Latest news with #NagasakiPrefecturalPolice


SoraNews24
23-05-2025
- SoraNews24
Nagasaki police get into high speed chase with Nagasaki police
It's a police chase in the truest sense of the term. One day in February of this year, a patrol car belonging to the Nagasaki Prefectural Police was working a national highway with a speed limit of 50 kilometers per hour (31 miles per hour) when a car tore past them at speeds well beyond the limit. The patrol car quickly went in pursuit but the other vehicle showed no signs of slowing down with a speed clocked at 102 kilometers per hour (63 miles per hour). Eventually, the car managed to shake off the police but not before the officers could take note of its license plate number. Much to their surprise, the license number led them to another member of the same police force. Not only that, but surveillance camera video showed that the off-duty officer in her 20s had committed 13 violations of the Road Traffic Act, such as running a red light, on that same day. Following the full investigation, the officer in question was handed down a six-month, 10-percent pay cut by the Nagasaki Prefectural Police on 1 May and her case was submitted to the prosecutor's office to determine if the criminal charges she's facing will be pursued. The police officer told police that she was going home from visiting her parents during the holiday, and that: 'I didn't notice the patrol car chasing me. I just wanted to get home and get some sleep.' She also admitted to the charges and resigned on 1 May. ▼ Police cars are notoriously easy to miss, aren't they? Perhaps I'm reading too much into this, but the 'I didn't notice the patrol car chasing me,' felt like a subtle dig at her former colleagues. After all, if she really didn't notice the sirens, lights, and person shouting over a megaphone behind her for an extended period of time, she must have been severely impaired in some way, but the fact that no accidents occurred from it would suggest either an incredible stroke of luck or that she's fibbing. Whatever the case may be, readers of the news online were mostly impressed by her driving skills and unimpressed by the police department's response to them. 'She's probably better off as a race car driver.' 'They've got to be joking with that 10 percent pay cut.' 'I don't buy it. She clearly had something to hide that day.' 'Don't the police have 3.5L V6 Crowns? What was she driving?' 'I think in cases like this she should be investigated by police from a different prefecture.' 'She got away from a police car while doing twice the limit…' 'I would never want to be pulled over by her.' 'What a waste of a good driver.' 'And she didn't get into an accident doing all that. She must have trained on Mario Kart.' It wasn't mentioned in the reports, but that ought to be more than enough simultaneous violations to warrant her license being suspended, in which case she'll have lots of time for Mario Kart from now on. So, let's all show our appreciation to the police in Japan who work tirelessly to keep us safe from other police in Japan. Source: NBC, Hachima Kiko Featured image: Pakutaso Insert image: Pakutaso ● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!


Tokyo Reported
23-05-2025
- Tokyo Reported
Female cop in Nagasaki accused of speeding 'wanted to get home and get some sleep'
NAGASAKI (TR) – A female police officer from the Nagasaki Prefectural Police has been referred to prosecutors for driving more than 50 kilometers per hour over the speed limit earlier this year. Before the officer resigned, she told police that she simply 'wanted to get home and get some sleep,' reports Nagasaki Broadcasting (May 22). According to police, the female officer is suspected of driving her own car at 102 kilometers per hour on a national highway in Nagasaki City with a speed limit of 50 kilometers per hours on a public holiday in February. A patrol car spotted the female officer's car speeding and pursued it, but she did not stop and instead kept driving, shaking off the patrol car. It was later discovered from the car's license plate number that the driver was the female officer. In addition to speeding, the officer committed 13 violations of the Road Traffic Act that same day, including ignoring red lights. On May 1, Nagasaki Prefectural Police disciplined the officer, cutting her pay by 10 percent for six months. That same day, police referred her case to the prosecutor's office on suspicion of violating the Road Traffic Act. She admitted to the allegations. According to the Nagasaki Prefectural Police, the female officer was on her way home from her parents' home in Nagasaki Prefecture to her residence in Nagasaki City at the time. 'I didn't notice the patrol car chasing me,' she said. 'I just wanted to get home and get some sleep.' She also submitted her resignation on May 1.


Japan Times
07-03-2025
- Japan Times
Woman held over death of partner after locking him out naked on balcony
A 54-year-old woman has been arrested for allegedly locking her naked partner out on their balcony for the night in an incident three years ago, which led to the man's death from extreme cold, police said Friday. The woman was arrested on charges of assault and lethal confinement, the Nagasaki Prefectural Police said. One day in February 2022, the woman "ordered the victim to get out on a balcony while he was naked, and confined him there," local official Masafumi Tanigawa said. The next day, police rushed to the scene after an emergency call, and the 49-year-old man — the woman's common-law spouse — was found "nearly dead" in a room, Tanigawa said, adding the man later died of hypothermia. The temperature that night had fallen to a low of 3.7 degrees Celsius, the Mainichi daily reported. Prior to the incident, the woman had previously attacked her partner with a knife, which left him with nose injuries that took two weeks to heal. The woman is denying the charges, telling police that "I've done nothing," Tanigawa quoted her as saying. Police did not say why it took so long to formally bring charges against her.