logo
Breaking good: the yakuza gangster who became a lawyer

Breaking good: the yakuza gangster who became a lawyer

The Guardian10 hours ago

Yoshitomo Morohashi is every inch the lawyer, from his three-piece suit and designer glasses to the sunflower lapel badge identifying him as a member of the Japan Federation of Bar Associations.
Then, with little encouragement, he removes his shirt and turns away to reveal a tattoo of an ancient warrior, a samurai sword clenched between his teeth, covering his entire back.
Morohashi's readiness to expose his body art is relatively recent: there was a time when he did everything possible to conceal it and the dark past it represented.
His life story is an extreme example of poacher-turned-gamekeeper. For more than two decades, Morohashi lived a life of crime as a member of a yakuza organisation before he addressed his drug addiction, with a mental health crisis on a busy Tokyo street setting him on a path of professional and personal redemption.
'The thing is, I had a very happy, normal childhood,' Morohashi says in an interview at his office in Tokyo. 'I was a very good student and always came top of my class, but I found it hard to settle … I was disruptive and drove my teachers crazy.'
Morohashi was just 14 when his father, a noodle maker, died, leaving his mother to raise their only child in Iwaki, a large town in Fukushima prefecture.
'I really struggled after my father's death, and I had no brothers or sisters to turn to,' he says. Morohashi's descent into delinquency drowned out his clear academic talent. After failing his university entrance exams, he was sent to Tokyo to attend a cram school and, his mother hoped, gain a degree and start a career.
Two years later, he was accepted by Seikei University, but by then he had also found drugs, along with a circle of friends who shared his fondness for aburi – inhaling the smoke from heated methamphetamine.
Time that should have been devoted to his studies was spent playing mahjong and hanging out with young men with links to Japan's network of organised crime syndicates.
'I had been swept up in that kind of lifestyle … basically drugs and antisocial behaviour,' he says. His knowledge of narcotics – and his imposing physique – made Morohashi, now a university dropout, a natural recruit for the Inagawa-kai, Japan's third-biggest yakuza group, which employed him as a dealer and debt collector.
'I never shot or stabbed anyone, but I did rough people up with a baseball bat if they didn't repay their loans … but I never targeted the head,' he says. 'The yakuza became my family. I had lost my father, and I finally felt like I belonged. They accepted me. I knew they did awful things to people, but I pretended that it had nothing to do with me.'
However, his drug addiction worsened, culminating in 2005 in a public meltdown, stripped to the waist, on the famous 'scramble' crossing in Shibuya – a humiliation that would change the course of his life.
He was committed to a psychiatric hospital for six months and expelled from his gang. 'I had embarrassed them,' he explains. His mother, with whom he had not spoken for seven years, rushed to his side, 'even though I knew she was in pain over my drug addiction and yakuza membership'. After being discharged, Morohashi was arrested on drug charges and sentenced to 18 months in prison, suspended for three years.
His mother aside, two other people would have a profound effect on Morohashi: the judge at his trial who said he believed in him when he said he wanted to become a lawyer, and Mitsuyo Ōhira, a woman with a similarly chaotic past who wrote about her transformation from yakuza wife to respected lawyer in her 2000 autobiography Dakara, anata mo ikinuite (That's why you too can survive).
'My mother gave me a copy of the book, and I immediately understood how [Ōhira] felt,' says Morohashi, the book now taking pride of place in his office. 'I knew I had made a mess of my life and wanted to be like her.'
Over the next seven years, Morohashi rediscovered his scholastic instincts, becoming a qualified estate agent before passing exams to become a judicial scrivener. He then enrolled at law school in Osaka and passed the bar exam – which has a pass rate of 45% – in 2013.
'My identity as a former yakuza weakened,' the 48-year-old says. 'Sometimes I would catch sight of my tattoo in the shower and could barely believe what I had been.'
On Ōhira's advice, he did not talk about his old life to his contemporaries at law school or to colleagues at the offices in Osaka and Tokyo where he cut his legal teeth working mainly on criminal cases.
Morohashi finally revealed his past in a 2022 YouTube interview, convinced it would make it easier for him to help other men and women whose lives had been turned upside down by their yakuza membership.
Today, two years after he opened his own office and released an autobiography – Motoyakuza bengōshi (The Ex-Yakuza Lawyer) – the defence attorney counts gang members among his clients, all united by a desire to escape the yakuza's clutches and rejoin mainstream Japanese society.
'They realise that it's important to take responsibility by serving their time, apologise, and then rebuild their lives. I know that too because of my time in the yakuza.'
Demand for Morohashi's services is likely to grow. Japan's fast-ageing society, coupled with the introduction of stricter anti-yakuza laws mean membership is at an all-time low. Even those who leave are forbidden from opening a bank account for five years, making it almost impossible to rent a flat or find a job.
A depleted yakuza is now ceding ground to tokuryū – ad hoc groups whose members often don't know each other and which have been accused of crimes ranging from robberies and frauds to assaults and murders.
'I tell the men I represent that they are not leaving the yakuza for the good of society – they are doing it for themselves and their families. When they think of it that way it can work out for them,' he says.
'That's the most important part of what I do as a lawyer, convincing people that they can make things right, no matter what they have done. Giving people hope is what keeps me going.'
Now married with a young daughter, Morohashi has reconciled with his mother. 'That's the thing I'm most proud of … I finally made my mum happy.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Drugs kingpins James Harding and Jayes Kharouti jailed
Drugs kingpins James Harding and Jayes Kharouti jailed

