Monday, August 3, 2015

Telco executives play the Subaru Porsche card




Before the Isis demolition team hits Fukushima

Telco buys Bcg from Japanese manufacturer and applies same to people with autoimmune diseases in accordance with us patent reissue 43,467
See eg faustmanlab.org and pubmed.org faustman DL and pubmed.org RISTORI + Bcg.

Japanese pharmaceutical companies murder more people than tepco.

As the Japanese are better copycats than thinkers in some respects, the greatest Japanese person will be the one who copies faustman and RISTORI whileamericans die slow death from FDA murderers.

See clinicaltrials.gov faustman
Isis ramps up the death poll toll by vowing to simultaneously hit Hanford washington, Chernobyl, fukushima, and Indian point to go for the glow.


Pump up the Subaru mindset by using Bcg as taught by faustman et alwhilethe us murders
Americans who are sick.






Former Tepco Executives to Face Charges Tied to Fukushima Nuclear Disaster

Japanese judicial committee votes in favor of indicting former chairman, two others


Tsunehisa Katsumata speaking at a news conference in March 2007. The former Tepco chairman and two other former company executives are set to face charges stemming from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.ENLARGE
Tsunehisa Katsumata speaking at a news conference in March 2007. The former Tepco chairman and two other former company executives are set to face charges stemming from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG NEWS
TOKYO—A Japanese judicial committee has decided that three former utility executives should face criminal charges and stand trial for alleged negligence in the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
A document released Friday showed the committee voted in favor of indictingTsunehisa Katsumata, 75 years old, who was chairman of Tokyo Electric PowerCo., or Tepco, at the time of the crisis, along with then-vice presidents Sakae Muto, 65, and Ichiro Takeguro, 69.
The 11-member committee’s second decision supporting the indictment overrides Tokyo prosecutors’ two earlier decisions to drop the case, forcing the three men to be charged with professional negligence. It will be the first criminal case involving the utility’s officials from the nuclear disaster to be tried in court. The prosecutors had cited lack of evidence to prove they could foresee the danger of a tsunami and decided not to file charges in September 2013 and again in January this year.
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The committee, in its July 17 decision, alleged that the three men neglected to take sufficient measures even though they were fully aware of the risk of a major tsunami at the Fukushima plant at least two years before the accident. It said they should be charged with professional negligence resulting in death and injury during the accident and its aftermath, including the deaths of dozens of senior citizens in a hospital during and after the lengthy evacuation.
The Tokyo District Court will now choose a team of lawyers to act as prosecutors to formally press charges in court.
Three reactors had meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi plant damaged in the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, triggering massive radiation leaks that forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate.
Government and parliamentary investigative reports have said Tepco’s lack of safety culture and weak risk management, including an underestimate of tsunami threats, led to the disaster.
The committee’s decision sustains an appeal representing more than 5,700 people from Fukushima and other parts of Japan, urging prosecutors to investigate and send the utility executives to court to determine who was responsible for the disaster. They said the Tepco executives failed to fulfill their obligation to prevent a serious accident.
The committee said Friday that Tepco’s Fukushima Daiichi had a reputation as one of the nuclear plants with the “least safety margin for tsunami.”
Tepco President Naomi Hirose declined to comment because the case was pending.
“We’ve finally come this far,” said Ruiko Muto, who heads the group that filed the complaint, said Fukushima residents hit by the disaster have long sought their criminal liability to be clarified in court. “We believe the truth of the accident will be revealed in criminal trial proceedings to bring justice.”

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