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Saitama woman, yakuza suspected of forcing runaway girl, 14, into prostitution
Saitama woman, yakuza suspected of forcing runaway girl, 14, into prostitution

Tokyo Reported

time15 hours ago

  • Tokyo Reported

Saitama woman, yakuza suspected of forcing runaway girl, 14, into prostitution

TOKYO (TR) – Tokyo Metropolitan Police have arrested a woman living in Saitama Prefecture and a member of a criminal syndicate for allegedly forcing a 14-year-old runaway girl into prostitution last year, reports the Sankei Shimbun (June 9). On two occasions between December 23 and 28, Chihiro Fushimi, 32, and Masaru Minowa, a 33-year-old member of the Yamaguchi-gumi, are alleged to have forced the girl to engage in lewd acts with a man at a hotel in Saitama. Upon their arrests on suspicion of violating the Child Welfare Act and the Anti-Prostitution Law, the suspects admitted to the allegations. 'I made her do it to earn money,' and Minowa said. At the time, the girl was a third-year middle school student. Last November, Fushimi met the girl on a social-networking site. Chihiro Fushimi, left, and Masaru Minowa When the suspect found out that the girl had run away from home, she invited her to live at her residence in Kasukabe City. She then encouraged the girl to engage in prostitution. Minowa is an acquaintance of Fushimi. Together, they posed as the girl online to recruit customers interested in arrangements known as papakatsu , or compensated dating. The suspects drove the girl to met the men contacted online. Fushima and Minowa collected 120,000 yen from the girl's customers. The girl stayed at Fushimi's house for six days. She then returned to her parents. The incident came to light when her parents filed a missing persons report. Police have also sent documents on the pair to prosecutions on suspicion of non-consensual sexual intercourse.

Established Organized Crime Syndicates Continue to Age and Decline in Japan

time25-04-2025

Established Organized Crime Syndicates Continue to Age and Decline in Japan

A National Police Agency report on organized crime in 2024 showed that the number of members and associate members of designated organized crime groups ( bōryokudan ) fell by 1,600 from the previous year to 18,800. This is the twentieth consecutive year that yakuza numbers have decreased and marks a new record low. Membership of syndicates dropped by 500 to 9,900, falling below 10,000 for the first time. There were more than 80,000 organized crime gang members in Japan as of 2009, but numbers have plummeted in subsequent years. Factors in the decline include the increasing age of members and the spreading enactment of organized crime ( bōryokudan ) exclusion ordinances by local authorities across the country that have restricted economic and other association between gangs and ordinary citizens. The membership numbers of the main syndicates as of the end of 2024 are as follows. 2024 Membership of Major Gangs in Japan Yamaguchi-gumi Members: 3,300 (-200) Associate Members: 3,600 (-200) Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi Members: 120 (-20) Associate Members: 200 (-60) Kizuna-kai Members: 60 (unchanged) Associate Members: 80 (-30) Ikeda-gumi Members: 60 (unchanged) Associate Members: 90 (unchanged) Sumiyoshi-kai Members: 2,100 (-100) Associate Members: 1,100 (-200) Inagawa-kai Members: 1,600 (-100) Associate Members: 1,100 (-100)) Created by based on data from the National Police Agency. Numbers in parentheses indicate the year-on-year change. In August 2015, the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi splintered from the Yamaguchi-gumi, and since 2019, a turf war between the two gangs has seen a series of firearm homicides. A number of prefectural public safety commissions have also identified ongoing rivalry between the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi, Ikeda-gumi, and Kizuna-kai, but there was only one related incident in 2024. During 2023, the police arrested 8,249 crime gang members and associate members, in a 1,361 year-on-year decrease. The largest number of arrests, at 1,707, was for violations of the Stimulants Control Act. This was followed by 1,103 people arrested for fraud, 1,071 for assault, 713 for theft, 464 for violation of the Cannabis Control Law, and 389 for assault. There were 79 people arrested for murder, up 23 year on year. While the power of established crime gangs is diminishing, new groups are drawing headlines for recruiting through social media or other online spaces for specialized fraud or organized robberies and thefts. These groups are known as tokuryū for their anonymous ( tokumei ) and fluid ( ryūdō ) nature, as they quickly form and disband. In 2024, 5,203 people connected with tokuryū groups were arrested, with around half being apprehended for fraud. (Translated from Japanese. Banner photo: Police investigators raid offices of the Inagawa-kai crime group in Ōta, Gunma, on March 4, 2025. © Jiji.)

Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war
Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war

Japan's largest yakuza crime syndicate has pledged to end its longstanding war with a rival faction and refrain from causing 'trouble,' authorities said, as the mafia-like groups contend with falling membership and increased police crackdowns. Three senior members of the Yamaguchi-gumi visited the Hyogo Prefectural police headquarters on Monday and delivered a letter to officers pledging to 'end all internal fighting' and to 'never cause any trouble,' police told CNN. The Yamaguchi-gumi, one of the world's largest and wealthiest crime gangs, has been embroiled in a bloody feud with splinter groups since 2015, when more than a dozen factions broke away to form the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi. Since then, intensifying violence between the two warring crime organizations has seen rival gangsters gunned down or stabbed in dozens of incidents, according to police. The armed conflict, often erupting on public streets in cities across central and western Japan, has put pressure on authorities to toughen restrictions on the gangs. 'Yakuza' is a blanket term for Japan's organized crime groups, which sit in a gray area in the country. Though they are not outlawed, the groups are regulated and monitored by authorities. In 2020, police formally designated the Yamaguchi-gumi and its splinter group as gangs at war - giving officers the ability to increase surveillance, restrict their activities, including prohibiting the use of their offices and ability to raise funds. 'Their conflicts have become serious and unpredictable,' the National Police Agency said in 2021. In the past five years, police have also put several other gangs under close surveillance. It is unclear whether the rival splinter group, Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi, has responded to the ceasefire pledge. Police said they would be 'closely monitoring the movements of both groups' as the declaration to end the turf war may be one-sided. Membership to yakuza groups across Japan has been in decline over recent decades. In 2024, the number of members of organized crime syndicates stood at 18,800, hitting a record low and falling below 20,000 for the first time, according to police data. Those official figures show the number of active members of the Yamaguchi-gumi gang have almost halved since 2014 - falling from 6,000 then to just 3,300 at the end of last year. The Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi had around 120 members last year. As yakuza membership falls, however, Japanese authorities are contending with a new criminal phenomenon: the 'tokuryu.' These anonymous gangs are not affiliated with a yakuza family, operating individually or in ad hoc groups. About 10,000 members of tokuryu gangs were investigated last year, with police linking them to violent robberies in Tokyo, and fraud schemes involving romance scams and investments on social media.

Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war
Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war

CNN

time11-04-2025

  • CNN

Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war

Japan's largest yakuza crime syndicate has pledged to end its longstanding war with a rival faction and refrain from causing 'trouble,' authorities said, as the mafia-like groups contend with falling membership and increased police crackdowns. Three senior members of the Yamaguchi-gumi visited the Hyogo Prefectural police headquarters on Monday and delivered a letter to officers pledging to 'end all internal fighting' and to 'never cause any trouble,' police told CNN. The Yamaguchi-gumi, one of the world's largest and wealthiest crime gangs, has been embroiled in a bloody feud with splinter groups since 2015, when more than a dozen factions broke away to form the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi. Since then, intensifying violence between the two warring crime organizations has seen rival gangsters gunned down or stabbed in dozens of incidents, according to police. The armed conflict, often erupting on public streets in cities across central and western Japan, has put pressure on authorities to toughen restrictions on the gangs. 'Yakuza' is a blanket term for Japan's organized crime groups, which sit in a gray area in the country. Though they are not outlawed, the groups are regulated and monitored by authorities. In 2020, police formally designated the Yamaguchi-gumi and its splinter group as gangs at war - giving officers the ability to increase surveillance, restrict their activities, including prohibiting the use of their offices and ability to raise funds. 'Their conflicts have become serious and unpredictable,' the National Police Agency said in 2021. In the past five years, police have also put several other gangs under close surveillance. It is unclear whether the rival splinter group, Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi, has responded to the ceasefire pledge. Police said they would be 'closely monitoring the movements of both groups' as the declaration to end the turf war may be one-sided. Membership to yakuza groups across Japan has been in decline over recent decades. In 2024, the number of members of organized crime syndicates stood at 18,800, hitting a record low and falling below 20,000 for the first time, according to police data. Those official figures show the number of active members of the Yamaguchi-gumi gang have almost halved since 2014 - falling from 6,000 then to just 3,300 at the end of last year. The Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi had around 120 members last year. As yakuza membership falls, however, Japanese authorities are contending with a new criminal phenomenon: the 'tokuryu.' These anonymous gangs are not affiliated with a yakuza family, operating individually or in ad hoc groups. About 10,000 members of tokuryu gangs were investigated last year, with police linking them to violent robberies in Tokyo, and fraud schemes involving romance scams and investments on social media.

Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war
Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war

CNN

time11-04-2025

  • CNN

Japan's biggest Yakuza crime group pledges to end decade-long gang war

Japan's largest yakuza crime syndicate has pledged to end its longstanding war with a rival faction and refrain from causing 'trouble,' authorities said, as the mafia-like groups contend with falling membership and increased police crackdowns. Three senior members of the Yamaguchi-gumi visited the Hyogo Prefectural police headquarters on Monday and delivered a letter to officers pledging to 'end all internal fighting' and to 'never cause any trouble,' police told CNN. The Yamaguchi-gumi, one of the world's largest and wealthiest crime gangs, has been embroiled in a bloody feud with splinter groups since 2015, when more than a dozen factions broke away to form the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi. Since then, intensifying violence between the two warring crime organizations has seen rival gangsters gunned down or stabbed in dozens of incidents, according to police. The armed conflict, often erupting on public streets in cities across central and western Japan, has put pressure on authorities to toughen restrictions on the gangs. 'Yakuza' is a blanket term for Japan's organized crime groups, which sit in a gray area in the country. Though they are not outlawed, the groups are regulated and monitored by authorities. In 2020, police formally designated the Yamaguchi-gumi and its splinter group as gangs at war - giving officers the ability to increase surveillance, restrict their activities, including prohibiting the use of their offices and ability to raise funds. 'Their conflicts have become serious and unpredictable,' the National Police Agency said in 2021. In the past five years, police have also put several other gangs under close surveillance. It is unclear whether the rival splinter group, Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi, has responded to the ceasefire pledge. Police said they would be 'closely monitoring the movements of both groups' as the declaration to end the turf war may be one-sided. Membership to yakuza groups across Japan has been in decline over recent decades. In 2024, the number of members of organized crime syndicates stood at 18,800, hitting a record low and falling below 20,000 for the first time, according to police data. Those official figures show the number of active members of the Yamaguchi-gumi gang have almost halved since 2014 - falling from 6,000 then to just 3,300 at the end of last year. The Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi had around 120 members last year. As yakuza membership falls, however, Japanese authorities are contending with a new criminal phenomenon: the 'tokuryu.' These anonymous gangs are not affiliated with a yakuza family, operating individually or in ad hoc groups. About 10,000 members of tokuryu gangs were investigated last year, with police linking them to violent robberies in Tokyo, and fraud schemes involving romance scams and investments on social media.

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