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Crime As Japan’s yakuza weakens, police focus shifts to unorganized crime hired via social media

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BY MARI YAMAGUCHI
Updated 10:01 PM BRT, May 17, 2024


TOKYO (AP) — A senior member of yakuza was arrested for allegedly stealing Pokemon cards near Tokyo in April, a case seen as an example of Japanese organized crime groups struggling with declining membership.

Police agents who were busy dealing with thousands of yakuza members just a few years ago have noticed something new: unorganized and loosely connected groups they believe are behind a series of crimes once dominated by yakuza.

Police call them “tokuryu,” anonymous gangsters and tech-savvy young people hired for specific jobs. They often cooperate with yakuza, obscuring the boundary between them and making police investigations more difficult, experts and authorities say.

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A senior Yakuza meber was caught staling Pokemon cards.

The Tokyo metropolitan police are currently investigating six suspects in their 20s and 30s, most of them without connections to one another, who are believed to have been hired on social media to kill, transport and burn the bodies of an older couple at a riverbank of Nasu, 200 kilometers (124 miles) northeast of Tokyo.

“It’s a crime carried out like a part-time job,” Taihei Ogawa, a former police investigator and crime analyst, said on an online talk show. “Tasks are divided, making it difficult for police to track down where instructions come from.”
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The yakuza membership has shrunk to 20,400 last year, one-third what it was two decades ago, according to the National Police Agency. It attributed the decline largely to legislation passed to combat organized crime that includes measures like barring members of designated groups from opening bank accounts, renting apartments, buying cell phones or insurance.

Yakuza once operated from well-marked offices, often with signs out front and symbols of their trade such as lanterns and samurai swords visible through the windows. They were often portrayed in films and cartoons as noble outlaws with a code of honor. Their typical rackets were extortion, gambling, prostitution, gunrunning, drug trafficking and construction kickbacks.

But gang violence in a number of neighborhoods, including the 2007 fatal shooting of Nagasaki Mayor Iccho Ito during his election campaign, have since led the government to tighten gun control, racketeering laws and other anti-gang measures.
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Posing fore a pic, Jiban the most beloved Japanese cop in Brazil

Local residents and businesses have also stepped up and filed dozens of lawsuits against yakuza groups to bar them from their communities. In December 2022, Fukuoka city filed for a court injunction to close down an office led by the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi branch of yakuza near elementary and junior high schools and forced it off the street six months later.

The aging of yakuza members and their financial difficulties have also hobbled the syndicate, experts say.

The number of arrested yakuza members in 2023 declined to 9,610, compared to 22,495 in 2014, according to the police.

Yakuza crackdowns have driven many members to quit and sent others underground. But they also prompted younger generations to join “tokuryu” groups rather than the traditional criminal structures, Noboru Suetomi, a criminologist and expert on yakuza, said in his recent article.
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The National Police Agency describes “tokuryu” as “anonymous and fluid” groups that repeatedly form and disband via social media to carry out swindling, illegal betting, prostitution and other crimes often remotely, including from overseas.

They recruit a number of participants who are not connected to each other and assign them specific roles. While often cooperating with conventional yakuza, they invest their earnings into illegal businesses, the agency said. “They have become a threat to public safety.”

While numbers are hard to track, more than 10,000 people were arrested from 2021 to 2023 for alleged swindling, illegal drug trade other crimes, such as forgery of identification cards, which were linked to “tokuryu,” records show.
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In April 2022, police busted a ring of 19 people recruited anonymously who operated a fake telecom company out of Cambodia and swindled an elderly Japanese. In 2023, Tokyo police arrested six people who got in touch via social media and carried out a high-profile daytime robbery of watches and jewelry worth 300 million yen ($1.92 million) at a store in Tokyo’s posh Ginza district.

National Police chief Yasuhiro Tsuyuki, at a meeting Monday of top prefectural criminal investigators, said “tokuryu” have been part of surging cases of swindling via social media and have become a “serious concern.” He urged police across the country to make unified efforts to tackle the problem and also cooperate with authorities abroad.

Tsuyuki has said police must drastically change their anti-organized crime measures to keep up with the new menace, calling for organizational restructuring and cooperation across investigative departments, from cyber to robbery and fraud.

To reinforce measures, the police in April launched a joint investigation unit specializing in social media and telephone scams. The agency also stepped up policing in entertainment districts and measures against juvenile delinquents and motorcycle gangs.
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https://apnews.com/article/japan-gangsters-yakuza-crime-fdb57ffd2325fb3aba8c211a30b6c861
 
With cameras everywhere and police being able to track one's location and spy on calls/messages/etc., how crime will be possible at all in the nearest future?

Unless, the "watchers" do the crime themselves.
 
Pokemon cards. We talking about Pokemon, man. Pokemon. Pokemon cards. It's Pokemon. We talking about Pokemon cards.

Are they doing anything about the Chinese and nigerian gangs?
 
Sounds like there actually moving towards more "normal" organised crime, previously the impression I got is the very high membership numbers were the result of a lot of low level criminals or street gangs having direct membership which wouldn't be the case in say the Mafia.
 
