72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia (UPDATED)
- CEOCambodiaNews
- Expatriate
- Posts: 62459
- Joined: Sun Oct 12, 2014 5:13 am
- Reputation: 4034
- Location: CEO Newsroom in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
- Contact:
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
Elderly drug mules: are Japan’s yakuza behind wave of arrests across Asia?
A growing number of hard-up older people appear to be being targeted by Japan’s criminal underworld to smuggle drugs internationally
Elderly passengers with drugs in their luggage were uncovered in China, Cambodia and Japan before the pandemic shut down air travel
Julian Ryall
Published: 4:46pm, 17 Sep, 2020
An elderly Japanese man on Tuesday was sentenced by a court in Cambodia to 25 years in prison after being found guilty of drug smuggling charges in what is apparently the latest example of how Japan’s “yakuza” groups are targeting a growing number of hard-up older people willing to take risks for a quick pay-off.
The Phnom Penh Municipal Court found 72-year old Shunichi Nonaka guilty of “trafficking, storing and smuggling” methamphetamine. He was arrested in February at the Cambodian capital’s international airport before he could board a flight bound for Japan via South Korea
During an X-ray inspection of his luggage, customs officials found 1.7kg of the drug wrapped in plastic in a suitcase.
Nonaka told investigators that he was given the package by a man living in Phnom Penh soon after his arrival in the city two days previously. Authorities say they believe the operation was the work of an organised smuggling ring.
“Japan’s underworld groups are moving into different areas to bring in income, and one of those areas is getting older people involved in smuggling,” said Nagamoto Kuroda, managing director and head of forensics and litigation consulting for FTI Consulting in Tokyo.
As well as narcotics, older people are also being convinced to smuggle gold and counterfeit pharmaceuticals because they have in the past typically attracted less attention from customs officials, Kuroda said, although authorities appear to have caught on to this tactic.
Zachary Arnold, a 68-year-old American national, was arrested at Fukuoka Airport in December carrying about 10,000 tablets of ecstasy after arriving on a flight from France that had stopped off in South Korea. The haul, weighing in at 4.7kg and with an estimated street value of 40 million yen (US$381,680), was the largest ever seized at the airport.
Arnold told authorities that he “was simply told to carry the luggage” and had “no idea of what was inside”.
Similarly, 76-year-old former Japanese politician Takuma Sakuragi was sentenced to life in prison in China in November
after being detained at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in Guangdong province with 3.3kg of methamphetamine in his luggage.
Jake Adelstein, a crime writer who specialises in Japan’s underworld groups, said the average age of Japan’s yakuza nowadays was about 50 “and they are not going to get their hands dirty doing this sort of thing themselves”.
“This is another example of what is termed ‘hinkon biz’, or a moneymaking scheme that preys on the elderly,” he said. “These are people who were in their 50s when the global recession struck in 2007, were laid off and were too old to get work again by the time the domestic economy had improved again.”
Elderly Japanese matching this description not only lost out on their expected future income “but they also were not able to pay into the national pension scheme, so the pensions they are getting now are often not enough to get by on,” Adelstein said.
The writer said it was “interesting” that Nonaka’s arrest was in Cambodia, where former yakuza kingpin Tadamasa Goto has based himself in recent years – though there is no evidence linking Goto to the case.
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/economic ... sts-across
A growing number of hard-up older people appear to be being targeted by Japan’s criminal underworld to smuggle drugs internationally
Elderly passengers with drugs in their luggage were uncovered in China, Cambodia and Japan before the pandemic shut down air travel
Julian Ryall
Published: 4:46pm, 17 Sep, 2020
An elderly Japanese man on Tuesday was sentenced by a court in Cambodia to 25 years in prison after being found guilty of drug smuggling charges in what is apparently the latest example of how Japan’s “yakuza” groups are targeting a growing number of hard-up older people willing to take risks for a quick pay-off.
The Phnom Penh Municipal Court found 72-year old Shunichi Nonaka guilty of “trafficking, storing and smuggling” methamphetamine. He was arrested in February at the Cambodian capital’s international airport before he could board a flight bound for Japan via South Korea
During an X-ray inspection of his luggage, customs officials found 1.7kg of the drug wrapped in plastic in a suitcase.
