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Yumiko-chan incident

The Yumiko-chan incident was the rape and murder of five-year-old Japanese girl Yumiko Nagayama, sometimes reported as Yumiko Arakaki, by U.S. soldier ‌Sergeant Isaac J. Hurt in Kadena, Okinawa, on 4 September 1955. Nagayama's body was found near Kadena Air Base during the U.S. occupation of Okinawa. An investigation led to the conviction of 31-year-old Sergeant Hurt on charges of murder, rape, and kidnapping. The Yumiko-chan incident caused anti-American outrage in Okinawa and contributed to the first major Okinawan protests against the U.S. occupation and military presence.

Background
Hurt, who was born in Lothair, Kentucky, had previously served 11 months in jail for assault and attempted rape in Michigan. ==Incident==
Incident
On 4 September 1955, the mutilated body of a young girl was discovered in a landfill belonging to the Kadena Air Base, an installation of the Far East Command in Kadena, Okinawa, at the time governed by the United States Civil Administration of the Ryukyu Islands. The girl was found to have been raped and her body was described as if it had been cut up with a sharp knife from the abdominal region to the bowel. The girl was identified as Yumiko Nagayama, sometimes reported as Yumiko Arakaki, a five-year-old kindergarten student from Ishikawa, now part of the city of Uruma. She had been reported missing at about 8 p.m when she did not come home from playing outdoors. When a brown hair was discovered on Nagayama's body, investigators suspected that the perpetrator was foreign, prompting a joint investigation by the U.S. military and the Ryukyu Police, the civilian police agency in Okinawa at the time. ==Reaction==
Reaction
News of Nagayama's violent rape and murder by a U.S. serviceman provoked outrage among Okinawans, who were further angered by the fact that due to extraterritoriality laws, Hurt's murder would not be tried by an Okinawan court, but rather an American military court. A Rally for Protection of Children was held in Okinawa and the Association for Protection of Children was formed with this incident, and many Okinawans rallied in support of the cause. Okinawans demanded that the U.S. military "Punish offenders of this kind of case with the death penalty without leniency regardless of nationality or ethnicity." Okinawans demanded for the U.S. to have Hurt tried in a civilian court and that the trial be publicly broadcast, but these requests were declined. ==Trial==
Trial
Hurt was court-martialed on charges of rape and felony murder by an American military court in Okinawa. He was tried just 15 days after U.S. Marine Raymond Elton Parker was sentenced to life in prison for raping a 7-year-old Okinawan girl. Hurt insisted on his innocence. His court martial lasted 13 days and he was convicted after a deliberation of less than an hour, and sentenced to death. While it was standard procedure, Hurt was returned to the U.S. without the Okinawan public being informed. After sentencing, people from his hometown, as well as number of politicians jumped to his defense. The defense presented letters and petitions from Hurt's hometown of Lothair, which described him as "honest" and "law abiding". Military prosecutors rejected this, citing Hurt's prior convictions. Release from prison Following the commutation of his death sentence, Hurt was transferred to United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas, where he suffered a stroke in 1969. He wrote letters to Senators and members of the U.S. government requesting to be granted parole or his case to be dismissed. In one letter, he alleged, "I was sacrificed to appease the dissident political elements who were demanding an end to American mil. [military] Occupation." Hurt was released from prison later that year. Following his release, he found work as a night watchman and married Lura Bea McKinney in 1981. On 6 August 1984, Hurt died at a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Ohio State. ==Aftermath==
Aftermath
The Yumiko-chan incident caused an increase in Okinawan opposition against the United States Civil Administration of the Ryukyu Islands and ten years of U.S. military occupation in Okinawa, and led to further debate over the continued presence of U.S. forces in Japan. It was the springboard for the first serious, coordinated anti-U.S. military protests in Okinawa following the beginning of the occupation in 1945. On 23 September 2021, Okinawa Times reported about the release of Hurt and the Department of Veterans' Affairs' provision of his grave marker, despite his conviction for rape and murder of a minor. Okinawan peace activists, including Suzuyo Takazato, expressed anger at the release and the U.S. government's decision to supply such a headstone. ==See also==
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