcars) seem happy with the arrangement, although some feminists take issue with segregation between the sexes being viewed as a solution to a sexist problem.

It may still be too early to really critique this new system; nonetheless, it is fair to say the reaction has thus far been mixed. Many women would like to see the program expanded and more such women-only cars made available. Many men treat such trains as being rather absurd and women on the general cars are now often inferred to be quite literally 'up for grabs'.


3.

Overall however, as the culture at large transforms, the problem seems to be taken more seriously and chikan are beginning to be confronted and challenged by the public (and I'm not just talking about white male bloggers either).

Former rock star/TV personality Masashi Tashiro and former star economist Kazuhide 'Mirrorman' Uekusa, perhaps the two most high-profile individuals charged with such crimes in Japan, are excellent examples of the social cost such actions now extract there.


A price so very high in fact that it is now increasingly common to find oneself the victim of an expensive new con if one is riding a mixed-gender train car: a woman accuses you of being a chikan, of having assaulted her. This is often followed shortly thereafter by a second person coming forward who asserts that they saw the whole thing and are willing to testify to the veracity of the woman's claim. Of course there's no need to go to the police if a settlement can be reached, the woman explains...and in this sly manner salarymen are parting with vast sums to protect their reputation.

Though I haven't yet seen it myself, I would be remiss if I didn't mention last year's critically acclaimed film Soredemo boku wa yattenai (I just didn't do it!), directed by Masayuki Suo. The story of a young man who is falsely accused of being a chikan and his travails through the Japanese courts system, it conveys something of the fear and apprehension men are now sharing (if for entirely different reasons) with their female fellow passengers on the train.

The problem has become so bad now that some men are calling for their own male-only train cars so that they may ride without fear of false accusation; the stations plead the expense is too high or ignore the problem and hope it will disappear. Fearful male riders offer each other suggestions to avoid accusation and on what to do if accused; there is even a cottage industry selling portable subway straps so that men can advertise the fact that their hands are occupied hands, thank you very much.


4.

And the men whose hands are roaming, what of them? What they have in common is obviously a desire to engage in frotteurism. As this used to be known as frottage, gropers will often speak of needing to frot or going frotting or the like (frot and frotting are also popular terms in the gay community, where the action is consensual and often seen as an alternative to anal sex).

The anonymity of the internet allows such men the freedom to speak openly about their drives and thus we are granted, should we choose, a rare entry into their minds and motivations.

Not surprisingly, chikan use the internet for their own ends as well, everything from chat boards and hall of fames to private yahoo groups and sites selling chikan-based pornography. Stories of particularly great gropes are common, as are claims that their actions were thankfully - depending on the man's level of depravity - enjoyed or rejected. It is worthy of note that the largest gropers board I found also had a section dedicated to helping users stop groping; pretty unusual for an enthusiast's site, and very telling of the often-conflicted state of mind of the practising pervert.

Salaryman Shigeru Oohori (a pseudonym) feels no shame however; instead, he took things up a notch back in 1999 and suggested his fellow chikan actually get together to meet and exchange ideas, leading to the creation of the Chikan Tomo-no-Kai (or Gropers’ Brotherhood).

"Groping was once a solitary activity, but now thanks to the Internet it’s become easy to link up with people who share the same kind of sexual interests", he is quoted as saying. The Brotherhood meets once a month, counsels and encourages each other, and even has belts for varying degrees of groping (5th dan black belt = 100 gropes a month).

Certainly one of the stranger realities of this whole subject is the existence of clubs - or train cafes - which cater specifically to the tastes of chikans, creating detailed mock-ups of train interiors and staffing them with women to grope. The mind boggles.


5.

In compiling this big batch o' links, it became pretty obvious pretty quickly that an awful lot of the stuff I was finding online related to this issue - whether "hard news" or blog, chat group or social comment - had a strong undercurrent of xenophobia if not outright racism to it.

The degree to which this was so was surprising to me and it brings up an important issue: how different are media around these events than the events themselves? Events effect media in the obvious sense that news (and new products) obstentiously comprise media's reason for existence - but how does media effect events? Does the very act of media's focusing on chikan possibly drive some people into that lifestyle? Transgression needs expression, and the media have certainly provided that, with a heaping side order of titillation.


Can we really blame the media though? The fact is that sex is fascinating and breaking the rules is fascinating, and yes, breaking the sex rules is quite fascinating indeed. Even Nobel Laureate author Kenzaburo Oe employed chikan themes in his novella "J" (or "Homo Sexualis") - about a rebellious young man who takes up with chikans, groping young women together on the trains. As one reviewer puts it, "Oe uses rather extreme situations to highlight the difficulty or even impossibility of reconciling personal expression and social expectations".

I will close finally with another insightful write-up on the same work, a comment I found thought-provoking:

"J can be read as an allegory about freedom, and about man — Everyman — in society. But it lends itself to a more personal reading, too. "I write with my genitals," Oe once said in an interview, in response to critics who had complained about his sexual explicitness. He now regards that statement as thoughtless, superficial, and immature — nothing but a young man's expression of anger — yet it is worth examining in this context. In the story, the sexual impulse can be seen as standing for a writer's creative urge — exhilarating in itself, and utterly irresponsible. But its author understands that the urge to self-expression, if not curbed by conscience, is a fundamentally antisocial thing...In J, Kenzaburo Oe was — at least on some level — examining questions about the selfishness of the creative artist..."