Senior ‘Luffy’ crime group member gets life sentence over Japan robberies


A crime group in Japan had used monikers such as “Luffy” after a popular manga character. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

TOKYO (Agencies): A Japanese court sentenced on Monday (Feb 16) a senior member of a crime ring that orchestrated robberies across Japan from the Philippines to life in prison as prosecutors demanded.

Toshiya Fujita, 41, was convicted by the Tokyo District Court of charges that include robbery resulting in death, becoming the second of the group’s four ringleaders to be found guilty, as reported by Kyodo and Japan Times.

Members of the group used monikers such as “Luffy” after a popular manga character.

According to the ruling, Fujita conspired with Kiyoto Imamura and Yuki Watanabe, both senior figures in the group and aged 41, to remotely carry out a robbery by dispatching men to a house in Komae, Tokyo, in January 2023.

The court said Fujita played a “crucial role” in the crime.

A 90-year-old woman was robbed of valuable items, including watches, and died from traumatic shock resulting from the incident in which the intruders entered the house disguised as parcel deliverers.

In July 2025, Tomonobu Kojima, a 48-year-old senior member of the crime ring, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for helping plan robberies and introducing Fujita to people recruited to carry them out. Kojima has appealed the ruling. -- Agencies

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

US$17 billion question: why China and South Africa are so far apart on trade data
Aaron-Khai Xing bow out in Swiss Open quarters
All six US service members killed in plane crash over Iraq
China slams US trade probe ahead of Paris talks
Sixteen illegal immigrants detained in Johor raids
Malaysian peacekeepers unharmed after Israeli airstrike near Unifil post in south Lebanon
Media plays key role in tackling evolving crime landscape, says Bukit Aman CID director
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Friday (March 13, 2024)
Petrol prices in Singapore surpass highs set during the Ukraine crisis in 2022
Asean will keep energy and food trade open as war roils markets

Others Also Read