The strong Japanese outcry over the killing precipitated a major diplomatic crisis between the United States and Japan and led to a jurisdictional dispute between the Japanese authorities and the
U.S. Army over who had the right to put Girard on trial for Sakai's killing. The U.S. Army maintained that Girard had acted while on "active duty" and was thus under the jurisdiction of U.S. military courts in accordance with the terms of the
U.S.-Japan Security Treaty. Girard appealed this decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, but the court declined to intervene, in the case
Wilson v. Girard. American domestic response to Girard's extradition was largely negative, sparking an intense political and media backlash against the
Eisenhower administration. Relatives and supporters in his Illinois hometown drummed up 182 feet of signatures for a petition decrying the decision, the
American Legion protested vociferously, the
Veterans of Foreign Wars said that Girard had been "sold down the river", Senator
John Bricker of Ohio called the decision a matter of "sacrificing an American soldier to appease Japanese public opinion", and the
New York Daily News summed up its feelings in a headline: "To the Wolves, Soldier". In the midst of the uproar,
The New York Times, fearing that American reaction was eroding the good will earned in Asia by the initial decision to extradite, published an article lauding the positive interactions between most U.S. soldiers and Japanese civilians, including photographs of soldiers celebrating
Christmas with a Japanese family while clothed in traditional Japanese attire. ==Trial==