Nonaka told investigators that he was given the package by a man living in Phnom Penh soon after his arrival in the city two days previously. Authorities say they believe the operation was the work of an organised smuggling ring.
“Japan’s underworld groups are moving into different areas to bring in income, and one of those areas is getting older people involved in smuggling,” said Nagamoto Kuroda, managing director and head of forensics and litigation consulting for FTI Consulting in Tokyo.
As well as narcotics, older people are also being convinced to smuggle gold and counterfeit pharmaceuticals because they have in the past typically attracted less attention from customs officials, Kuroda said, although authorities appear to have caught on to this tactic.
Zachary Arnold, a 68-year-old American national, was arrested at Fukuoka Airport in December carrying about 10,000 tablets of ecstasy after arriving on a flight from France that had stopped off in South Korea. The haul, weighing in at 4.7kg and with an estimated street value of 40 million yen (US$381,680), was the largest ever seized at the airport.
Arnold told authorities that he “was simply told to carry the luggage” and had “no idea of what was inside”.
Similarly, 76-year-old former Japanese politician Takuma Sakuragi was sentenced to life in prison in China in November
after being detained at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in Guangdong province with 3.3kg of methamphetamine in his luggage.
Jake Adelstein, a crime writer who specialises in Japan’s underworld groups, said the average age of Japan’s yakuza nowadays was about 50 “and they are not going to get their hands dirty doing this sort of thing themselves”.
“This is another example of what is termed ‘hinkon biz’, or a moneymaking scheme that preys on the elderly,” he said. “These are people who were in their 50s when the global recession struck in 2007, were laid off and were too old to get work again by the time the domestic economy had improved again.”
Elderly Japanese matching this description not only lost out on their expected future income “but they also were not able to pay into the national pension scheme, so the pensions they are getting now are often not enough to get by on,” Adelstein said.
The writer said it was “interesting” that Nonaka’s arrest was in Cambodia, where former yakuza kingpin Tadamasa Goto has based himself in recent years – though there is no evidence linking Goto to the case.
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/economic ... sts-across
Join the Cambodia Expats Online Telegram Channel: https://t.me/CambodiaExpatsOnline
Cambodia Expats Online: Bringing you breaking news from Cambodia before you read it anywhere else!
Have a story or an anonymous news tip for CEO? Need advertising? CONTACT US
Cambodia Expats Online is the most popular community in the country. JOIN TODAY
Follow CEO on social media:
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Instagram
Cambodia Expats Online: Bringing you breaking news from Cambodia before you read it anywhere else!
Have a story or an anonymous news tip for CEO? Need advertising? CONTACT US
Cambodia Expats Online is the most popular community in the country. JOIN TODAY
Follow CEO on social media:
YouTube
- newkidontheblock
- Expatriate
- Posts: 4466
- Joined: Tue May 20, 2014 3:51 am
- Reputation: 1554
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
Yakuza have been on ropes for while. Super restrictive laws. Plus known Yakuza are excluded from the health care and pension system. And then the virus hit.
The pension system in Japan pays pretty poorly, about $1000 USD/month. Some elderly live in their cars to make ends meet. Many commit suicide. Others commit petty crimes so they can go to prison.
Unfortunately prison is Cambodia is not like prison in Japan.
The pension system in Japan pays pretty poorly, about $1000 USD/month. Some elderly live in their cars to make ends meet. Many commit suicide. Others commit petty crimes so they can go to prison.
Unfortunately prison is Cambodia is not like prison in Japan.
- phuketrichard
- Expatriate
- Posts: 16880
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2014 5:17 pm
- Reputation: 5782
- Location: Atlantis
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
Now this is some fine reporting, drug gangs & gold smuggling grous were using older people back in the 70's & 80's....A growing number of hard-up older people appear to be being targeted by Japan’s criminal underworld to smuggle drugs internationally
Elderly passengers with drugs in their luggage were uncovered in China, Cambodia and Japan before the pandemic shut down air travel
This is NOTHING New
LOL, after 40 years of success....although authorities appear to have caught on to this tactic......
WE always tried to hire older people in HK to carry for us
Anyone else seen Clints movie, "the mule" form 2018?
based on an New York times article from in 2014, about someone in their 80's old that was smuggling for the Sinaloa Cartel
FYI: I'd much rather be in a prison in Thailand or Cambodia than Japan.
