US court convicts Japanese yakuza for trafficking nuclear material


FILE PHOTO: Yakuza leader Takeshi Ebisawa poses with a rocket launcher during a meeting with an informant and two undercover Danish police officers at a warehouse in Copenhagen in 2021, in a photograph from a Drug Enforcement Administration criminal complaint. - US Magistrate Judge/SDNY/Reuters

NEW YORK: A member of Japan's yakuza crime group was sentenced to 20 years in prison by a New York court on Tuesday (March 3) after being convicted of trafficking nuclear material as well as drugs and weapons.

Takeshi Ebisawa, 61, has been jailed since April 2022 on the drug and weapons charges, along with his Thai co-defendant Somphop Singhasiri, following years of investigations by the US Drug Enforcement Administration.

In February 2024, he was also accused of trying to sell military-grade nuclear material, along with narcotics including heroin and methamphetamine, to buy weapons including surface-to-air missiles for armed groups in Myanmar.

He pleaded guilty to a total of six charges in January 2025.

"Takeshi Ebisawa has been held accountable for his crimes, including an attempt to sell weapons-grade plutonium to Iran and to flood New York with deadly narcotics," said John Eisenberg, the assistant attorney general for national security. - AFP

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

Next In Aseanplus News

US opposes repatriation
Four-day work week as oil prices surge
Another Mekong dolphin born
Southern state to ban social media for under-16s
Gulf conflict snarls fast fashion
China and US to hold high-level trade talks in Paris before Trump’s Beijing visit
Govt to continue to act firmly in tackling leakages, corruption, says Anwar
Trump announces new military coalition to 'eradicate cartels' in Western Hemisphere
Baseball-Suzuki, Ohtani homers help Japan outlast South Korea
Five nabbed in KL over involvement in online gambling

Others Also Read