ダークサイドミステリー 2025年2月21日
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00:003. American movie that became a hot topic with DiCaprio and De Niro's co-star,
00:06Killers of the Flower Moon.
00:10A hundred years ago, dozens of residents of a certain area were assassinated.
00:17The darkness of America hidden in the truth of the case is a suspense based on a true story.
00:25Tonight, I will thoroughly explain the serial murders and the conspiracy of terror that became the basis of the movie.
00:35If I say the theme in one word,
00:38there is poison in a gentle smile.
00:43You still don't know the terrible mystery hidden in this world.
00:58Now, let's go to the world of dangerous surprise, Dark Side.
01:07They pretend to be sick and kill themselves.
01:10They take them to a deserted place and kill them.
01:16The people who were killed were the Senjuu people.
01:19There were dozens of victims.
01:22Why did the heinous murders continue?
01:25Greed and discrimination in the local area.
01:28A huge case of oil money.
01:31The history of Senjuu people and white people.
01:34What is the darkness of history that America wanted to hide?
01:38The explosion of bombs.
01:40The woman who was targeted relied on the white man in the front.
01:45It will be a trap of terror.
01:49The federal government has come to the solution.
01:53Will the woman who was targeted be saved?
01:56A terrible conspiracy that will be revealed in court.
02:01A distorted discrimination hidden in a gentle smile.
02:09From now on, I will shine a light on the world of darkness for an hour.
02:14I will solve the mystery with you.
02:32The End
02:42Can you imagine it?
02:45If such an unpleasant thing happened around you...
02:53One day, your brother...
02:57From a kind relative...
03:00If you're not feeling well, this will help you.
03:04If you take the medicine...
03:12You will die soon.
03:16Soon, your parents...
03:20Your brothers...
03:22They will die after taking the same medicine over and over again.
03:28For some reason, the doctor and the police pretend not to see.
03:33And finally, you...
03:39Are you sick?
03:42This medicine will help you.
03:51It's desperate, isn't it?
03:54I will introduce you tonight.
03:56The image of a series of incidents in the Osei clan.
04:01The devil approaches with the face of a kind angel.
04:09Central America
04:11Oklahoma City, where vast plains spread and became the stage of western development.
04:2014.2% of the American population lives here.
04:27This is the area where the largest number of immigrants live.
04:34100 years ago, in 1926,
04:38the Osei clan was arrested by a local powerful man in the northern part of Oklahoma.
04:46William Hale, 51 years old.
04:50He ran a vast ranch in the Osei clan.
04:54He was a man who realized the beauty of the land.
05:05I'm a visitor, aren't I?
05:10On the day of the arrest,
05:13Hale came out with a lot of room.
05:19The charges against Hale were
05:22that he killed about 10 people, including two women from the Osei clan,
05:28who lived in the Osei clan.
05:34But he was suspected of murder,
05:38but he had plenty of room.
05:40Because Hale was a man who gained great trust in the Osei clan.
05:49He was called the king of the Osei Hills.
05:56Hale came to the Osei clan about 25 years ago.
06:02He was just a flower boy.
06:06He worked hard to earn a living,
06:09and little by little, he bought land.
06:12Eventually, he became the manager of a large ranch
06:16that was 4,000 times the size of the Tokyo Dome.
06:23Hale was involved in the management of several companies,
06:27such as banks and warehouses, in Fairfax.
06:31He was also a man who had a great influence
06:34on the development of military properties.
06:40In the city elections,
06:42the candidates would go to Hale
06:44and get a backer,
06:46winning one after another.
06:49As a result, many politicians,
06:51mayors, judges,
06:53and prosecutors in this area
06:55were influenced by Hale.
06:59On the other hand,
07:01Hale was not only a white man,
07:03but also a man who gained trust
07:05from the Osei clan.
07:09Hale donated a lot of money
07:11to schools and hospitals
07:13for the Osei clan
07:15to make education and medical care
07:17easier for them.
07:21Hale was also a man
07:23who had a great influence
07:25on the development
07:27of military properties.
07:29Everyone was grateful to Hale.
07:33Hale proudly declared
07:35to the Osei clan.
07:41The Osei clan is my best friend
07:43in my life,
07:45and I will continue
07:47to be a true friend of the Osei clan.
07:50Why did a man
07:52who was known
07:54for his trust and kindness
07:56have to commit
07:58a mass murder
08:00of all the residents?
08:06It all began
08:08five years before Hale was arrested.
08:12At that time,
08:14the Osei clan
08:16had a mysterious murder
08:18on the Hill of Pohaska
08:20in May 1921.
08:24A body of a 30-year-old
08:26white man of the Osei clan
08:28was found
08:30on the hill
08:32of Pohaska in May 1921.
08:36Two shots were fired
08:38on the forehead.
