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February 05,
1999
New Evidence Presented
in Seattle Incident Trial
By Jeff Farr
Associate Editor
Scientific tests on Nikken?s diary, which was submitted
as evidence by his lawyers in the Seattle Incident trial,
suggest that Nikken did not tell the truth about his
diary during his previous testimony. The test results
indicate that a crucial part of the diary entry Nikken
testified that he made on March 20, 1963, was actually
added at a later date.
Two U.S. forensic experts, David S. Moore and Erich
J. Speckin, examined Nikken?s diary for the defense
and made the finding; the defense team has since submitted
their results to the Tokyo District Court (in Nichiren
Shoshu?s libel suit against the Soka Gakkai over its
press coverage of the so-called Seattle Incident).
Under direct examination on Dec. 22, 1997, Nikken claimed
that he was in bed by 1:00 a.m. on March 20, 1963, about
an hour before the incident — his dispute with
prostitutes and subsequent run-in with police —
occurred. His cited proof was his diary entry, which
ended “Now I am going to sleep. It?s 1:00 p.m.
now.” (Nikken explained that he sometimes confuses
p.m. and a.m.).
The test results indicate that “It?s 1:00 p.m.
now” was added some time after the next day?s
entry was recorded. Mr. Speckin, a forensic document
analyst and ink-dating specialist, used a high-powered
microscope to show that impressions made by the next
day?s entry, which appears on the reverse side of the
page, affected the ink flow in “It?s 1:00 p.m.
now.” This would not have been possible if Nikken
had written it when he said that he did.
Another test, conducted by Mr. Moore, a forensic document
examiner, employed specially filtered light shone on
the page to reveal that the ink used for “It?s
1:00 p.m. now” is most likely different from the
ink used in the following paragraph, which Nikken testified
he wrote at the same time with the same fountain pen.
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