Insane Twist. Japanese crime. This case will shock you! True crime documentary

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.พ. 2025
  • August 14, 2011, Osaka, Japan. Early that morning, a man cleaning Higashi Park in the Tennōji district stumbled upon a small metal container. The cleaner assumed someone had left their trash behind and bent down to pick it up. To his surprise, the container was quite heavy, and its lid was tightly sealed with vinyl tape. The man peeled off the tape and opened the lid. Inside, he found a human skull. Horrified by the discovery, the cleaner immediately dropped the container to the ground. After a few moments, regaining his composure, he called the police.
    Upon arrival, the police cordoned off the park area. No visitors were allowed to leave until they were questioned. A thorough crime scene investigation followed. The metal container, about 35 cm tall and 24 cm wide with an 18-liter capacity, had been placed near some bushes as if hastily hidden. It bore a blue label from a pharmaceutical company. Inside the container, more bones were found. Investigators questioned the cleaner, who explained that he was a sanitation worker who had come to the park early that morning, as usual, to collect recyclables. Spotting the metal container, he intended to take it and sell it. That morning, there were only a few people in the park-some were strolling, others exercising. Several individuals had seen the container, but no one knew who had placed it there.
    Later that day, at 2:00 PM, police discovered a second metal container on a nearby street. Unlike the first, this container was much darker. Inside, more human bones were found. The next day, local residents reported finding a third metal container in a parking lot about 100 meters west of the park. Police quickly arrived at the scene. This third container contained fragments of an ankle. Unlike the first container, the second and third were not sealed with vinyl tape. However, all three containers shared the same design.
    The remains from the three containers were sent to forensic experts for analysis. After DNA testing, it was determined that the bones belonged to two individuals-a mother and her son. Due to the limited bone fragments, the cause of death could not be established. The forensic team also estimated that the victims had died around 2006, approximately five years earlier.
    Investigators began searching their database for missing persons cases in Osaka. Information was scarce-only two individuals, a mother and her son, had gone missing in Osaka around 2006. In the records for missing persons from 2006, only two people matched the description: 46-year-old Mitsushiro Fujimori and her 21-year-old son, Yoshiro Fujimori. According to the files, the mother and son had disappeared in April 2006.
    In May 2006, a man named Yasutaka Fujimori, husband of Mitsushiro and father of Yoshiro, reported his wife and eldest son missing to the police. They had disappeared in April, yet Yasutaka waited until May to alert the authorities. Why did he wait so long? To understand this, we need to go back to 2006, when the events unfolded.

ความคิดเห็น • 3

  • @Aesthxetic_Bobax
    @Aesthxetic_Bobax 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Everyone wake up the king of scary stories has posted

  • @Idontlikesomepeople
    @Idontlikesomepeople 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Whoelse was here when they were making slime vids

  • @katreetree604
    @katreetree604 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    First