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Criminal Broads

Woman of Seven Faces: Kazuko Fukuda

Criminal Broads

Cloud10

True Crime, History, Society & Culture

4.71K Ratings

🗓️ 8 May 2019

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 1982, Kazuko Fukuda strangled her coworker, changed her name, and went on the run—for fifteen years. She was playing a game of chicken with the law, trying to stay free until the statute of limitations for her crime ran out. To do this, she had to go under the knife. (Become a Patreon supporter for rewards and bonus content!) Sources: Crime stats for Japan and the US: The Japanese Industrial System (De Gruyter Studies in Organization, 3rd Edition), Page 46, and “The U.S. Murder Rate Is Up But Still Far Below Its 1980 Peak,” FiveThirtyEight, 25 Sept 2017 “Staying Healthy in Japan: Jujin Hospital,” Tokyo Weekender, 20 May 1888 “A Modest Proposal for Capturing Fugitives,” The Japan Times, Aug 07, 1997 “Informant donates reward to charity,” The Japan Times, 24 Aug 1997 “After 14 years on run, murder suspect arrested,” The Japan Times, 30 Jul 1997 “Japanese police scramble to catch up with criminals,” The Washington Post, Tokyo, 13 September 1997 “Ex-fugitive admits killing,” The Japan Times, 28 Oct 1997 “Life term for ex-fugitive upheld,” The Japan Times, 14 Dec 2000 “The rules of hostessing,” Japan Today, 3 November 2009 “Japan: Statute of Limitations for Murder Abolished,” Global Legal Monitor, The Law Library of Congress, 21 May 2010 “Heisei flashback: Kazuko Fukuda, ‘The Woman of Seven Faces,’” Tokyo Reporter, 19 April 2019 Music: “Guilty” by Richard A. Whiting, Harry Akst, and Gus Kahn, sung by Anna Telfer.“Moon-kana – Tsuki Kinoko (Yaka-anima Slow Mix)” by Yaka-anima from Broken Doll (2018), used with permission from archive.org under license Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Is it a sin? A crime loving you dear like I do? If it's a crime then I'm guilty

0:10.1

If it's a crime, then I'm guilty, guilty of love in you.

0:20.0

Hello, everyone and welcome to episode 25 of criminal broads.

0:24.8

We are one fourth of the way to 100 and we will make it there someday.

0:29.1

I believe in us.

0:30.6

Friends, thank you for listening.

0:32.8

This is Criminal Broad, a true crime podcast

0:34.8

about wild women on the wrong side of the law,

0:36.5

as you have probably become aware of.

0:39.8

And my name is Tori Telfer.

0:41.2

I am your faithful host, and I am also here celebrating the one year

0:45.7

birthday of Criminal Broads. Yeah, I launched this podcast a year ago, May 1st, 2018. Isn't it crazy that it's already been year so before I say anything

0:56.2

else I just want to say thank you for listening you have all been so supportive

1:00.4

and kind and generous and every time I get an email or a note or whatever I just feel so

1:08.7

grateful to have the cool awesome engaged listeners that I do.

1:12.6

So thank you so much for being there

1:15.0

for the past year or the past week or however long

1:17.7

you've stuck around.

1:19.8

So since it's a year anniversary or birthday,

1:22.1

it's a good time to tell you this announcement

1:25.6

that I have.

1:26.5

So at long last, Criminal Broads is joining a podcast network. This is going to be a great opportunity for the

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