Google – AFP, Hiroshi Hiyama (AFP), 1 December 2013
Tokyo —
Japanese mobsters driving flash cars purchased with bank loans. Executives
bowing in apology for loaning millions to those underworld figures. And
high-level officials vowing to squash the crime syndicates, known as yakuza.
Japan Inc.
is engulfed in its worst mob scandal in years and it's shining a rare light on
the links between big business and shadowy organised crime groups usually known
for low-brow ventures like extortion and loan sharking.
But with
membership falling as police ratchet up a crackdown, experts say the yakuza are
branching far outside their traditional business into everything from insider
trading to funding business startups.
"Insider
trading has become huge -- you can make much more money manipulating
stocks" than extorting businesses, says Jake Adelstein, a crime writer
whose bestselling memoir "Tokyo Vice" is set to become a Hollywood
movie.
Adelstein,
a former reporter at Japan's top-selling Yomiuri daily, likens the
Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan's biggest organised crime group, to "Goldman Sachs
with guns".
Tattoos and
missing pinkies
Many
mobsters -- forever associated with full-body tattoos and lopped-off pinky
fingers -- have now ditched that tough guy persona in favour of tailored suits
and clean-cut look that could pass in any boardroom, Adelstein said.
"They're
savvy investors," he said added. "They like to gamble."
The yakuza
occupy a grey area in Japan's usually law-abiding society.
They are
both feared and loathed as social outcasts, while they're revered in equal
measure through film, fanzines and manga cartoons.
Like the
Italian mafia or Chinese triads, the yakuza engage in activities ranging from
gambling, drugs, and prostitution to loan sharking, protection rackets and
other illegal ventures often run through front companies.
But unlike
their foreign counterparts, yakuza are legal groups with offices in major
Japanese cities, and they have historically been tolerated by authorities,
although there are periodic clampdowns on some of their less savoury
activities.
In fact,
the Yamaguchi-gumi helped dole out food after a major quake in the western city
of Kobe in 1995.
![]() |
A
53-year-old former yakuza gangster
shows off his silicone-made finger on
May
27, 2013 during a visit to prosthetics
specialist Shintaro Hayashi's office
in
Tokyo (AFP, Toshifumi Kitamura)
|
'Sophisticated
methods'
But Tokyo
is now under intense pressure from abroad to clamp down on yakuza and their
money laundering, as the US Treasury Department works to freeze the overseas
assets of top Japanese crime groups which it says make "billions of
dollars annually in illicit proceeds".
The
crackdown at home has intensified after Mizuho Bank said in September that it
had loaned money to organised crime members, an admission subsequently repeated
by at least four other major lenders including Japan's biggest bank, Mitsubishi
UFJ Financial Group.
Sometimes
loans were legitimately used by gangsters to buy foreign sports cars or other
expensive items, while in other cases the vehicle was quickly sold on the black
market with the loan never paid back.
The scandal
at Mizuho worsened after it initially said top executives knew nothing about
the loans, only to backtrack on that claim as a company-commissioned report
blasted its laissez-faire compliance.
Mizuho
later said more than 50 executives would be punished with its chief executive
foregoing pay for six months.
![]() |
| A retired Japanese yakuza crime boss shows the tattoo on his back featuring a carp swimming up a waterfall, at his home in Tokyo on March 20, 2009 (AFP/File, Frank Zeller) |
"It is
baffling that Mizuho board members failed to act," said Toshihiko Kubo,
professor of financial law at Ritsumeikan University.
"Once
they learned that loan recipients were related to the mob, they should have
taken immediate action."
Major
lenders are routinely approached by those with links to organised crime looking
to raise money, said an anti-yakuza campaigner in Tokyo, echoing calls from
Finance Minister Taro Aso, among others, to tighten banking rules.
"Crime
syndicates...are out to make money, and they'll use whatever means available,"
said the campaigner, who asked not to be identified.
"Many
companies are trying not to deal with organised crime...But It's difficult to
filter everything because their methods are also becoming sophisticated."
Earlier
this year, the Japan Securities Dealers Association launched a database to help
keep those with mob links out of the country's now-sizzling stock market.
The
pressure on Tokyo to clean up the problem is set to intensify as Japan looks to
host the 2020 Summer Olympics.
![]() |
Kenichi
Shinoda, boss of Japan's largest
yakuza gang, the Yamaguchi-gumi, gets
into a
car on April 9, 2011 after his
release from a Tokyo prison (Jiji Press/
AFP,
Jiji Press)
|
Mob links
run deep
Still,
yakuza links run deep in Japan and some credit their tough presence for keeping
street crime low.
Their place
is so deeply rooted that senior politicians are sometimes found to have mob
ties, including ex-Justice Minister Keishu Tanaka who resigned last year
following reports of his association with mobsters.
"There
are lots of politicians that, in some sense, owe their positions to yakuza
support back in old days, so clearly their influence is not non-existent,"
Adelstein says.
"It's
still a bizarre system because Japan's organised crime groups are legal
entities. They are regulated but not banned."
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