In a nation run by swine, all pigs are upward-mobile and the rest of us are fucked until we can put our acts together: not necessarily to win, but mainly to keep from losing completely. HST
- John Bingham
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13781
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2014 11:26 pm
- Reputation: 8982
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
A friend of mine did a couple of years in a Japanese prison in the early 90s. He said it was very strict but safe and that the food was really good, as good as any you'd get in a Japanese restaurant in the west at the time. Plus he was a chef at the time so he learned how to cook sushi etc.
Silence, exile, and cunning.
- phuketrichard
- Expatriate
- Posts: 16880
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2014 5:17 pm
- Reputation: 5782
- Location: Atlantis
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
Knew a few and 1 associate did 1-4 years thereJohn Bingham wrote: ↑Sat Sep 19, 2020 2:35 pm A friend of mine did a couple of years in a Japanese prison in the early 90s. He said it was very strict but safe and that the food was really good, as good as any you'd get in a Japanese restaurant in the west at the time. Plus he was a chef at the time so he learned how to cook sushi etc.
strict>> yep, not allowed to sit from 7 am -9pm in ur cell, bow to the guards, stand at attention, march daily
but ur right, safe an good food.
BUT winters were dam cold
Thailand, Cambodia and afaik, Bali , India and Nepal, if you have $$ your life can be ok
In a nation run by swine, all pigs are upward-mobile and the rest of us are fucked until we can put our acts together: not necessarily to win, but mainly to keep from losing completely. HST
- John Bingham
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13781
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2014 11:26 pm
- Reputation: 8982
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
Yes, I think he mentioned having to stand on a square marked on the floor all day, no sitting or lying down!
Silence, exile, and cunning.
- pissontheroof
- Expatriate
- Posts: 1906
- Joined: Fri Apr 13, 2018 6:12 pm
- Reputation: 347
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
I guess you could learn to cook sushi , but it wouldn’t be sushi any more , because you are not supposed to cook it .John Bingham wrote: ↑Sat Sep 19, 2020 2:35 pm A friend of mine did a couple of years in a Japanese prison in the early 90s. He said it was very strict but safe and that the food was really good, as good as any you'd get in a Japanese restaurant in the west at the time. Plus he was a chef at the time so he learned how to cook sushi etc.
Mysterious stuff ;
... when I go to japanese restaurant anymore I can’t understand why the sushi takes longer than the cooked food
พิซออนเดอรูฟ
- CEOCambodiaNews
- Expatriate
- Posts: 62459
- Joined: Sun Oct 12, 2014 5:13 am
- Reputation: 4034
- Location: CEO Newsroom in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
- Contact:
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
72Yo Nonaka Shunichi Appeals Sentence, Saying Drugs Belonged to a Nigerian
Cambodia News, (Phnom Penh): The Phnom Penh Court of Appeal on the morning of September 15, 2021, held a hearing on the appeal of an elderly Japanese man convicted of the attempted transport of nearly 2 kg of drugs across the border from Cambodia to Japan, passing through Phnom Penh International Airport, which took place during February 2020.
The trial was presided over by Judge Pov Phu Sun, presiding judge, and represented by Deputy Prosecutor Tan Seng Narong.
Judge Phu Sun said during the hearing that the accused was Nonaka Shunichi, a 73-year-old Japanese tourist.
Judge Phu Sun said that the accused was sentenced by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on October 22, 2020 to 25 years in prison for transporting drugs across the border in accordance with Article 40 of the Law on Drug Control. However, he has appealed the court's decision at the Court of Appeal, asking for a commutation of his sentence because he wants to return home to see his family.
The accused was arrested by the Anti-Drug Police on February 15, 2020 at the Phnom Penh International Airport. After the arrest, the police confiscated 7 large packages of drugs hidden in his suitcase with a total weight of 1705, 85 (almost 2 kg).
During the trial, defendant Nonaka Shunichi confessed and admitted his guilt, but claimed that the drugs confiscated from his suitcase did not belong to him. He says they belonged to an unknown Nigerian man who hired him.
The result of the appeal will be announced in two weeks.
