Makoto Oya was a 52-year-old tax counselor from Saitama, Japan, who was arrested and convicted for the horrific torture and killing of at least 13 cats between 2016 and 2017. He filmed these acts—which involved using steel traps, boiling water, and a gas torch—and posted them online, claiming his actions were a form of "pest control".
In 2017, the Tokyo District Court sentenced Oya to one year and 10 months in prison, which was suspended for four years. While his case sparked significant public outrage and calls for stricter animal protection laws in Japan, there are no legitimate "cat videos" associated with his name from 2021.
Given the extremely violent and illegal nature of the content he produced, any "posts" or "videos" under this name typically refer to: Makoto Oya Cat Videos 2021
Legal Updates: News regarding the conclusion of his suspended sentence or subsequent animal welfare legislation in Japan.
Advocacy: Social media posts by animal rights activists using his case to campaign for harsher penalties for animal abuse. Makoto Oya was a 52-year-old tax counselor from
Misinformation: Graphic content or malicious links that often circulate under his name on forums.
Makoto Oya was convicted in 2017 for torturing and killing at least 13 cats, sparking international outrage and leading to significant legal reforms in Japan. Although the acts occurred earlier, the case resurfaced in 2021 as the four-year suspended sentence neared completion and following the enactment of stricter animal welfare laws. Read a summary of the court details at Facebook. Authentic charm: Casual, unstaged moments that felt real
Makoto Oya, a former Japanese tax accountant, received a suspended prison sentence in 2017 for brutally killing and torturing at least 13 stray cats, acts he filmed and uploaded online. The case sparked significant public outrage and prompted calls for stronger animal protection laws in Japan. Read more about the case on The Straits Times.
Why does this matter? In a year dominated by doom-scrolling, Makoto Oya offered "slow content." He proved the internet still has a place for quiet beauty. The 2021 videos inspired a wave of copycats (pun intended), but none captured the mono no aware (the bittersweetness of life) that Oya does.
Today, his 2021 catalog serves as a time capsule. It reminds us that even when we couldn't travel to Japan, we could sit on a digital dock next to a purring cat and watch the sunset.