Tetsuya Yamagami, the suspect assassinated former Japanese Prime Minister Abe, will be psychotic assessment by the end of this year to determine whether Yamagami will be prosecuted.
The court in Nara province, western Japan, where the suspect lives and assassins former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, accepted the prosecutor's request that Yamagami should be psychotic and Japanese media today.
Yamagami will be transferred to the hospital for evaluation.
Nara Prosecutor Nara has not yet commented on this information.
The suspect Tetsuya Yamagami was escorted to the Nara District Prosecutor Office, July 10.
Yamagami, 41, opened fire to assassinate Mr. Abe on July 8 when he was speaking in Nara before the Senate election.
Yamagami claimed to target the former Prime Minister because he thought that he was related to the religious organization that his mother participated in and was made for them.
Police believed that Yamagami had planned to assassinate Mr. Abe for at least a year because he started making guns in the spring of 2021. A neighbor near the suspect's house said that he had heard the sound.
Police determined that Yamagami had no stable job and was indebted to guns.
Yamagami joined the Japanese Sea Defense Force (JMSDF) in 2002, the time when her mother went bankrupt, and once tried to commit suicide in 2005 because she wanted her brother and sister to enjoy life insurance.
The Church agreed to confirm that Yamagami's mother was a long -time member.
The Japanese police deployed an elite officer to protect the former Prime Minister Abe, but a series of mistakes made them unable to stop the assassin.
The assassination of Shinzo Abe, who has a great influence in Japan, leaves a large gap that is hard to compensate for politics and democracy.