08:40The homicide was obvious.
08:42Rather, it was a execution.
08:48At about the same time,
08:50a body of a woman
08:52of the Osei clan
08:54was found
08:56in the valley of Fairfax.
08:58Her name was Anna Brown,
09:0034 years old.
09:02A shot was fired
09:04on the back of the head
09:06from a close distance.
09:08The following year,
09:10on February 2, 1922,
09:13a man of the Osei clan
09:15was called out
09:17by someone
09:19and suddenly
09:21he died of a stroke.
09:25The following March
09:27and July,
09:29a woman and a man
09:31of the Osei clan
09:33died of the same symptoms.
09:39The fear of the Osei clan
09:41was rampant.
09:43More than 20 people
09:45were killed.
09:49No matter how many
09:51unsubstantiated deaths
09:53occurred,
09:55the investigation
09:57for the arrest of the culprit
09:59did not proceed.
10:01I think that
10:03the white man
10:05who was investigating
10:07had a feeling
10:10that the Osei clan
10:12was the culprit.
10:14The mysterious
10:16serial killer
10:18was related to the
10:20miraculous fortune
10:22of the Osei clan.
10:28The oil
10:30that came out
10:32from the ground
10:34of the Osei clan.
10:36The enormous
10:38oil.
10:42From the 17th century
10:44to the 19th century,
10:46the white people
10:48who immigrated to the United States
10:50sought cheap and
10:52abundant land
10:54and went to the
10:56western part of the continent.
10:58They robbed the land
11:00of all the people
11:02one after another
11:04and committed
11:06forced migration.
11:08In the 19th century,
11:10the U.S. federal government
11:12expelled the white people
11:14from the land
11:16that was beneficial
11:18to the white people
11:20and forced them
11:22to move to the
11:24poor land
11:26in Oklahoma.
11:28The land was managed
11:30by the federal government.
11:32There, the white people
11:34were allowed to
11:36do their business.
11:38However,
11:40the white people
11:42tried to deceive
11:44the white people
11:46by buying the land
11:48cheaply and
11:50making their own
11:52towns.
11:54The white people
11:56were manipulated
11:58by the mayor,
12:00judges,
12:02and many other people
12:04in the U.S.
12:06and the United States.
12:08Many tribes
12:10were exploited
12:12by the white people
12:14and suffered
12:16from poverty.
12:18However,
12:20the Osegis were different.
12:26The oil came out.
12:28At the end of the 19th century,
12:30the Osegis found out
12:32that their land
12:34was an oil field
12:36and started an oil business.
12:40The Osegis
12:42borrowed the rights
12:44to use the land
12:46and the oil
12:48from the white oil workers
12:50and received a huge sum.
12:52Moreover,
12:54the Osegis had a special rule
12:56to protect the rights
12:58of the white people.
13:00It was called
13:02the Equal Rights.
13:04About 2,000 Osegis
13:06were given
13:08equal rights
13:10regardless of
13:12their age or gender.
13:16Moreover,
13:18the rights of the white people
13:20were taken away
13:22by the Osegis
13:24as a rule.
13:28The price was
13:3012,000 dollars
13:32per person per year.
13:34The Osegis
13:36got the money
13:38to buy
13:4040 cars.
13:42The Osegis
13:44were the richest people
13:46in the world.
13:48The Osegis
13:50bought cars
13:52for the white people
13:54and other people.
14:02This is
14:04the center of the Osegis
14:06at that time,
14:08Ohasuka.
14:10The city
14:12developed rapidly
14:14thanks to the oil money.
14:16However,
14:18the Osegis
14:20became the source
14:22of the trouble.
14:26According to the newspaper
14:28at that time,
14:30the women of the Osegis
14:32were
14:34targeted by the white people.
14:38All the Osegis
14:40with huge money
14:42and rights
14:44were targeted
14:46by the white people.
14:50The Osegis
14:52were attacked by
14:54all kinds of criminals
14:56such as robbers
14:58and swindlers.
15:04A series of murders
15:06happened in the Osegis.
15:10The white officials
15:12who had the power
15:14of the city
15:16pretended not to see this.
15:18What is this?
15:20I must stop
15:22such a cruel crime!
15:26The one who stood up
15:28was the king of the Osegis,
15:30the true friend
15:32of the Osegis,
15:34William Hale.
15:36Hale
15:38declared that
15:40he would give
15:421000 dollars
15:44as a reward
15:46and hired
15:48a private detective
15:50to find the criminal
15:52who killed the Osegis.
15:54Hale
15:56trusted the Osegis
15:58like his own son
16:00and reached out his hand.
16:04Why was he
16:06arrested as
16:08the mastermind
16:10four years later?
16:16The Osegis
16:18were rich in oil
16:20and became
16:22the richest people
16:24in the world.
