HOME > NATION > Article

Text Size

small

medium

large


Alleged Yakuza Boss Pleads Guilty in U.S. to Nuclear Trafficking

Alleged Yakuza Boss Pleads Guilty in U.S. to Nuclear Trafficking

   New York, Jan. 8 (Jiji Press)--A Japanese national purported to be a leader of a yakuza organized crime syndicate has pleaded guilty to trafficking nuclear materials from Myanmar to other countries, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday.
   The defendant, Takeshi Ebisawa, 60, has been charged in the United States over allegedly conspiring with antigovernment forces in Myanmar to smuggle nuclear materials, weapons and narcotics. He admitted the charges at a federal court in New York.
   According to the department, Ebisawa is a "yakuza leader" who has a criminal network spanning Japan, Thailand and Sri Lanka, among other countries. He was arrested in April 2022 after approaching an undercover agent of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in a bid to acquire U.S.-made surface-to-air missiles for sale to Myanmar's antigovernment forces, in exchange for trafficking nuclear materials and narcotics.
   Samples seized from Ebisawa included weapons-grade plutonium. The sentence will be handed down on April 9, with the maximum possible punishment being life in prison.
   "DEA remains positioned to relentlessly pursue anyone who threatens our national security," its administrator, Anne Milgram, said in a statement.

To read a full story, please click here to find out how to subscribe.

NATION

HEADLINES

POLITICS
Japan, S. Korea Foreign Chiefs to Reaffirm Cooperation at Seoul Meeting Mon.
ECONOMY
End-2024 Loan Balance at Japanese Banks Rises 4.4% to Record 605.85 T. Yen
SPORTS
Soccer: Real Madrid Set to Meet with Barcelona at Spanish Super Cup Final
OTHER
10 Dead, 180,000 Evacuated, 9,000 Structures Damaged in Los Angeles Wildfires

AFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL


Photos