VK June 26, 2015 at 10:18 pm
Who needs Arudou when you’ve got Pesek?
That's from the comments section of Japanolojism. So There!!!!!!!!!!!!


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VK June 26, 2015 at 10:18 pm
Who needs Arudou when you’ve got Pesek?
kurogane wrote:HA!!!!!!!!!!!! I've been exonerated:VK June 26, 2015 at 10:18 pm
Who needs Arudou when you’ve got Pesek?
That's from the comments section of Japanolojism. So There!!!!!!!!!!!!![]()
Salty wrote:The latest TV news flash is that she has resigned, and Toyota has accepted her resignation. Good too, since she would have had a hard time doing her job from behind bars...
Toyota Motor Corp said on Wednesday Julie Hamp, its first female managing offer, had resigned following her arrest last month on suspicion of illegally importing the painkiller oxycodone into Japan.
The American, who in April had become chief communications officer, notified Toyota of her intent to resign, the automaker said in a statement, adding that it had accepted after "considering the concerns and inconvenience that recent events have caused our stakeholders".
Toyota declined to give further details, citing the ongoing investigation.
Hamp was arrested on June 18 after customs officials found tablets of oxycodone in a parcel shipped to her from the United States. Hamp said she did not think she had imported an illegal substance, according to the police.
Oxycodone is a prescription drug in both the United States and Japan. Bringing it into Japan requires prior approval from the government and it must be carried by the individual.
Following Hamp's arrest, Toyota said it believed that she had no intent of breaking the law.
Hamp was appointed managing officer as part of a drive to diversify Toyota's male-dominated, mostly Japanese executive line-up.
She joined Toyota's North American unit in 2012 and in June relocated to Tokyo, where she was to be based.
"We remain firmly committed to putting the right people in the right places, regardless of nationality, gender, age and other factors," Toyota said in its statement on Wednesday.
Mike Oxlong wrote:Five Scenarios Facing Former Toyota Executive Julie Hamp in Japan
Former Toyota Motor Corp. executive Julie Hamp has resigned from the car maker, but that doesn’t resolve her legal problems. Ms. Hamp, a 55-year-old American, was arrested last month and remains in custody after police said they found oxycodone pills in a package addressed to her. Under Japanese law, those arrested can be legally held for up to 23 days if a judge allows. Ms. Hamp’s detention period is set to end July 8. She couldn’t be reached for comment and the identity of her defense counsel wasn’t clear as of Wednesday. Here are five possible scenarios she’s facing:
http://blogs.wsj.com/briefly/2015/07/01 ... -in-japan/
Mike Oxlong wrote:Five Scenarios Facing Former Toyota Executive Julie Hamp in Japan
http://blogs.wsj.com/briefly/2015/07/01 ... -in-japan/
Taro Toporific wrote:"4. More time in limbo" with multiple re-arrests on additional bogus charges
kurogane wrote:Taro Toporific wrote:"4. More time in limbo" with multiple re-arrests on additional bogus charges
A little unclear on this "bogus" business. She did it, she said she did it, and they know that she knows she did it and said she did it. Is there clear evidence of Replicant machinations and skullduggery??? ::
The shipment arrived at a post office in Kawasaki City, Kanagawa Prefecture on June 10.
In recent years, traffic accidents caused by drivers under the influence of such drugs have caught the attention of the public.
Tokyo prosecutors plan to release former Toyota Motor Corp executive Julie Hamp from custody after she was arrested last month on suspicion of illegally importing the painkiller Oxycodone into Japan, Kyodo News reported on Tuesday.
Japan's daily Yomiuri newspaper reported Hamp was unlikely to be charged because prosecutors judged there was little criminal intent in the case, in which a family member had mailed Oxycodone pills to her to alleviate knee pain.
Kyodo said Hamp, who resigned from her post as chief communications officer last week three months after her appointment as Toyota's first female managing officer, is set to be released without indictment on Wednesday, the latest she can be held without a formal charge.
A spokeswoman for the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office declined to comment on the report.
Citing an unidentified source, the Yomiuri said Hamp had stated that she knew the drug was regulated in Japan, but that she did not consider it an illegal drug.
Japanese media reports, citing police investigators, had said that 57 addictive Oxycodone pills were found in a small parcel labelled "necklaces" that was sent from the United States and addressed to Hamp in Japan. The pills were in packets or buried at the bottom of the parcel, which also contained toy pendants and necklaces, they had said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/07/ ... EG20150707
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I guess they didn't have enough evidence to prove she sent it to herself or that she requested they be hidden. In the end she got publicly humiliated and lost her job. Probably punishment enough. Wonder where she'll end up next. Maybe a pharma company.
Salty wrote:Well, I am truly surprised. I thought for sure that she would be doing time and then deported. If the prosecutors wanted to pursue it, no doubt in my mind that they could have made charges stick. And 23 days – is nothing. They could have gone for extensions.
kurogane wrote: ... PS just for wanky fun, what else could or should the authorities have done?
kurogane wrote:Could we re-direct the last 6 or so posts into the Newbie Paranoid Debito Wannabes Discover Japan thread, please? Seriously, being That American need not be a mental handicap. How many weeks are you guys into your Permanent Holiday in Japan? They kept her so she knew she was being punished, so everybody looking knew she was punished for being a scofflaw, and then they let her go because there was no point in incarcerating somebody too stupid to know how stupid stupid can get (aka Ameridumb), and anything to do with motivations and intent has always been enjoyable wankful speculation anyways. This is just fat cholo Oregonian on Adderrall with a higher profile done the same way. Good for them, major applause for not going Third World (aka Americvnt) on her poor sorry ass, and all the best to her outside of Japan. It couldn't have been easy but she deserved every mofo minute her sad, sorry and painfully entitled retard ass spent in jail, and you Americans need to get a fuckin' brain transplant or something. You're the ones from the Third World. Your country officially sucks poo juice. It's a corporate military camp run by halfwits and sadists. Japan, not so much judging by this. A good and humane result to a sad and potentially appalling story.
PS just for wanky fun, what else could or should the authorities have done?
matsuki wrote:Now take a step back from this case and realize this means anyone who wants to fuck with you can get you a 23day vacation in detention just by mailing you a package with contents that are illegal in Japan. That is just fucked up.
Coligny wrote:matsuki wrote:Now take a step back from this case and realize this means anyone who wants to fuck with you can get you a 23day vacation in detention just by mailing you a package with contents that are illegal in Japan. That is just fucked up.
Yes but it means you they need to send from your country of origine. If not that's might be a bit too far fetched.
So unless you're on a lot of shit list back home you're safe...
Looking back...
Oh shit...
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