16:26But the Osegis
16:28were ruled by
16:30white officials
16:32such as
16:34the mayor,
16:36the security officer
16:38and the judge.
16:40The Osegis were
16:42killed one after another
16:44in a mysterious
16:46and strange way.
16:48What happened
16:50to the Osegis?
16:52Let's ask an expert.
17:00This is the story of the Osegis.
17:02Mr. Noguchi,
17:04what was the situation
17:06of the Osegis in the 1920s
17:08when the American colonists
17:10were in power?
17:12In the 1920s,
17:14the American colonists
17:16were suppressing
17:18the colonists by force.
17:20However,
17:22in the 20th century,
17:24the colonists were
17:26assimilated
17:28into the American people.
17:30Specifically,
17:32the colonists were taught
17:34English,
17:36white lifestyle,
17:38and technology
17:40while the American colonists
17:42were taught
17:44their own culture.
17:46On the other hand,
17:48the American colonists
17:50were taught
17:52the culture of the colonists.
17:54It was a very
17:56discriminatory policy
17:58from the top.
18:00I had the image
18:02that the colonists
18:04were the only
18:06inhabitants of the Osegis.
18:08However,
18:10there were many white people
18:12in the Osegis.
18:14I think there are good
18:16and bad things
18:18when a lot of people
18:20come together
18:22and the population
18:24grows rapidly.
18:26In this case,
18:28oil money is involved.
18:30So,
18:32so-called bad guys
18:34such as Yamashita
18:36and bank robberies
18:38are also involved.
18:40This sudden oil money
18:42is the oil of the city.
18:44This amounted to
18:46$12,000 per person per year.
18:48At that time,
18:50it was enough
18:52to buy 40 cars.
18:54It was enough
18:56to buy
18:58only rich people.
19:00The amount of money
19:02was too large.
19:04Including people
19:06who had little social experience,
19:08a huge amount of money
19:10came every year
19:12every three months.
19:14When that happened,
19:16I think it was natural
19:18for people to aim for the money.
19:20That's right.
19:22In the Osegis,
19:24I was a little worried,
19:26but there were many cases
19:28such as the poisoning
19:30and homicide of the inhabitants.
19:32However,
19:34despite the Osegis' case,
19:36until then,
19:38in the United States,
19:40there were many cases
19:42where the inhabitants were not killed
19:44and such crimes were not investigated.
19:46The residence of the inhabitants
19:48is the jurisdiction of the federation,
19:50but the military and the police
19:52around it
19:54is the jurisdiction of the military
19:56and the police.
19:58Such a very complicated judicial system
20:00is very difficult
20:02to solve.
20:04And the man of the problem,
20:06Hale, will appear.
20:08What kind of person was
20:10this Hale, Mr. Usui?
20:12Before other white people
20:14came in, when the oil began to come out,
20:16he started living with the Osegis.
20:18Originally,
20:20he was a poor cowboy,
20:22but his business succeeded
20:24and he became the owner
20:26of a large ranch
20:28and he contributed
20:30a lot to the Osegis,
20:32such as building hospitals
20:34and schools.
20:36He was an active person
20:38and he was trusted
20:40by the people of the city.
20:42This frontier,
20:44from nothing,
20:46he made an effort
20:48and succeeded
20:50with the spirit of independence.
20:52The image of Hale
20:54is the image of a successful person
20:56and the people of the Osegis
20:58respect him.
21:00In this way,
21:02Hale gained popularity
21:04among the people.
21:22I must stop
21:24the Osegis!
21:26While the white people
21:28were not seriously trying
21:30to kill the Osegis,
21:32the king of the Osegis,
21:34William Hale,
21:36was active
21:38to save the Osegis.
21:42In particular,
21:44in the case of
21:46Anna Brown,
21:48a woman of the Osegis who was killed,
21:50she ordered her lawyers
21:52to investigate the case.
21:54She was enthusiastic about
21:56the investigation.
21:58Because
22:00Hale had a connection
22:02with Anna Brown
22:04as a relative.
22:06Anna Brown
22:08was the eldest daughter
22:10of four sisters.
22:12Her father was a hero of the Osegis,
22:14but he was already dead.
22:16According to his mother,
22:18all four sisters
22:20were married.
22:24Among them,
22:26the one who had a connection
22:28with Hale was
22:30Anna's sister,
22:32Mollie, 33 years old.
22:34Mollie married
22:36Hale's daughter,
22:38Ernest.
22:40Mollie was taught
22:42the culture of white people
22:44such as English
22:46by the American government
22:48and was a woman
22:50who cherished the tradition.
22:52Ernest and Mollie
22:54met in a village
22:56and fell in love and got married.
23:00It was a happy family
23:02with three children.
