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11-10-2010, 04:52 PM
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Someone said something about special forces for big incidents? That rings pretty true to me. At the end of my stay in Japan bits of a body was found on the railway track. We didn't realize what was going on at the time (being oblivious to the news/announcements), but we saw a squad of armed police in full gear heading for the river and the track. As it happened, my friend's Host father was there when the legs were found (he called us shortly after we saw the police to tell us to go home because some guy with a knife had been seen and was suspected to still be in the area). At any rate, these were totally different guys than the usual ploddies we saw around town. Different uniforms and attitude. |
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11-10-2010, 04:56 PM
Ghost Rider is famous also in Japan!(biker only? )
It is fully also in the Video hosting service(nikoniko douga) in Japan. This two especially has popularity. Cryptanalysis is necessary for you. set a goal:English at the same level as Johan Cruyff |
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11-10-2010, 08:12 PM
Statistics
In 1990 the police identified over 2.2 million Penal Code violations[citation needed]. Two types of violations—larceny (65.1 percent of total violations[citation needed]) and negligent homicide or injury as a result of accidents (26.2%)—accounted for over 90 percent of criminal offenses in Japan[citation needed]. In 1989 Japan experienced 1.3 robberies per 100,000 population, compared with 48.6 for West Germany, 65.8 for Great Britain, and 233.0 for the United States; and it experienced 1.1 murder per 100,000 population, compared with 3.9 for West Germany, 1.03 for England and Wales, and 8.7 for the United States that same year[citation needed]. Japanese authorities also solve a high percentage of robbery cases (75.9%, compared with 43.8% for West Germany, 26.5% for Britain, and 26.0% for the United States) and homicide cases (95.9% , compared with 94.4% for Germany, 78.0% for Britain, and 68.3% for the United States)[citation needed]. This is connected to the fact that prosecutions are less likely to be successfully challenged compared to the above mentioned countries, a fact that has caused human rights concerns and has led to a change in the law which will take effect in 2009[citation needed]. Crime in Japan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Wikipedia's take. |
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11-10-2010, 11:02 PM
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