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Drugs kingpins James Harding and Jayes Kharouti jailed

Two men who ran a multi-million pound drugs-smuggling operation have been jailed for life for plotting to murder a Harding, 34, from Alton in Hampshire, and his "loyal right-hand man" Jayes Kharouti, 39, from Epsom in Surrey, ran a vast criminal empire and imported £30m worth of cocaine into the were sentenced after being found guilty of conspiracy to murder following a trial at the Old Bailey. Harding had also been convicted of conspiring to import cocaine, which Kharouti, had messages showed them discussing recruiting a hitman to put an unnamed rival courier "permanently out of business". The pair's operation made £5 million in profit from importing drugs over 10 weeks in 2020 Police officers trawled through thousands of messages on encrypted communication service showed Harding and Kharouti planning to arm the hitman with a gun and ammunition for the "full M" - a data came from French police who broke the encryption code to the service favoured by the criminal messages showed the defendants discussing violence against anyone tempted to speak to the police about their drug one message, Harding said: "Bro u just have to know where their nan lives. They all love their nans. Then when they act up they know granny gonna get one in the head lol. Keeps them in check."In turn, Kharouti had threatened to arrange to "get a prisoner's head bust open" if he talked to the the time, Harding, who claimed to be a high-end watch sales executive, was living in luxury in Dubai, staying in five-star hotels and driving Bugatti and Lamborghini sports footage released by the police showed the moment he was arrested at Geneva airport in Switzerland on December 27 2021 and extradited to the was extradited from Turkey on 25 June 2024. Judge Anthony Leonard KC ordered Harding should serve a minimum term of 32 years and Kharouti at least 26 sentence, he said it was "hard to comprehend" the amount of cocaine imported and the profits would have been "very substantial"."Without the benefit of EncroChat your scale of offending would never have been apparent."The case formed part of a wider operation targeting criminals who used Ch Insp Jim Casey, from Scotland Yard, said the sentences reflected "the severity of the crimes the duo committed"."Following one of the largest EncroChat investigations in the Met's history, I am pleased that both criminals are serving the time they deserve." You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Serial murderer ‘The Twitter Killer' who dismembered 9 victims he snared on social media is executed by hanging in Japan
Serial murderer ‘The Twitter Killer' who dismembered 9 victims he snared on social media is executed by hanging in Japan

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Serial murderer ‘The Twitter Killer' who dismembered 9 victims he snared on social media is executed by hanging in Japan

JAPAN has executed the man who brutally murdered eight women and one man - aged between 15 and 26 - after luring them to his flat. Takahiro Shiraishi, dubbed the "Twitter killer", raped, strangled and dismembered his victims - in a chilling case that shook one of the world's safest countries. 5 5 Shiraishi, who committed the crimes in 2017, was executed by hanging - marking Japan's first execution since 2022. Then 27, the serial killer lured young women to his home, where he raped them before murdering them. Three of the eight women were schoolgirls. He also killed the boyfriend of one of the women to silence him. Authorities made the disturbing discovery in October 2017 while investigating the disappearance of a 23-year-old woman last seen walking with Shiraishi. Cops found the victims' body parts in Shiraishi's flat in the Japanese city of Zama, near Tokyo. One resident told The Japan Times in 2017: 'I thought it smelled like sewage. It was something I never smelled before.' Another neighbour said they noticed a 'nasty smell' coming from the flat. Nine dismembered bodies were found in three coolers and five large storage boxes when cops visited his flat - dubbed the "house of horrors" by the media. The serial killer had discarded parts of his victims in the bin, which was collected with the recycled garbage. Inside the hellish prison dubbed 'Indonesia's Alcatraz' which executes death row inmates with a firing squad It later emerged that he had searched online for how to mutilate bodies before buying a saw and a meat cleaver. Shiraishi pleaded guilty to murdering nine victims in October 2020. He revealed that he met them on the social media platform Twitter, now known as X. He told them he could help them die, even claiming in some cases he would kill himself alongside them. His Twitter profile wrote: "I want to help people who are really in pain. Please DM [direct message] me anytime." Prosecutors demanded the death penalty for Shiraishi, while his lawyers argued for a prison sentence, claiming his suicidal victims had consented to their deaths and that he should be charged with "murder with consent". They also called for his mental state to be assessed. But Shiraishi later disputed his own defence team's version of events, revealing he killed without the victims' consent. 435 people showed up to watch the 2020 verdict sentencing him to death - despite the court having only 16 public seats - Japan's public broadcaster NHK reported. The murders also prompted Twitter to change its rules to state users should not "promote or encourage suicide or self-harm". Shiraishi was hanged at the Tokyo Detention House in secrecy, with nothing revealed until the execution was done. Japan's Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki, who ordered Shiraishi's execution, said on Friday that Shiraishi acted "for the genuinely selfish reason of satisfying his own sexual and financial desires", according to AFP. The case "caused great shock and anxiety to society", he said. Japan currently has 105 people on death row, Suzuki added. The country has one of the lowest crime rates in the world. What is Japan's death penalty? JAPAN'S justice system allows the death penalty for serious crimes like murder, typically carried out by hanging. The nation's death penalty dates back to the Meiji era - with the current legal framework established under the Penal Code of 1907. Executions are rare and usually follow a lengthy appeals process. The justice minister must sign the execution order. Inmates are often told just hours before, and the executions are carried out in total secrecy. Between January 2000 and June 2025, 99 inmates have been executed in Japan. Who has recently been executed? July 2022: Tomohiro Kato, 39, was executed for a rampage in a Tokyo shopping district in 2018, where he killed seven people in a car crash and stabbing spree. December 2021: Yasutaka Fujishiro, 65, was executed for killing seven relatives in 2004. December 2021: Tomoaki Takanezawa, 54, and Mitsunori Onogawa, 44, were executed for the 2003 murders of two employees at separate pachinko parlours. August 2019: Koichi Shoji, 64, was executed for multiple rape-murders in Kanagawa Prefecture in 2001. August 2019: Yasunori Suzuki, 50, was executed for murdering three women - and raping one of them - in Fukuoka Prefecture between 2004 and 2005. 5 5