23:06In other words,
23:08Mollie and Hale
23:10were a match made in heaven.
23:12Although they were different races,
23:14they were related
23:16by marriage.
23:20However,
23:24Anna's murder
23:26was a tragedy
23:28for Mollie.
23:36Three years ago,
23:38her sister,
23:40Minnie,
23:42died suddenly.
23:44She was healthy
23:46but suddenly
23:48became weak
23:50and died.
23:52The doctor's diagnosis was
23:54a myocardial infarction
23:56with unknown cause.
24:00Three years later,
24:02in July 1921,
24:06her mother,
24:08Lizzie,
24:10became weak
24:12and died
24:14two months after Anna's death.
24:20The doctor's diagnosis was
24:22a myocardial infarction
24:24with unknown cause.
24:32Isn't this a suicide?
24:38Every time Mollie's family
24:40died,
24:42their will
24:44created a bond
24:46between the sisters.
24:50Now,
24:52Mollie and
24:54her sister,
24:56Rita,
24:58were focused on
25:00Mollie and Rita.
25:06On March 10,
25:081921,
25:10at 3 a.m.,
25:12a tragedy happened
25:14in Fairfax.
25:20A huge explosion
25:24hit Rita's house.
25:28Rita and
25:30her husband,
25:32Bill Smith,
25:34died four days later.
25:38The cause of the explosion
25:40was a large amount of
25:42nitroglycerin
25:44in the basement.
25:46Some white people,
25:48such as lawyers,
25:50raised their voices
25:52against the crime.
25:56It's beyond our understanding
25:58that humans can do
26:00such a despicable thing.
26:04Even if you turn over
26:06a new leaf,
26:08you have to find the culprit
26:10and have him punished.
26:12However,
26:16some people
26:18tried to save the truth,
26:20even if they were white people.
26:22Some were shot.
26:30Some were shot
26:32from the basement.
26:36Everyone
26:38spoke out
26:40against the huge impact.
26:44Meanwhile,
26:46Mollie,
26:48who was the only one
26:50left among the four sisters,
26:52died suddenly.
27:00Even if the doctor
27:02who brought her
27:04to the hospital
27:06didn't save her,
27:08she would die.
27:10Now,
27:12if Mollie dies,
27:14Ernest,
27:16her husband,
27:18will inherit
27:20the huge fortune
27:22of his family.
27:24Could it be that
27:26Ernest and
27:28his uncle,
27:30Hale,
27:32are the culprits?
27:38The focus of the story
27:40is the tragedy of Mollie's family
27:42who is a relative of Hale.
27:44Not only Anna,
27:46the eldest daughter,
27:48but also Minnie,
27:50the third daughter,
27:52and her mother
27:54died the same way.
27:56In May,
27:58her daughter was killed.
28:00Her mother
28:02died of malnutrition.
28:04Three years ago,
28:06Minnie,
28:08who was as healthy as her mother,
28:10died of malnutrition.
28:12The doctors
28:14could only give her
28:16a diagnosis
28:18as if she had been poisoned.
28:20When you think about it,
28:22it doesn't seem like a coincidence.
28:24It may be more natural
28:26to think that
28:28Mollie's family
28:30died of malnutrition.
28:32Every time they died,
28:34they inherited a huge fortune.
28:36As a rule,
28:38the Oseiji clan
28:40distributed oil money
28:42to members of the clan
28:44four times a year.
28:46It was called
28:48the Kinto Juekiken.
28:50The Juekiken
28:52could only be handed over
28:54by the Yuin clan.
28:56Even if you were a member of the Oseiji clan,
28:58you couldn't buy or sell it.
29:00The purpose of the Juekiken
29:02was to prevent people
29:04who were not members
29:06of the Oseiji clan
29:08from inheriting the right.
29:10However,
29:12there was a pitfall.
29:14Of course,
29:16the right could be given
29:18to a white man who married
29:20a member of the Oseiji clan.
29:22This was one of the major
29:24pitfalls of the Juekiken.
29:26A terrible incident happened.
29:28The husband of Rita
29:30and the white man
29:32was blown up in the house.
29:34It was a very flashy
29:36and violent way to kill.
29:38Bill Smith,
29:40Rita's husband,
29:42was suspicious
29:44that the whole thing
29:46was a crime.
29:48So he started to investigate
29:50by himself.
29:52He was very suspicious.
29:54He wanted to
29:56get rid of the trouble.
29:58Because of the explosion,
30:00the inheritance of the family
30:02was concentrated
30:04in Molly.
30:06As the family died one after another,
30:08the inheritance concentrated
30:10in her.
30:12She was very scared.
30:14Molly was worried,
30:16but she didn't know
30:18what to do.
30:20The priest was worried,
30:22too.
