This may seem like a random tangent, but I was recently reading
Foreign Faction by James Kolar, who was the lead criminal investigator for the District Attorney’s Office in Colorado and was quite involved with the JonBenet Ramsey case for a time.
In it, he discusses that John Douglas (former FBI profiler, author of
Mindhunter, etc) was hired at some point early on by the Ramsey family, and part of his profile of the likely killer was that they were ‘mission-oriented’, and as such, unlikely to have committed a similar crime before or since.
Spoiler alert for those of you unfamiliar with the JBR case: Kolar’s theory is that the crime was committed by Burke Ramsey, JBR’s 9-year old brother, and covered up by her parents.
Now, what does this have to do with the Miyazawa family? I’m not sure, really, except I was struck by this idea of the “mission-oriented” killer who likely never killed before their crime and likely never kills again. I immediately thought of the many discussions of the Miyazawa family’s killer, and how it might apply to him, and perhaps partially explain the some of the difficulty in identifying him.
In the context of the FBI/Behavioral Sciences Unit, ‘the mission-oriented’ designation is usually applied to serial killers whose murders focus on a particular group of people (ie, prostitutes, dark-haired women, etc), so I found Douglas’s application of it to the murder of a single 6-year old girl, with the addenda of ‘likely never killed before or after’) interesting.
Vaguely following this line of thought, I started wondering about ‘family annihilator’ -type killers who don’t kill their
own family. This was surprisingly difficult to research. I was really only able to come up with the
McStay family (killed by a business competitor), and the
Clutter family (botched robbery). (There must be others!)
However neither of those cases, or their apparent motives, seem to apply to the Miyazawa family. So that, combined with the mission-oriented idea, leads me back at the speculation that the family was specifically targeted and known to the killer. I’m aware that the TMPD have apparently been unable to identify such a person during the succeeding decades, and that Nick does not believe this is likely either.
I just wonder. I know approximately zero percent about how the Japanese police work, but I wonder if, for lack of a better phrase, there is an element of ‘polite inquiry’ vs very aggressive interrogation tactics that may have allowed any theoretical ‘secrets’ to fall through the cracks.
All speculation, of course.