Man suspected of killing Shinzo Abe made multiple types of guns with iron pipes
The homemade gun recovered from 41-year-old Tetsuya Yamagami who is the prime suspect in the assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. PHOTO/COURTESY: CNN
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The suspect in
the assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the weapon
he used was homemade, Nara Nishi police told a news conference on Friday.
Tetsuya Yamagami, 41, admitted to shooting
Abe, police said. Yamagami, who is unemployed, told investigators he holds
hatred toward a certain group that he thought Abe was linked to. Police have
not named the group.
The weapon was a gun-like item that measured 40
centimeters (about 16 inches) long and 20 centimeters wide, police said.
Yamagami made multiple types of guns with
iron pipes that were wrapped in adhesive tape, Japan's public broadcaster NHK
reported, citing the police. The police found guns with three, five, and six
iron pipes as barrels.
The suspect inserted bullets in the pipe, which he
had bought parts for online, police said, according to NHK. Police believe the
suspect used the strongest weapon he made in the assassination, NHK
added.
Abe was fatally shot while making a campaign speech in the streets of Nara prefecture on Friday morning. His death has shocked Japan, a nation with one of the lowest rates of gun crime in the world.


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