In the early 1980s, a small, unassuming suitcase became the center of one of the most bizarre and horrifying true crime cases of the 20th century. Inside that suitcase was the dismembered remains of a young Dutch woman. And the man who carried it through the streets of Paris was Issei Sagawa—a man whose name would become synonymous with a crime so grotesque that it continues to fascinate and repel the world decades later. The Crime: From Fantasy to Reality Issei Sagawa was a Japanese national, the son of a wealthy and respected family. He was a brilliant but deeply troubled student, studying literature at the Sorbonne in Paris. For years, Sagawa had harbored a secret, cannibalistic fetish, specifically focused on tall, blonde, Western women. He saw them as the ultimate object of his obsession—powerful, beautiful, and, in his disturbed mind, something to be consumed.
But the story was far from over. Sagawa’s wealthy family in Japan exerted enormous pressure and expense to bring him home. In 1984, they succeeded in having him extradited to Japan. Upon arrival, Japanese authorities reassessed his case. A panel of Japanese psychiatrists came to a different conclusion: they found that Sagawa was not insane, but rather had a severe personality disorder. However, because French authorities had already dismissed the case, and due to legal technicalities regarding evidence and double jeopardy, the Japanese prosecutors could not re-try him for the murder committed in France. Issei Sagawa walked free. He checked into a Tokyo mental hospital for a short period, but by 1986, he was released. For the rest of his life, he was a free man. issei sagawa suitcase
In 1983, the French courts ruled that Sagawa was unfit to stand trial and ordered him to be held indefinitely in a psychiatric institution. He was placed in a secure hospital in Paris. In the early 1980s, a small, unassuming suitcase