TOKYO — The brazen assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe with a handmade gun shocked a nation unused to high-profile political violence. But there has been another surprise in the weeks since the murder as details have emerged about an alleged assassin who was well-off until his mother’s
"Though I feel bitter, Abe is not my true enemy. He is only one of the Unification Church’s most influential sympathizers,” murder suspect Yamagami wrote in his letter.