U.S. Sailor Arrested in Japan Slaying 

Saturday January 7, 2006 9:32 PM


AP Photo KSX101 

By CHISAKI WATANABE 

Associated Press Writer 

TOKYO (AP) - Japanese police arrested an American sailor Saturday on charges of 
robbing and beating a Japanese woman to death - a case likely to further stoke 
opposition to U.S. military presence in Japan. 

William Oliver Reese, 21, was arrested after being transferred to police from 
the U.S. Navy base in Yokosuka, about 30 miles southwest of Tokyo, said police 
officials in Yokosuka and Kanagawa prefecture, both speaking on condition of 
anonymity citing police protocol. 

The U.S. military previously agreed to hand over Reese, who police said 
admitted during questioning that he killed Yoshie Sato, 56, in Yokosuka on 
Tuesday. She was found beaten and unconscious that day and later died of 
internal bleeding. 

Reese, who also has been identified in Japanese media, is accused of robbing 
Sato of $129. 

The U.S. Navy in Japan said it would continue cooperating with Japanese 
authorities in the case. 

``The U.S. Navy's responsibility to see this matter through to its rightful 
conclusion does not end here, and we will continue to provide our complete 
support and cooperation with Japanese authorities,'' said Rear Adm. James 
Kelly, the commander of U.S. naval forces in Japan. 

Reese was based on the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk and has been in Japan 
since May 2004. He has been in the Navy for about two years and Japan was his 
first assignment, according to the Navy. 

The case risks further inflaming local opposition to plans to build an American 
military airstrip in the southern island of Okinawa and base a U.S. 
nuclear-powered warship at Yokosuka for the first time. 

Reflecting the sensitivity of the case, the U.S. Embassy issued a statement 
Friday expressing regret for the crime. 

``The U.S. military and the American people are deeply shocked and saddened by 
this event,'' U.S. Ambassador Thomas Schieffer said. 

In 1995, an uproar over the rape of a 12-year-old girl by three U.S. servicemen 
on Okinawa triggered massive protests and led to the relocation of an air base 
to a less densely populated part of the island. 

The rape case also resulted in an agreement with the U.S. military that it 
would hand over American suspects in serious crimes to Japanese authorities for 
pre-indictment investigation. 

About 50,000 U.S. troops are stationed in Japan under a joint security pact, 
but Tokyo and Washington agreed in October to move 7,000 Marines from Okinawa 
to the U.S. territory of Guam and shift some of the remaining troops within 
Japan.

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