30:24He was warned not to
30:26eat or drink a lot.
30:28But Molly's condition
30:30was getting worse.
30:32There is a story
30:34that Hale
30:36hired a detective
30:38to investigate.
30:40Was it effective?
30:42Hale hired a detective
30:44or cut his own salary
30:46to help
30:48the investigation.
30:50But in the end,
30:52it didn't go well.
30:54Hale was prepared
30:56to support
30:58the investigation.
31:00On the other hand,
31:02Molly was
31:04afraid of death.
31:06She was afraid
31:08that death would
31:10come to her.
31:18The family was killed
31:20one after another.
31:22The local officials
31:24and the white people
31:26pretended not to see.
31:28At that time,
31:30there was a white man
31:32in Washington, D.C.,
31:34the capital of the United States.
31:38Edgar Hoover,
31:4029 years old.
31:42Later,
31:44he founded the FBI,
31:46and served as
31:48the director
31:50for over 40 years.
31:52At that time,
31:54he was still
31:56the director of the investigation agency
31:58before he became the FBI.
32:00To solve the case
32:02of the Osei family,
32:04he hired a detective.
32:06Well,
32:08he seems to be
32:10on the side of justice.
32:12But I don't think
32:14he's on the side
32:16of justice.
32:18I don't think so.
32:22The case of the Osei family
32:24that continues
32:26to Okurahoma.
32:32The FBI
32:34in Washington, D.C.,
32:362000 km away
32:38from Okurahoma
32:40was established
32:42by the Bureau of Investigation
32:44of the Japanese government,
32:46B.O.I.
32:48Later,
32:50the Bureau of Investigation
32:52of the FBI
32:54was much smaller.
32:58Now,
33:00there are 56 branches
33:02of the FBI.
33:04There are 38,000 investigators.
33:06However,
33:08the Bureau of Investigation
33:10of the FBI
33:12was only about 500 or 600 people.
33:14At that time,
33:16the director of the Bureau of Investigation
33:18was Edgar Hoover.
33:20I can use this.
33:24To save the Osei family,
33:26the media
33:28used the case
33:30of the rich tribe
33:32that the media paid attention to,
33:34and tried to make
33:36the Bureau of Investigation
33:38of the FBI
33:42Hoover sent
33:44investigators of the FBI
33:46to the Osei family.
33:52Tom White,
33:54a special investigator,
33:56was a calm
33:58and calm man
34:00who once
34:02borrowed a horse
34:04in the West
34:06and joined
34:08the Osei army.
34:10However,
34:12the investigation was difficult.
34:14I'm from the Bureau of Investigation.
34:16Bureau of Investigation?
34:18You don't tell
34:20anything to others, do you?
34:24As if
34:26being watched by someone,
34:28people speak firmly.
34:30They don't talk about
34:32the murder of the Osei family.
34:36So,
34:38White
34:40read the documents
34:42about the many
34:44deaths in Osei,
34:46and noticed
34:48a special case.
34:50It was
34:52Molly's family.
34:54In the past few years,
34:56four people have died.
35:00Moreover,
35:02if Molly died,
35:04Ernest, her husband,
35:06would have a huge fortune.
35:08If
35:10this black frame
35:12was Hale,
35:14all the wives
35:16would meet.
35:18These two
35:20are suspicious.
35:24But Hale
35:26was the king of Osei Hills.
35:30Hale, who was
35:32the king of Osei Hills,
35:34was not investigated
35:36by the Bureau of Investigation,
35:38including Ernest.
35:42Of course,
35:44no one could expect
35:46that he would commit the crime.
35:52So, White
35:54aimed at the surprising people.
35:56To save them,
36:02he went to the prison.
36:08He wanted to get
36:10the information
36:12about Hale and Ernest
36:14from the prisoners
36:16who were arrested.
36:18Many of the prisoners
36:20who seemed to know the situation
36:22had died for unknown reasons.
36:26He followed
36:28the thin thread
36:30that remained.
36:32Finally...
36:34Yeah.
36:36At first,
36:38Ernest asked me,
36:40but I refused.
36:42Then,
36:44Hale came to see me
36:46and said
36:48that he wanted me
36:50to kill Rita and
36:52to pay her
36:54a visit.
36:56Hale
36:58took the prison
37:00with his power
37:02and took the prisoner
37:04outside
37:06and set a bomb
37:08in Rita's house.
37:10Then,
37:12he returned to the prison
37:14to hide it from the public.
37:16Furthermore,
37:18Ernest and Hale
37:20asked the prisoners
37:22to kill the Osegi people.
37:24That's the testimony
37:26he got.
37:28Now,
37:30we know the truth.
37:32After all,
37:34Hale was the mastermind.
