Yamabe Oshimaro: Difference between revisions

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===Physique===
===Physique===
While he was not nearly the tallest person to have lived in Dayashina, his height has been a subject of public discussion after the PSW.  His father was noted as an large man, standing 6' 2", and his mother was also unusually tall for a Dayashinese woman then, at 5' 11"; the couple was considered a good match (amongst other factors) for their height.  Oshimaro grew up to be a prodigious 196 cm (6' 5"), the tallest amongst his siblings.  According to his personal account, it was "rare" for him not to be the tallest person in any setting, and he grew up "looking at heads rather than faces".  For his height, he had been given special duties at his school and the IDA.  Oshimaro was also an avid sportsman during his primary and middle school education, and in the earlier part of his military service was noted as an immensely strong person, though also consuming a "great quantity of food".  His great strength was utilized at his unit as a conveyor of heavy weapons and ammunitions, which otherwise required multiple individuals to transport.  His enlistment records at the Themiclesian Marines suggest that he weighed 108 kg (240 lbs), which was 2 kilogram short of being refused for obesity.<ref>This was an absolute weight ceiling regardless of height.</ref>
While he was not nearly the tallest person to have lived in Dayashina, his height has been a subject of public discussion after the PSW.  His father was noted as an large man, standing 6' 2", and his mother was also unusually tall for a Dayashinese woman then, at 5' 11"; the couple was considered a good match (amongst other factors) for their height.  Oshimaro grew up to be a prodigious 196 cm (6' 5"), the tallest amongst his siblings.  According to his personal account, it was "rare" for him not to be the tallest person in any setting, and he grew up "looking at heads rather than faces".  For his height, he had been given special duties at his school and the IDA.  Oshimaro was also an avid sportsman during his primary and middle school education, and in the earlier part of his military service was noted as an immensely strong person, though also consuming a "great quantity of food".  His great strength was utilized at his unit as a conveyor of heavy weapons and ammunitions, which otherwise required multiple individuals to transport.  His enlistment records at the Themiclesian Marines suggest that he weighed 108 kg (240 lbs), which was 2 kilogram short of being refused for obesity.<ref>This was an absolute weight ceiling regardless of height.</ref> According to other members of his unit, he was nicknamed the "giant", and again his great strength and willingness to use it helping others made him a popular individual in his Themiclesian unit as well.


==Trial==
==Trial==

Revision as of 03:56, 23 September 2019

Yamabe no Oshimaro
Onoda-young.jpg
Native name
山部押麻呂
Born(1919-11-30)November 30, 1919
DiedDecember 2, 2000(2000-12-02) (aged 81)
Nakaya, Dayashina
Buried
Onakata, Dayashina
Allegiance Dayashina
ServiceImperial Dayashinese Army (cover)
Imperial Special Operations Group (actual)
Years of service1937 – 1960
RankMajor
Battles/warsPan-Septentrion War
Spouse(s)高町古真子 (Takamachi Komako, m. 1938)

Yamabe Oshimaro (Dayashinese: 山部押麻呂/やまべのおしまろ, also Yamabe no Oshimaro, Nov. 30, 1919 – Dec. 2, 2000) was a Dayashinese soldier of the Pan-Septentrion War and author of several books relating to it.

Personal life

Birth and early life

Yamabe Oshimaro was born on November 30, 1919 to Yamabe Ookomomaro (山部大薦萬侶, Dayashinese: やまべ の おおこもまろ) and Nijou Uchiko (二條內子, Dayashinese: にじょう うちこ). His father was a mid-level military officer in the Imperial Dayashinese Army, while his mother was from a wealthy Dayashinese industrialist lineage. He was born third of five boys, and fifth of nine children in total. His family was well-to-do before and throughout the war.

Physique

While he was not nearly the tallest person to have lived in Dayashina, his height has been a subject of public discussion after the PSW. His father was noted as an large man, standing 6' 2", and his mother was also unusually tall for a Dayashinese woman then, at 5' 11"; the couple was considered a good match (amongst other factors) for their height. Oshimaro grew up to be a prodigious 196 cm (6' 5"), the tallest amongst his siblings. According to his personal account, it was "rare" for him not to be the tallest person in any setting, and he grew up "looking at heads rather than faces". For his height, he had been given special duties at his school and the IDA. Oshimaro was also an avid sportsman during his primary and middle school education, and in the earlier part of his military service was noted as an immensely strong person, though also consuming a "great quantity of food". His great strength was utilized at his unit as a conveyor of heavy weapons and ammunitions, which otherwise required multiple individuals to transport. His enlistment records at the Themiclesian Marines suggest that he weighed 108 kg (240 lbs), which was 2 kilogram short of being refused for obesity.[1] According to other members of his unit, he was nicknamed the "giant", and again his great strength and willingness to use it helping others made him a popular individual in his Themiclesian unit as well.

Trial

Arraignment

On Nov. 2, 1941, Yamabe was sent to the law side of the Minor Exchequer (少內, stjawh-nubh). The Themiclesian Navy committed all allegations of treason and felony for trial at this court, which is ordinarily concerned with disputes in excise, customs, and amercements. While the Navy possessed its own version of the court-martial, held by its captains and the naval tribunes, its jurisdiction did not extend to crimes committed in domestic territory. As the court was in vacation, his capture reached the newspapers, prompting his financially well-off parents in Dayashina to retain serjeant-at-law Chao Ree (黎兆), GC to represent him. Chao Ree was a partner in Ree, Ree, and Ree (三黎士師所, sem-rii-dzrje-srjii-skrja’), one of Themiclesia's most distinguished criminal defence firms at the time.