Woman, 21, becomes sixth person charged with murder of mother-of-four, 40, who was gunned down on her doorstep in 'case of mistaken identity'
Woman, 21, becomes sixth person charged with murder of mother-of-four, 40, who was gunned down on her doorstep in 'case of mistaken identity'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Woman, 21, becomes sixth person charged with murder of mother-of-four, 40, who was gunned down on her doorstep in 'case of mistaken identity'

A 21-year-old woman has been charged with the murder of a mother-of-four killed in a suspected mistaken identity murder as she answered the door. Former shop worker Joanne Penney, 40, was killed on a doorstep when she was shot in the chest by an alleged crime gang in Talbot Green, south Wales. Kristina Ginova, 21, has now been charged with murder after being arrested for allegedly assisting an offender. Four men and one woman have previously been accused of Ms Penney's murder after the doorstep killing in a quiet village. Ginova was due to appear at Cardiff Crown Court but refused to attend the hearing. An inquest was told Ms Penney was shot in the left side of her chest and suffered wounds to her heart and lung as she opened the door to a friend's flat. Coroner's officer Beverly Morgan said police were called to 'a reported shooting' where the victim was staying on March 9 at about 6.10pm this year. She said: 'On arrival of emergency services they found Joanne Penney lying on her back unresponsive in the living room area - she had sustained a gunshot wound to the chest. 'Despite efforts of emergency services in attendance she was later pronounced deceased.' Ms Morgan said Ms Penney, of no fixed abode, was identified by her family and a post mortem examination was carried out by Dr Richard Jones at the Princess of Wales Hospital in Bridgend. She said the pathologist gave a provisional cause of death as a 'gunshot wound to the left chest involving the heart and left lung'. South Wales central coroner Graeme Hughes said: 'I have sufficient reason to suspect Miss Penney's death was due to violence - those circumstances clearly satisfy me so.' He said he was 'cognisant individuals have been arrested and charged' and an inquest would continue after police investigations had been completed. Mr Hughes added: 'While those investigations are ongoing by South Wales Police and the Crown Prosecution Service, I want to pass on my own condolences to Miss Penney's family and friends.' The hearing at Pontypridd Coroner's Court was adjourned to a date to be fixed. Detectives have said they are investigating the 'possibility' that Ms Penney was 'the victim of mistaken identity.' Those accused of Ms Penney's murder are Tony Porter, 68, 27-year-old Joshua Gordon, Marcus Huntley, 20, Melissa Quailey-Dashper and Jordan Mills-Smith. Porter is also accused of participating in the criminal activities of an organised crime group. Porter, Gordon, Quailey-Dashper and Ginover are all from the Leicestershire area while Mills-Smith and Huntley are from Cardiff. Sai Raj Manne, 25, of no fixed abode, is charged with participating in the activities of an organised crime group. Molly Cooper, 33, from Leicester, has been charged with participating in the activities of an organised crime group and acquiring ammunition for a firearm without a certificate. Police previously asked for witnesses to come forward to help with what they described as a 'complex' investigation into Ms Penney's death. A provisional trial date for all eight defendants has been set for October 20 and is expected to last between six and eight weeks.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store