37:38Hale's
37:40crooked kindness
37:42as a true friend of the Osegi people
37:44is the same as
37:46the assimilation policy
37:48that the federal government
37:50introduced in the 1920s.
37:54In the 1920s,
37:56the white people's
37:58discrimination
38:00was very different
38:02from that of the black people.
38:04At that time,
38:06the white people
38:08did not recognize
38:10the black people as human beings.
38:12On the other hand,
38:14the black people
38:16thought that
38:18the Osegi people
38:20would be able to
38:22change the world.
38:24The assimilation policy
38:26tried to incorporate
38:28the white people's culture
38:30as a member
38:32of the American society
38:34by forcibly teaching
38:36the culture of the white people
38:38as if they were
38:40inferior to the Osegi people.
38:42In other words,
38:44Hale's kindness
38:46was the same as the Osegi people.
38:56The white investigators
38:58asked Ernest and Hale
39:00to arrest them
39:02on charges of
39:04retaliation and
39:06murder.
39:08Hale, on the other hand,
39:10said,
39:12I'm just a guest.
39:14So he went to the security office.
39:18Hale was convinced
39:20that he could not
39:22be guilty.
39:26January 1926
39:30Hale and
39:32Ernest arrested.
39:36At first,
39:38Ernest kept his mouth shut.
39:40However,
39:42when he was asked
39:44by Ernest
39:46to meet the prisoner,
39:48he opened his mouth
39:50as if he had given up.
39:54When my uncle
39:56asked me to blow up
39:58Rita and the others,
40:00I tried to stop him at first.
40:02But I had no choice
40:04but to obey my uncle.
40:06He admitted that
40:08he had asked
40:10Ernest to do so.
40:12Please,
40:14help me!
40:16If Ernest finds out what I said,
40:18my uncle will kill me!
40:20Hale, on the other hand,
40:22denied
40:24all charges
40:26without hesitation.
40:30Among the Osegi people,
40:32many judges,
40:34lawyers,
40:36and witnesses
40:38were convinced
40:40that Hale
40:42would not lose
40:44the trial.
40:50On the other hand,
40:52the Osegi people
40:54accepted the news
40:56of Hale's arrest
40:58with mixed feelings.
41:00Those who thought
41:02he was the culprit
41:04were relieved
41:06to hear the news.
41:08On the other hand,
41:10there were many people
41:12who thought
41:14he was being framed
41:16for a crime
41:18he did not commit.
41:20After a while,
41:22Hale and Ernest
41:24were arrested.
41:26Molly recovered.
41:30It is said that
41:32Hale's doctor
41:34took care of her.
41:42The Osegi people
41:44asked the Bureau of Investigation
41:46to investigate the case
41:48right after the murder of Anna.
41:50Why did the Bureau of Investigation
41:52take action?
41:54Actually,
41:56the Bureau of Investigation
41:58did not take action
42:00right away.
42:02There were many reasons
42:04why it was difficult
42:06to send investigators
42:08to the scene of the murder.
42:10However, the delay of the Bureau of Investigation
42:12clearly showed
42:14the prejudice
42:16against the Osegi people.
42:18I think the media
42:20started to pay attention
42:22to the case
42:24and decided to
42:26make the case public.
42:28Mr. Noguchi,
42:30there was a difference
42:32between the Osegi people
42:34and the black people.
42:36The black people
42:38were originally brought
42:40as slaves
42:42because they were not
42:44recognized as laborers.
42:46On the other hand,
42:48the Osegi people
42:50were labeled as
42:52barbarians and uneducated
42:54in white society.
42:56On the other hand,
42:58the Osegi people
43:00were seen as
43:02children who could grow up.
43:04The federal government
43:06gave the Osegi people
43:08a sponsor.
43:10The sponsor
43:12was a person
43:14who managed
43:16the money of the Osegi people.
43:18The Osegi people
43:20were chosen as
43:22the black people.
43:24The Osegi people
43:26were educated
43:28and helped.
43:30This kind of
43:32distorted goodwill
43:34is a kind of
43:36white superiority.
43:38On the other hand,
43:40it leads to a deep
43:42sense of discrimination.
43:44This sense of discrimination
43:46leads to the mindset
43:48that we can change
43:50the lives,
43:52culture,
43:54and society.
43:56In the field of psychology,
43:58there is a term
44:00called
44:02positive discrimination.
44:04Positive discrimination?
44:06Yes.
44:08Discrimination is
44:10to hate someone
44:12and make fun of them.
44:14But it's not like that.
44:16It's to have a goodwill.
44:18It's easy to see
44:20it in women.
44:22Women are weak.
44:24They can't carry heavy things.
44:26They can't bear heavy responsibilities.
44:28They are kind at first,
44:30but as a result,
44:32it leads to discrimination.
44:34Hale was finally arrested.