He was formally arraigned on Feb. 10, 1942 and stood indicted on 17 murder charges, 24 assault charges, and high treason. Ree led the defence, with Yamabe absent, prior to trial; on the 22nd, he demurred to all murder and assault charges as "acts prescribed by a foreign lord". That is, on the grounds that neither were Themiclesian soldiers on trial in foreign states for acts against them, so Yamabe ought not be tried for these actions. On the following day, the public disorder charges were confessed. On Mar. 5, Yamabe appeared in court for the first time and entered a not guilty plea to the treason charge. Themiclesian law required all charges to be answered before the court proceeded to decide demurrers.

Pleading

The court first focused on the question of Yamabe's legal allegiance. The Navy contended since Yamabe did not claim benefit of alien when he was previously brought before a court, he should be tried as a subject. Bjum Hwiar, barrister, argued that failure to claim benefit does not create allegiance. The Navy rejoined that Yamabe had joined the Marine Corps as a Themiclesian subject; Hwiar refuted that no law requires the Marine Corps's men to be Themiclesian, and his enlistment "does not imply it." Hwiar showed the court a long list of marines that were not Themiclesians at enlistment, spanning 1410 – 1817, and a list of their subsequent enrollments in household records, after discharge. When the Navy argued these examples were obsolete, Hwiar said that the Navy recently promoted an officer who died in 1244 posthumously "for valour", showing that facts centuries ago are still within the Navy's purview. On Mar. 31, the Navy was ordered to produce counter-arguments; the prosecutors pled imparlance, which the court overruled then sustained the demurrer to murder and assault charges.

Navy prosecutors' expulsion

Desperate for information, the Navy ordered agents to monitor Yamabe for incriminating evidence. Ree anticipated this and stationed solicitors at Yamabe's side. On Apr. 7, solicitor Mak Hmin staged a conversation with Yamabe (with his knowledge). When session resumed, the Navy presented the staged conversation as evidence, and Ree demanded the prosecutors be imprisoned for misconduct and the case be dismissed with prejudice. The court expelling the prosecution, Ree sued for their disbarrment. The Bar was galvanized by Ree and voted to disbar the prosecutors. With new prosecutors, the Navy pushed for venire de novo, but Kung, barrister, argued the Navy was at fault for the interruption and not entitled to a new trial. Kung further requested the indictment be dismissed. The court overrued both and ordered the parties to join at issue.

Joinder at issue

During Yamabe's trial, the 4th and 5th Regiments have started to identify infiltrators. The campaign is estimated to have killed as many innocent soldiers as infiltrators. The Admiralty ordered the 4th Regiment to make themselves available for jury duty for the treason trial. The prosecution moved that a jury should be summoned from Yamabe's regiment, which was indignant at his actions; however, Ree expounded the issue was one of law, not of fact, which in the Exchequer results in a trial by bench. The judges agreed and directed the Navy to accept this mode of trial. The Navy was later proven to have schemed of using the regiment's rage to secure a conviction.

Trial by bench

The prosecution argued that Yamabe, no matter his nationality, owed allegiance to the Themiclesian crown after he had surrendered to the Themiclesian Army and accepted the purse of 600 hmrjing as advertised. The defence maintained that Yamabe did not owe allegiance by his surrender, at best becoming stateless. On May 15, parliament resumed sitting, and the Navy Secretary passed a bill to naturalize all members of the two regiments that were not yet naturalized. This did not retroactively apply to Yamabe, though his name was on the bill.[2]

Closing statement

During closing statements, Yamabe asked to address the court personally. Ree gave him a very lengthy script that described him purely as a Dayashinese soldier, protected by the Eisenmaat Convention; he initially followed the script but soon deviated from it, inserting statements that disparaged the Emperor, his court, and the country's future generally. The Court stopped and imprisoned him several times, but each time he was released, his statements grew more extreme. The Navy thought his tactics amounted to a filibuster. The prosecutors asked the Court not to remand the defendant to confinement, so his "treasonable" statements could be heard. Ree, in the pit, could not bar his client's speech.[3]

Assassination attempt

On Jun. 2, two marines of the 4th Regiment broke into the marshalsea in which Yamabe was held, apparently intending to assassinate Yamabe. Solicitors by Yamabe took several shot, though none fatally. They testified that the two had spoken words indicating their intentions. Ree capitalized on the argument that Navy sent these assassins, asking the case be dismissed due to gross misconduct of the prosecuting party. The prosecutors objected that this intrusion had nothing to do with them. The Court concurred with Ree, mindful of the prosecution's previous tactic, and dismissed the case with prejudice, acquitting Yamabe of treason and the public disorder charges that have already been confessed. The Navy requested permission to appeal the judgment, but the court refused. It then discharged Yamabe and proposed to the Gwian Prefecture (where Yamabe lived) police to monitor Yamabe.


Notes

  1. This was an absolute weight ceiling regardless of height.
  2. Up to this point, those desiring naturalization submitted a peition to the Council of Ushers declaring their wish to become subjects of the Themiclesian crown, and an act of parliament would be passed (generally for hundreds at once) to recognize their citizenship. Yamabe joined the Marines without formally petitioning for citizenship, which he thought was automatically granted upon accepting the 600 hmrjing purse.
  3. Attorneys sat in a sub-level pit, before the bench, while not speaking.

See also