Was about to make a thread on this but found it here. Anyway, my input

Yakuza - Good for Nothing

tokuryu - anonymous fluid​


The group have no structure and often don't even know other gang members even before working together.
They are basically the gig workers of the underworld.
Currently they operate all over Japan and even abroad, such as the Philippines.
Recruiters remain anonymous but Tokuryu require ID verification, an application letter and disclosure of loved ones home addresses.

Very interesting as the key tenant of the Yakuza was that Japan need the Yakuza's organised system, as without them there would be chaos. Without any code of conduct crimes are often shameless and extremely violent. This is exactly what the Yakuza said would happen.



 
Pokemon cards. We talking about Pokemon, man. Pokemon. Pokemon cards. It's Pokemon. We talking about Pokemon cards.

Are they doing anything about the Chinese and nigerian gangs?
- Didnt knew they had Nigerian gangs.

About the Pokemons. I find cute, that Ronda run away from home, to become a mod at a Pokemon forum.
 
Was about to make a thread on this but found it here. Anyway, my input

Yakuza - Good for Nothing

tokuryu - anonymous fluid​


The group have no structure and often don't even know other gang members even before working together.
They are basically the gig workers of the underworld.
Currently they operate all over Japan and even abroad, such as the Philippines.
Recruiters remain anonymous but Tokuryu require ID verification, an application letter and disclosure of loved ones home addresses.

Very interesting as the key tenant of the Yakuza was that Japan need the Yakuza's organised system, as without them there would be chaos. Without any code of conduct crimes are often shameless and extremely violent. This is exactly what the Yakuza said would happen.




- THis one. I'm surpirised that someone would give their family adress to criminals. Even thought i know criminals that run from their hood, and let their family behind.
 
- Didnt knew they had Nigerian gangs.

About the Pokemons. I find cute, that Ronda run away from home, to become a mod at a Pokemon forum.

If you go to Japan as a foreigner you are more likely to encounter the Nigerians long before the Yakuza. Nobody, or next to nobody, is from Nigeria and living legally in Japan. If you go to Roppongi do not even let their touts approach you. Their clubs are traps and they scout for tourists with offers of free beers at the door.

You can interact with the Yakuza fine normally as a tourist provided you don't act like a dick, but the Nigerian gangs are just poison.
 
If you go to Japan as a foreigner you are more likely to encounter the Nigerians long before the Yakuza. Nobody, or next to nobody, is from Nigeria and living legally in Japan. If you go to Roppongi do not even let their touts approach you. Their clubs are traps and they scout for tourists with offers of free beers at the door.

You can interact with the Yakuza fine normally as a tourist provided you don't act like a dick, but the Nigerian gangs are just poison.
- I've read that. Some sherdogger lived in Japan, and trained at a gym with them.

I never thought they would have foreign gangs free roaming Japan.
 
Completely unrelated but if you're interested in yakuza stuff; you should watch the Outrage trilogy by Takeshi Kitano.

Actually just watch all his stuff. It's great.
Other notable director mentions:

Takashi Miike
Seijun Suzuki
Kinji Fukasaku
Eiichi Kudo
Kiyoshi Kurasawa

And go play the Yakuza (Ryu ga Gotoku) games.
 
If you go to Japan as a foreigner you are more likely to encounter the Nigerians long before the Yakuza. Nobody, or next to nobody, is from Nigeria and living legally in Japan. If you go to Roppongi do not even let their touts approach you. Their clubs are traps and they scout for tourists with offers of free beers at the door.

You can interact with the Yakuza fine normally as a tourist provided you don't act like a dick, but the Nigerian gangs are just poison.
Why does Japan do nothing about it? Its not like Nigerians wont stick out in Japan.
 
With cameras everywhere and police being able to track one's location and spy on calls/messages/etc., how crime will be possible at all in the nearest future?

Unless, the "watchers" do the crime themselves.
That may be the plan.
Or you bribe the camera watchers.
 
Why does Japan do nothing about it? Its not like Nigerians wont stick out in Japan.
never really looked into it, more often than not they are fronts for Yakuza in tourist areas, so I think they get their residence through this means meaning it is difficult for authorities to investigate and confirm every single one, particularly if they haven't been caught doing a serious enough crime as to warrant an investigation. Most are con artists/front men for ''legitimate business'' who focus on scamming tourists. Tourists typically don't want to engage with police and visa vee and because the scam/drugging/theft is usually done by inviting the tourist into a compromising situation they are less likely to go to police. Also they are a regular site in Tokyo/Osaka tourist zones and don't hassle the locals. They are even known for for draining entire bank accounts but leaving money for a train and flight home.

So I've no doubt they they come from Nigerian gang backgrounds, but while in Japan they are fronts for the Yakuza organisations and don't create competition with the other gangs. Gangs often don't end up on the radar until they're at war with each other - see Kinnahen feud in Ireland which was totally under the radar until the in fighting started.

Also while tourists aren't a target for the Yakuza directly they do recognise the value in exploiting them, hence why it's easier for them to exploit the situation indirectly by proxy.
 
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