In 2002 Nick Baker, a 32 year old British chef, and father of a one year
old son, traveled to Japan in advance of the World Cup. He was arrested at
Tokyo's Narita Airport when ecstasy pills and cocaine were found in the
false bottom of a suitcase.
Nick protested he had been duped by a traveling companion, James Prunier,
but Japanese police allowed Prunier to leave the country without
questioning him. While Nick was spending some 10 months in solitary
confinement for apparently "refusing to confess", it happened that Prunier
was arrested in Belgium for allegedly tricking three other British
travelers into smuggling drugs. (The "Mules" were released by Belgian
authorities without charges).
Nick's defence attorney requested that the facts of the Belgian case be
admitted as evidence, but presiding Judge Kenji Kadoya, who in more than a
decade on the bench has never found a single defendant "not guilty",
refused this motion at the request of the prosecution. Instead, in June
2003, handing-down almost double what one might expect for murder in Japan,
Kadoya sentenced Nick to 14 years in prison with hard labour, largely on
the basis of testimony Nick was made to sign (written in Japanese, a
language he does not understand).
Nick protested that the testimony was inaccurately translated, and is
currently appealing the verdict, a process that could take up to one year.
Nick's family and supporters have put this site up in the desperate hope
that the Japanese authorities, aware that the world is watching, will admit
relevant evidence and provide Nick with a proper hearing during the appeal,
and that justice will prevail. Otherwise, Nick will not see his son again
until he is fully grown.
website created by Nick's family... details of his case available there
Click Here to Sign the Justice For Nick Baker Petition