Sagawa Issei.

(Reuters)

[Entertainment Channel/Comprehensive Report] In June 1981, the "Paris Human Flesh Incident" shocked the world. The Dutch female student Renee Hartvelt was shot dead, her body was dismembered and "gnawed and gnawed". It was a Japanese man, Issei Sagawa, who committed the appalling crime.

According to Agence France-Presse, Sagawa Issei's younger brother and friends issued a statement saying that he died of pneumonia on November 24. Only relatives and friends attended the funeral, and no public mourning ceremony was held.

Kazumasa Sagawa, known as the "Japanese Ogre", was arrested two days after the incident, but after psychological assessment, the French police decided not to prosecute.

His father arranged to return to China for medical treatment. The Japanese psychiatric hospital believed that the French side had misdiagnosed him and claimed that Sagawa should bear criminal responsibility. He was still free in just over a year.

Please read on...

The terrifying experience of Sagawa Issei was also made into a documentary.

(taken from Weibo)

Sagawa Kazumasa's adventure-seeking experience has become the target of the Japanese media. He also used his notoriety to write a number of books about cannibalism, the most famous work being "In the Fog".

In 2017, in the Venice Film Festival documentary "Caniba", two French directors went to Japan to visit Issei Sagawa who suffered a stroke.

Already added friends, thank you

Welcome to [Free Entertainment]

feel good

Already liked it, thank you.