Cambodia News, (Phnom Penh): The Phnom Penh Court of Appeal on the morning of September 15, 2021, held a hearing on the appeal of an elderly Japanese man convicted of the attempted transport of nearly 2 kg of drugs across the border from Cambodia to Japan, passing through Phnom Penh International Airport, which took place during February 2020.
The trial was presided over by Judge Pov Phu Sun, presiding judge, and represented by Deputy Prosecutor Tan Seng Narong.
Judge Phu Sun said during the hearing that the accused was Nonaka Shunichi, a 73-year-old Japanese tourist.
Judge Phu Sun said that the accused was sentenced by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on October 22, 2020 to 25 years in prison for transporting drugs across the border in accordance with Article 40 of the Law on Drug Control. However, he has appealed the court's decision at the Court of Appeal, asking for a commutation of his sentence because he wants to return home to see his family.
The accused was arrested by the Anti-Drug Police on February 15, 2020 at the Phnom Penh International Airport. After the arrest, the police confiscated 7 large packages of drugs hidden in his suitcase with a total weight of 1705, 85 (almost 2 kg).
During the trial, defendant Nonaka Shunichi confessed and admitted his guilt, but claimed that the drugs confiscated from his suitcase did not belong to him. He says they belonged to an unknown Nigerian man who hired him.
The result of the appeal will be announced in two weeks.
Join the Cambodia Expats Online Telegram Channel: https://t.me/CambodiaExpatsOnline
Cambodia Expats Online: Bringing you breaking news from Cambodia before you read it anywhere else!
Have a story or an anonymous news tip for CEO? Need advertising? CONTACT US
Cambodia Expats Online is the most popular community in the country. JOIN TODAY
Follow CEO on social media:
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Instagram
Cambodia Expats Online: Bringing you breaking news from Cambodia before you read it anywhere else!
Have a story or an anonymous news tip for CEO? Need advertising? CONTACT US
Cambodia Expats Online is the most popular community in the country. JOIN TODAY
Follow CEO on social media:
YouTube
- hanno
- Expatriate
- Posts: 6811
- Joined: Fri May 16, 2014 12:37 pm
- Reputation: 3182
- Location: Phnom Penh
- Contact:
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
pissontheroof wrote: ↑Sun Sep 20, 2020 8:00 amI guess you could learn to cook sushi , but it wouldn’t be sushi any more , because you are not supposed to cook it .John Bingham wrote: ↑Sat Sep 19, 2020 2:35 pm A friend of mine did a couple of years in a Japanese prison in the early 90s. He said it was very strict but safe and that the food was really good, as good as any you'd get in a Japanese restaurant in the west at the time. Plus he was a chef at the time so he learned how to cook sushi etc.
Mysterious stuff ;
... when I go to japanese restaurant anymore I can’t understand why the sushi takes longer than the cooked food
Uh, some Sushi items are cooked, the rice for one. Unagi is also usually cooked, as is tako. And in any decent restaurant, Sushi are made to order.
- John Bingham
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13781
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2014 11:26 pm
- Reputation: 8982
Re: 72-Year-Old Japanese Man caught Smuggling Meth From Cambodia
Good info but this guy only eats Burger King anyway.hanno wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 8:45 ampissontheroof wrote: ↑Sun Sep 20, 2020 8:00 amI guess you could learn to cook sushi , but it wouldn’t be sushi any more , because you are not supposed to cook it .John Bingham wrote: ↑Sat Sep 19, 2020 2:35 pm A friend of mine did a couple of years in a Japanese prison in the early 90s. He said it was very strict but safe and that the food was really good, as good as any you'd get in a Japanese restaurant in the west at the time. Plus he was a chef at the time so he learned how to cook sushi etc.
Mysterious stuff ;
... when I go to japanese restaurant anymore I can’t understand why the sushi takes longer than the cooked food
Uh, some Sushi items are cooked, the rice for one. Unagi is also usually cooked, as is tako. And in any decent restaurant, Sushi are made to order.
Silence, exile, and cunning.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 0 Replies
- 1629 Views
-
Last post by CEOCambodiaNews
-
- 0 Replies
- 1231 Views
-
Last post by CEOCambodiaNews
-
- 3 Replies
- 1468 Views
-
Last post by Ano63
-
- 0 Replies
- 1466 Views
-
Last post by CEOCambodiaNews
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Ahrefs [Bot], Semrush [Bot] and 872 guests