By the time you hit Chapter 27 (part of the "Nursing Home Fraud" or early "Kyogoku Gang" arcs), the manga moves past being a simple "case of the week" and begins a deep dive into:

The story uses the underworld to expose real issues, like the exploitation of the elderly and at-risk youth. The Verdict: Is It Worth Reading? Sins of Kujo (TV Series 2026– )

Kujo’s philosophy is simple: everyone deserves a defense, even "the devil". Chapter 27 forces the reader to confront whether Kujo is a protector of rights or an enabler of evil.

If you enjoyed Shohei Manabe’s previous work, Ushijima the Loan Shark , you’ll recognize the same gritty, uncompromising lens applied here to the Japanese legal system. The series follows Taiza Kujo, a defense attorney who lives in a blue tent on a rooftop and takes cases no one else will—defending Yakuza members, child abusers, and the seemingly irredeemable.

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