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Yoshie Shiratori

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Famous Japanese escapist known for escaping from four prisons

Yoshie Shiratori
白鳥 由栄
Yoshie
Born(1907-07-31)July 31, 1907
Aomori, Aomori Prefecture, Empire of Japan
DiedFebruary 24, 1979(1979-02-24) (aged 71)
Aomori Prefecture, Japan
Known forEscaping from 4 northern Japanese prisons

Yoshie Shiratori (白鳥 由栄, Shiratori Yoshie, July 31, 1907 – February 24, 1979) was a Japanese national born in Aomori Prefecture. Shiratori is famous for having escaped from prison four different times. There is a memorial to Shiratori at the Abashiri Prison Museum.

There are numerous tales describing his escapes, but some details may be highly exaggerated rather than factual.

Early life

Yoshie Shiratori was born on July 31, 1907, in Aomori, Japan. His father passed away when he was 2 years old, and he was abandoned at a young age by his mother. Initially, he worked in a tofu shop and later as a fisherman to obtain and catch crabs in Russia. After switching jobs several times and finding little success, he turned to gambling and robbery for a living.

Prison escapes

Aomori prison break

Aomori Prison

Shiratori was imprisoned at Aomori prison in 1936 for a felony murder charge, and after studying the guards' routine for months, he escaped by picking his cell lock with the metal wire that was wrapped around the washroom's bucket provided for bathing and escaped through a cracked skylight. Before escaping, he placed floorboards onto his futon to fool the passing guards into thinking he was still asleep.

Akita prison break

Police recaptured Shiratori after three days whilst he was stealing supplies from a hospital. Sentenced to life in prison for escaping and attempted theft, he was transferred to Akita prison in 1941.

At Akita prison, Shiratori was placed in a cell specially designed for escape artists, featuring high ceilings, one small skylight, and smooth copper walls. Nevertheless, Shiratori was able to scale the walls, and noticed that the wood holding the window bars was beginning to rot. Every night, he would climb up to loosen the vent, until he finally managed to pry away the wood and open the skylight. Knowing prison staff would be able to hear his footsteps on the roof, Shiratori waited until a stormy night to climb the walls and escape on June 14, 1942. Three months later, he showed up at the house of one of the guards to ask for help, as he was one of the only people who had shown kindness and respect to Shiratori during his stay in the Akita prison. However, the guard called the police and Shiratori was arrested and sent back to prison.

Abashiri prison break

Replica of Shiratori's escape from Abashiri Prison at the Abashiri Prison Museum.

During the winter of 1942/43, Shiratori was transferred to Abashiri prison in Northern Hokkaido, the country’s northernmost prison. He was thrown into an open cell exposed to the extreme cold, allowing the guards to beat him down whenever he stood up. Later, he was placed in specially made handcuffs taking nearly two hours to unlock by a specialist who came once per week so that he could bathe. When the guards delivered meals however, he would drip miso soup on the handcuffs and food slot, both of which eventually became corroded, allowing Shiratori to break them. Then on August 26, 1944, he dislocated both of his shoulders, enabling him to fit out of the narrow food slot in his cell door and escaped the prison, using a wartime blackout as cover. After living in an abandoned mine deep in the mountains for two years, he descended to a nearby village, and learned of the surrender of Japan. However, he was captured yet again after fatally stabbing a farmer who attacked him after he was caught stealing a tomato from his farm.

Sapporo prison break

For his previous escapes and the farmer's murder, Shiratori was sentenced to death by the Sapporo District Court. At the Sapporo prison, he was placed in a specially designed cell with high ceilings and windows smaller than his head. However, due to the prison guards at Sapporo having so much faith in it that they no longer bothered to handcuff Shiratori, and that they paid so much attention towards his ceiling escapes, they neglected the floors. In 1947, he dug his way out by making a tunnel with some of the miso soup bowls.

Final years

After a year of freedom, it is said that Shiratori was offered a cigarette by a police officer in a park. Emotionally touched by the kindness, Shiratori admitted he was an escaped convict and offered to be turned in. He was arrested and tried once again, but the High Court of Sapporo, having reviewed his case, decided that the farmer's death was a result of acting in self defense. As a result, the court revoked his death sentence, instead sentencing him to 20 years for his escapes. Shiratori's request to be imprisoned in Tokyo was also granted, and he spent 14 years in Fuchu Prison until December, 1961, when he was released on parole.

Later, he returned to Aomori to reunite with his daughter although they were not close. His wife had died while he was in prison. Shiratori lived for another decade working odd jobs to survive. He eventually succumbed to a heart attack in 1979, at the age of 71.

In media

Akira Yoshimura's novel Hagoku is based on Shiratori's life.

The character Yoshitake Shiraishi in the manga Golden Kamuy by Satoru Noda was revealed in an interview with the author to have been based on and named after Shiratori.

References

  1. "白鳥由栄の写真、名言、年表、子孫を徹底紹介". 昭和ガイド (in Japanese). Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  2. Wollstone, Edgar. Yoshie Shiratori, The Grand Jailbreaker: Heart-touching story of a Japanese Jailbreak Expert. AJS.
  3. Carlton, Genevieve (13 December 2022). "The Story Of Yoshie Shiratori, The Wrongfully Convicted Man Who Escaped From Prison Four Times". All That's Interesting. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
  4. 斎藤充功 (1985). 脫獄王白鳥由栄の証言 (in Japanese). 評伝社.
  5. 安夏芳 (30 June 2016). "昭和行刑史に残る脱獄王・白鳥由栄の人生". アナブレ (in Japanese). Retrieved 19 December 2024.
  6. ^ Carlos, Marius Jr. (3 February 2020). "Yoshie Shiratori: The Incredible Story of a Man No Prison Could Hold". Breaking Asia. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  7. ^ "昭和行刑史に残る脱獄王・白鳥由栄の人生". アナブレ (in Japanese). 30 June 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  8. 斎藤充功 (February 2023). 日本の脱獄王: 白鳥由栄の生涯 (in Japanese). 論創社. ISBN 978-4-8460-2180-1.
  9. Schreiber, Mark (5 May 2018). "News outlets quick to fall in love with prison break coverage". The Japan Times. Retrieved 29 December 2019.

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