Key Highlights
- His mother's devotion to the Unification Church bankrupted the family, and Yamagami bore a grudge against Abe after realising the ex-leader's ties to the controversial church. Abe's shocking death while giving a speech in broad daylight prompted investigations into the Unification Church and its questionable practices, including soliciting financially ruinous donations from its followers. The case also exposed links with politicians from Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party and resulted in the resignations of several cabinet ministers. Journalist Eito Suzuki, who covered all but one of Yamagami's court hearings, speaks of how both Abe's and Yamagami's families were "overwhelmed with despair" throughout the trial. Yamagami "exuded a sense of world-weariness and resignation", recounts Suzuki, who began looking into the Unification Church long before Abe's shocking murder."Everything is true.
- There is no doubt that I did this," Yamagami said solemnly on the first day of his trial in October 2025.
- Armed with a homemade gun assembled using two metal pipes and duct tape, he fired two shots at Abe during a political campaign event in the western city of Nara on 8 July 2022. The murder of Japan's most recognisable public figure at the time – Abe remains the longest-serving PM in Japanese history – sent shockwaves around the world. Calling for a jail term of no more than 20 years, Yamagami's lawyers argued that he was a victim of "religious abuse".
- He resented the church because his mother donated to it his late father's life insurance and other assets, amounting to 100 million yen (S$828,750), the court heard. Yamagami spoke of his grievance against Abe after seeing his video message at a church-related event in 2021, but said he had initially planned to attack church executives, not Abe.
- Suzuki recalls Abe's widow Akie's look of disbelief when Yamagami said the ex-leader was not his main target.


