
Tokyo cops: Second woman was in hotel room with Raysum founder when drugs found
TOKYO (TR) – Tokyo Metropolitan Police have revealed that a second woman was in the hotel room with the founder of real estate investment company Raysum Co., Ltd. last year when officers entered and discovered illegal drugs, reports Nippon News Network (May 16).
As previously reported, police found Tsuyoshi Tanaka, 60, to allegedly be in possession of approximately 0.859 grams of cocaine and approximately 0.208 grams of kakuseizai (methamphetamine) together with 32-year-old Miho Okumoto in a room of the hotel in Chiyoda Ward on June 24.
In the latest development, police said on Friday that Mona Konishi, a 21-year-old student at the Institute of Science Tokyo, was also present in the room. Tsuyoshi Tanaka, left, Mona Konishi, center, and Miho Okumoto (X)
Like Tanaka and Okukmoto, Konishi has been accused of violating the Narcotics Control Act and the Stimulants Control Act. Police did not reveal whether any of the suspects admit to the allegations.
Prior to the discovery, the three suspects were in the room when a male acquaintance of Konishi broke into their room. When police rushed to the scene, they searched the room and found three bags of cocaine and methamphetamine near the bed.
Police are now investigating how the suspects obtained the illegal drugs.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Tokyo Reported
15 hours ago
- Tokyo Reported
British man, 76, suspected of smuggling 1 kg of meth into Fukuoka
FUKUOKA (TR) – Law enforcement here has announced the arrest of a 76-year-old British man over the alleged smuggling of over 1 kilogram of methamphetamine from inside a travel bag, reports Nippon News Network (June 3). ON May 14, William John Brian Barnes allegedly concealed 1.2 kilograms of kakuseizai inside a travel bag for the purpose of sale upon arrival at Fukoka Airport on a flight from South Korea. The contraband has a street value of 73.5 million yen, according to customs officials. Upon his arrest on suspicion of violating the Stimulants Control Act, Barnes denied the allegations, saying he received the bag from a man he knows in South Africa. 'I bought this bag and brought it in, but I didn't know that there were stimulant drugs in it,' he said. According to sources, the large amount of methamphetamine was hidden on both sides of the leather bag. Police are investigating an organized crime ring is connected to the incident.

2 days ago
2 Japanese Killed in China's Dalian
News from Japan Jun 3, 2025 13:05 (JST) Beijing, June 3 (Jiji Press)--Two Japanese nationals have been killed in the northern Chinese city of Dalian, sources familiar with Japan-China relations said Tuesday. On May 25, local public security authorities informed the Japanese Consulate-General in Shenyang of their deaths. A suspect who appears to be a Chinese national has been detained. The authorities said that the killings were due to a business dispute between acquaintances. Details such as the ages of the victims are not known. No ideological background is believed to have motivated the incident, according to the sources. The consulate-general and others are collecting information while contacting their bereaved families. Many Japanese companies operate in Dalian. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press

2 days ago
Japan Introduces Single Type of Imprisonment
News from Japan Politics Jun 2, 2025 20:42 (JST) Tokyo, June 2 (Jiji Press)--Japan has unified the criminal punishments of imprisonment with labor and imprisonment without labor, creating the first new type of punishment since the establishment of the Penal Code in 1907. The change came as the revised Penal Code took effect on Sunday, with the aim of lowering the recidivism rate by shifting weight from punishment to rehabilitation and treating prisoners more flexibly with a combination of prison work and education. The revised Penal Code, enacted in June 2022, stipulates that necessary work and education can be imposed to improve and rehabilitate prisoners. Labor is no longer mandatory for all prisoners. According to the government's white paper on crime, the recidivism rate was 47 pct in 2023. Reoffenders accounted for about half of those who were subject to police action in recent years. The penalty of imprisonment with labor was problematic in that prisoners sometimes had difficulty finding enough time to receive education for rehabilitation and prevention of reoffending because they were busy doing prison work. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press