44:36How did Hale
44:38get involved
44:40in the murder case?
44:42First of all,
44:44Hale didn't do it himself.
44:46He didn't ask for it.
44:48He asked for it
44:50through his boss.
44:52When there was an incident,
44:54he would make
44:56a clear alibi.
44:58He also
45:00wanted to
45:02get rid of the perpetrator.
45:04He gave
45:06information about
45:08how a robbery would happen
45:10to a certain store.
45:12He told the perpetrator
45:14that the store was targeted.
45:16As a result,
45:18the store owner
45:20found the robber and killed him.
45:22He didn't get his hands dirty
45:24and killed the perpetrator.
45:26He was a very skilled
45:28and evil person.
45:30He was a very evil person.
45:32Hale himself
45:34may be a very cunning person,
45:36but of course,
45:38there are so many murder cases
45:40happening in the city,
45:42so he must have some information.
45:44There are people he knows.
45:46But the people in the city
45:48are afraid of Hale
45:50or his friends,
45:52so they keep their mouths shut.
45:54That's why the investigation
45:56was delayed so much.
45:58There are many things
46:00that we still don't know.
46:02This is a crime of Hale
46:04and his friends,
46:06but at the same time,
46:08they keep their mouths shut
46:10or pretend not to see it.
46:12It's a kind of atmosphere
46:14that made it difficult
46:16to solve the murder case.
46:18I think it's the background
46:20of many murder cases.
46:30March 1926
46:32Pohazuka Court of Justice
46:40Hale, Ernest,
46:42and Tom White
46:44were sentenced to death
46:46for murder.
46:50But at that time,
46:52Tom White,
46:54an investigator of the Federal Government,
46:56was forced to fight
46:58with no chance of winning.
47:02Because this court
47:04was not a court of the Federal Government,
47:06but a court of Oklahoma,
47:08and a court
47:10of the United States.
47:12At that time,
47:14these words were whispered.
47:18In the political army,
47:20no matter who commits a crime,
47:22the innocent judgment
47:24is paid with money.
47:28In the United States,
47:30it is not a court
47:32that judges crimes committed
47:34by the state or military,
47:36but a court that judges
47:38crimes committed
47:40by the people of Oklahoma.
47:46The crimes committed
47:48by the people of Oklahoma
47:50can be judged by the Federal Court of Justice,
47:52but the murder of Anna and Rita
47:54was not committed
47:56by the people of Oklahoma,
47:58so it was decided
48:00that it would be judged
48:02by the court of the political army.
48:05On March 12, 1926,
48:10the trial of Hale and Ernest
48:12began.
48:16Among them,
48:18Ernest said,
48:20Have you ever talked
48:22to Hale about
48:24the murder of the political family?
48:26No, I haven't.
48:31The local political army
48:33was terrified of the trial
48:35of Hale and Ernest.
48:38Furthermore,
48:41Tom White, the investigator,
48:43pointed a gun at me
48:45and sometimes gave me
48:47an electric shock
48:49and forced me to confess.
48:51I had no choice
48:53but to lie.
48:56Furthermore,
48:59Hale said,
49:01I was killed by Tom White.
49:04The defendant,
49:06the federal investigator,
49:08said that he used an electric shock.
49:11The investigation bureau
49:13should fire the illegal investigators.
49:16Such a voice
49:18began to rise from the influential people
49:20of the political army.
49:23Is it impossible to reverse the situation?
49:26Tom White fell into a trance.
49:28However,
49:32three months after the trial began,
49:35on June 9,
49:37an incredible reversal happened.
49:42I admit my sin.
49:46I committed a crime
49:48by order of my uncle.
49:51I want to admit the truth
49:53and quit the trial as soon as possible.
49:56I don't want to do it anymore.
50:00Ernest admitted
50:02that Hale ordered him
50:04to commit a murder.
50:09In fact,
50:11Ernest and Molly's 4-year-old daughter,
50:13Anna, were hospitalized
50:15a few days ago.
50:18Ernest, who had been imprisoned
50:20for half a year,
50:22could not participate
50:24in the trial.
50:29He was loyal to his uncle,
50:31who was a powerful man.
50:34He thought that the sadness
50:36of losing his beloved daughter
50:38was greater than his loyalty
50:40to his uncle.
50:43Ernest Burkhardt was sentenced
50:45to life imprisonment
50:47and severe labor.
50:50What?
50:52Is it true?
50:55Furthermore,
50:57there was a white-out.
51:01It was a murder case
51:03that Hale was suspicious of.
51:07It was recognized
51:09that it was judged
51:11by the federal government
51:13and not by the political party.
51:16Two years ago,
51:18Hale bought
51:20a huge amount of insurance money.
51:24A man of the Osei clan
51:26was killed by someone.
