Kenichi Shinoda: Difference between revisions
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| name = Kenichi Shinoda<br>篠田建市 |
| name = Kenichi Shinoda<br>篠田建市 |
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| image = Shinobu Tsukasa, the head of the 6th Yamaguchi-gumi.jpg |
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| caption = Shinobu Tsukasa before his 2005 arrest |
| caption = Shinobu Tsukasa before his 2005 arrest |
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{{nihongo|'''Kenichi Shinoda'''|篠田 建市|Shinoda Ken'ichi|born January 25, 1942}}, also known as {{nihongo|'''Shinobu Tsukasa'''|司 忍|Tsukasa Shinobu}}, is a [[yakuza]], the sixth and current ''kumicho'' (supreme [[Crime boss|Godfather]]) of the [[Yamaguchi-gumi]], [[Japan]]'s largest yakuza organization.<ref>Johnston, Eric, "[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110410b1.html Yakuza don exits the big house]", ''[[Japan Times]]'', 10 April 2011, p. 2.</ref> |
{{nihongo|'''Kenichi Shinoda'''|篠田 建市|Shinoda Ken'ichi|born January 25, 1942}}, also known as {{nihongo|'''Shinobu Tsukasa'''|司 忍|Tsukasa Shinobu}}, is a [[yakuza]], the sixth and current ''kumicho'' (supreme "[[Crime boss|Godfather]]") of the [[Yamaguchi-gumi]], [[Japan]]'s largest yakuza organization.<ref>Johnston, Eric, "[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110410b1.html Yakuza don exits the big house]", ''[[Japan Times]]'', 10 April 2011, p. 2.</ref> |
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==Career== |
==Career== |
Revision as of 19:40, 26 September 2014
Kenichi Shinoda 篠田建市 | |
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File:Shinobu Tsukasa, the head of the 6th Yamaguchi-gumi.jpg | |
Born | Ōita, Ōita Prefecture, Japan | January 25, 1942
Other names | 司 忍 Shinobu Tsukasa |
Kenichi Shinoda (篠田 建市, Shinoda Ken'ichi, born January 25, 1942), also known as Shinobu Tsukasa (司 忍, Tsukasa Shinobu), is a yakuza, the sixth and current kumicho (supreme "Godfather") of the Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan's largest yakuza organization.[1]
Career
Shinoda was born in Ōita, Kyushu.[2]
He began his yakuza career in 1962 when he joined the Hirota-gumi, a Nagoya-based Yamaguchi-gumi affiliate. Following the disbanding of the Hirota-gumi, he founded the Kodo-kai with Kiyoshi Takayama among others in 1984 as the successor to the Hirota-gumi.
Under Shinoda and his long-term partner Takayama, the Kodo-kai was a successful branch of the Yamaguchi-gumi, establishing branches in 18 prefectures—including expansion into the Kantō region, traditionally not Yamaguchi territory.
Shinoda took control of the 40,000-strong gang on July 29, 2005 after the retirement of previous don Yoshinori Watanabe. Under Shinoda, the Kobe-based Yamaguchi-gumi is expected to continue that expansion into Tokyo and Eastern Japan. According to both yakuza and police, this movement will inevitably create conflict between the Yamaguchi-gumi and the Kanto-Hatsukakai, a federation of Tokyo-based yakuza groups including the Inagawa-kai and the Sumiyoshi-kai.
Shinoda is the first Yamaguchi-gumi kumicho not to hail from the Kansai region. He also eschews the "supreme Godfather" image, in public at least: after his appointment as kumicho, he insisted on taking the train to his induction ceremony instead of a chauffeured limousine. He also reportedly stopped in a street ramen noodle restaurant on the way to the lavish yakuza banquet arranged in his honor.
Arrests
In the early 1970s, Shinoda was convicted of murdering a rival yakuza boss with a katana, and spent 13 years in prison.[3] He was also involved, as the head of the Kodo-kai, in the Yamaguchi-gumi's numerous historic yakuza wars. Notably his achievements at the Yama-Ichi War in the late 1980s was a major reason for his entrance into the Yamaguchi-gumi's Kobe headquarters.[4]
On December 4, 2005, only four months after being named kumicho, Shinoda began serving a six-year prison sentence for gun possession after the Japanese Supreme Court finally rejected his appeal of a 1997 conviction. In the 1997 case, one of his bodyguards was caught with an illegal pistol, and Shinoda was convicted of "conspiring" with the bodyguard.[5] He was released just under eight months early on April 9, 2011.[6]
U.S. sanctions in 2012
In 2012 the Obama administration of the United States imposed sanctions on him as the leader of the Yamaguchi-gumi, along with his second-in-command Kiyoshi Takayama.[7] The sanctions also targeted several individuals linked to three other transnational organized crime groups, the Brothers' Circle of Russia, the Camorra of Italy, and Los Zetas of Mexico.[8]
References
- ^ Johnston, Eric, "Yakuza don exits the big house", Japan Times, 10 April 2011, p. 2.
- ^ "Pre-Notification For Upcoming Designation Of Transnational Organized Criminal Elements : IDENTIFYING INFORMATION : YAKUZA : Entry 1 : Yamaguchi-gumi : Person 1 : Kenichi Shinoda" (p.2) Malta Financial Services Authority
- ^ "All-out turf war feared in Japanese underworld", 7 February 2007, The Guardian and "Japan's largest gang group changes its head for the first time in 16 years", August 30, 2005, Epoch Times (using katana / against a yakuza boss) Template:Zh icon
- ^ The Outline of the Yamaguchi-gumi, p.228, Kenji Ino, December 2008, Chikumashobo Ltd., ISBN 978-4-480-06463-9 Template:Ja icon
- ^ Police wary as Yamaguchi-gumi prepares to fete sixth don | The Japan Times Online
- ^ "Japan frees Yamaguchi-gumi crime boss Kenichi Shinoda", 9 April 2011, BBC
- ^ "US steps up offensive against Japan's yakuza gangs", 24 February 2012, The Guardian
- ^ "US moves to isolate Russian, Japanese crime groups", 23 February 2012, AFP