51:30As a result,
51:32the insurance money
51:34was rolling into Hale.
51:38The scene was
51:40a refugee camp
51:42where the white people
51:44lived.
51:46In other words,
51:48it was not Oklahoma
51:50but the territory
51:52of the federal government.
51:54With this,
51:56the trial of Hale,
51:58the king of the Osei clan,
52:00was abolished.
52:02The trial of Hale
52:04for the murder of the insurance money
52:06began
52:08at the federal local court
52:10in Gasly City,
52:12Japan.
52:16Ernest, who stood in the witness stand,
52:18did not try to cover up
52:20Hale anymore.
52:24I heard the uncles
52:26talking about the murder
52:28of the insurance money.
52:31At first,
52:33they tried to kill him
52:35with poisoned alcohol,
52:37but they switched to a gunshot
52:39that looked like a suicide.
52:42On the other hand,
52:44Hale denied
52:46that he had planned
52:48to kill anyone.
52:52Moreover,
52:54the opinion of the white people
52:56in the trial
52:58did not match
53:00the opinion
53:02of the white people
53:04in the last trial.
53:06How did the white people
53:08decide
53:10to kill Hale?
53:12The trial was repeated
53:14over and over again.
53:18And on October 28th,
53:22the judgment of the white people
53:24against Hale was...
53:36The white people
53:38sentenced Hale
53:40to death by first-degree murder.
53:44Hale was
53:46sentenced to death
53:48by first-degree murder.
53:54After that,
53:56Hale and his family
53:58were sentenced to death
54:00in the trial
54:02of the Anabran murderers.
54:04Hale and his family
54:06were sentenced to death
54:08in the trial
54:10of the Anabran murderers.
54:18However,
54:20the trial of the Anabran murderers
54:22was far from being
54:24completely solved.
54:28In fact,
54:30the victim
54:32was said to be
54:34Hale.
54:36This means that
54:38not only Hale,
54:40but also other influential people
54:42and doctors,
54:44a large number of white people
54:46committed the murder
54:48and sealed their mouths
54:50for the sake
54:52of their political wealth.
54:54This is the so-called
54:56Anabran murder.
54:58The truth
55:00is still shrouded in darkness.
55:04The trial of Hale and Ernest
55:06has begun.
55:08As a white man,
55:10he wanted to do
55:12the trial
55:14in a federal court
55:16instead of a local one.
55:18His strategy was
55:20to bring the case
55:22of the Anabran murderers
55:24to the federal court
55:26in a place
55:28where the case
55:30of the Anabran murderers
55:32could be solved.
55:34Although Hale was tried,
55:36about 60 people
55:38were killed
55:40in the Anabran murderers.
55:42This seems to be
55:44a big crime
55:46of the Anabran murderers
55:48including other influential people.
55:50The Bureau of Investigation
55:52thought that
55:54once Hale was caught,
55:56it would be clear.
55:58However,
56:00only the case of the Anabran murderers
56:02was made clear.
56:04In other words,
56:06the second and the third Hale
56:08were in this town.
56:10Some people
56:12want to commit a crime.
56:14Some people become
56:16the target of the crime.
56:18It is said that
56:20it happens in an environment
56:22where it is okay to commit a crime.
56:24An environment where it is okay
56:26to commit a crime
56:28In that sense,
56:30the whole area
56:32may be the accomplice.
56:34This case
56:36is about 100 years old.
56:38However, the problem of discrimination
56:40exists in modern society.
56:42We talked about
56:44ethical discrimination.
56:46In modern Japan,
56:48when we look at the culture
56:50of African and South American
56:52indigenous people,
56:54even if we use the words
56:56discrimination,
56:58I think we need to look at
57:00whether the heart of discrimination
57:02is hidden there.
57:04I think that
57:06this is a big foundation
57:08for various problems
57:10in the world.
57:12How to break
57:14this huge foundation
57:16is our challenge
57:18from now on.
57:20This case is
57:22about compassion and goodwill.
57:24I think that
57:26it was also a case
57:28of white superiority
57:30that was hidden
57:32behind such feelings.
57:34This is not limited
57:36only to the politics of this era.
57:38In modern society,
57:40I think that the majority
57:42is largely attracted
57:44to the perspective
57:46of minorities.
57:48The perspective of men
57:50looking at women,
57:52the perspective of women
57:54looking at minorities.
57:56In this perspective,
57:58advanced countries
58:00and advanced people
58:02are superior and know everything.
58:04On the other hand,
58:06immigrants and disabled people
58:08are targets to be protected.
58:10That's why we have to
58:12educate and protect them.
58:14I think that
58:16this mindset is working
58:18somewhere.
58:20I think this is a problem
58:22not only for politics
58:24and America,
58:26but also for us
58:28living in Japan.
59:20The Top Interview
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