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Russell wrote:Hmm, facing up to 15 years in prison in Lebanon.
Grumpy Gramps wrote:Russell wrote:Hmm, facing up to 15 years in prison in Lebanon.
Looks like the Japanese bribing machine has already started rotating. A thing, they are obviously a lot better at than keeping en eye on Ghosn
Japanese court checked Ghosn's 24/7 surveillance video just once a month
The Japan Times | 2020/01/04
Nissan’s former Chairman Carlos Ghosn, who skipped bail and turned up in Lebanon, was last seen on surveillance video leaving his Tokyo home alone, presumably to board his getaway plane.
Although the security cameras at his home were on 24 hours, the footage was only required to be submitted to the court once a month, on the 15th...
More laughs...
Russell wrote:...did not issue a Resident Card for Foreigners to him...With that he could've traveled inside Japan, and he would not have needed his passport. It is just unbelievable how stupid the Japanese authorities were.
Taro Toporific wrote:...intentional...
Grumpy Gramps wrote:Taro Toporific wrote:...intentional...
Thought crossed my mind, too. They just might not have enough evidence to justify the long time, Ghosn was under arrest already, let alone make him rot in jail for even longer. This way, the problem just "goes away" (literally). Would be a very Japanese "solution" to a potentially embarrassing conundrum.
And Trump kind of stoopid is now socially acceptable, or so I've heard.
TOKYO — Carlos Ghosn was aided in his escape from Japan by an American security consultant who accompanied him on the flight out of the country, a person familiar with the matter said, while a Turkish charter jet company said on Friday that its planes were used illegally to pull off the plan.
The Japanese news media also reported on Friday that surveillance camera footage showed the disgraced auto industry mogul leaving his Tokyo home by himself on Sunday, a day before he turned up in Beirut, Lebanon.
With the new details, a clearer — if still imperfect — picture is emerging of how Mr. Ghosn, Japan’s most prominent criminal defendant, managed to evade authorities. The American consultant, a former United States Green Beret named Michael Taylor, was introduced to the disgraced auto executive by Lebanese intermediaries months ago, said the person, who asked not to be identified to discuss a sensitive issue.
Turkish media outlets have reported that Mr. Taylor and another American were the only people listed as passengers on a manifest for the flight that carried Mr. Ghosn from Japan to Turkey. On Friday, MNG Jet, an aircraft charter company, said one of its employees had falsified records to remove Mr. Ghosn’s name from the official documentation for two flights.
Taken together, the disclosures paint a picture of a dash across Japan to a waiting plane. Still, most of the details of his getaway remain unconfirmed by authorities in Japan, Turkey or Lebanon.
[...]
Mr. Taylor, a former member of an Army Special Forces team, works as a security consultant. He was once hired by The New York Times to assist in the rescue of David Rohde, then a Times reporter, who was kidnapped by militants in Afghanistan and held for seven months in Pakistan’s tribal areas. Mr. Rohde ultimately escaped on his own in June 2009.
Mr. Taylor was indicted in 2012 for his role in a plan to obstruct a federal fraud investigation into bid rigging of Defense Department contracts. He served time in prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud, but the government returned $2 million that had been taken from him, as well as two Land Rovers, according to court records.
Mr. Taylor’s involvement in Mr. Ghosn’s escape was earlier reported by The Wall Street Journal.
The news accounts of Mr. Ghosn’s flight match the records of a Bombardier business aircraft operated by MNG Jet that took off from Osaka just after 11 p.m. local time and landed in Istanbul about 12 hours later, according to data from FlightAware, a flight tracking service.
MNG Jet said it had no indication the two flights were connected. It said that it filed a criminal complaint in Turkey on Wednesday and that it “hopes that the people who illegally used and/or facilitated the use of the services of the company will be duly prosecuted.”
The company said the employee who falsified flight records had confessed to acting alone, without management’s knowledge. MNG Jet did not disclose the employee’s name.
Five people — four pilots and MNG Jet’s operations manager — were sent to pretrial detention by a Turkish court, according to local media reports, and an official at the ground services provider Havas said prosecutors had released two of its employees.
The jet company has also transported gold out of Venezuela, helping the government there in its efforts to raise cash, according to Caracas Capital, an investment bank that has been tracking the gold shipments. The movement of MNG’s jets through Venezuela were confirmed by online flight trackers.
MNG is the “go-to company if you want to have something done,” said Russ Dallen, the managing partner at Caracas Capital.
The five people detained in Istanbul were charged with smuggling an undocumented migrant, Turkish news agencies reported on Saturday. MNG Jet’s operations manager, who was identified by local media outlets as Okan Kosemen, told investigators that he had been asked to help in an important international matter by a former contact in Beirut and that he and his family had been threatened if he did not comply, according to state-run news agencies.
It is not clear how Mr. Ghosn, who was under heavy surveillance in Tokyo, eluded the authorities and make his way to Osaka, which is roughly 300 miles west of Tokyo.
In Japan on Friday, news outlets reported that Mr. Ghosn walked out of his Tokyo home alone on Sunday but never came back. The news reports cited anonymous sources with knowledge of footage of the cameras surrounding his rented house in a central district of the city.
Prosecutors are investigating whether Mr. Ghosn, after leaving his home, met up with a group that helped his escape to Lebanon, according to the national broadcaster NHK and the economic daily Nikkei Shimbun.
The footage described in the news reports was from security cameras installed in front of the two-story house in the city center, the outlets reported. Three surveillance cameras had been installed above the doorway of Mr. Ghosn’s house as part of a bail agreement that placed tight restrictions on his movements.
On Saturday, Turkey’s justice minister, Abdulhamit Gul, said in a television interview on Saturday morning that two foreigners had been involved in the incident.
Mr. Gul added that Turkish prosecutors would continue with their investigation. “There is no judicial request from the Japanese authorities yet,” he said.
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Carlos Ghosn was recently asked to run GM. He declined.
J.A.F.O wrote:How have you been Coligny? long time... for both of us I see
Russell wrote:Carlos Ghosn was recently asked to run GM. He declined.
Could it be sour grapes from GM?
Obama sought Ghosn to run GM, Rattner says - Automotive News
Sep 3, 2010 · The Obama Administration initially wanted Nissan-Renault CEO Carlos Ghosn to run GM after Rick Wagoner was ousted in 2009, and repeatedly pressed Fiat to put up cash for a stake in Chrysler
Russell wrote:Grumpy Gramps wrote:Taro Toporific wrote:...intentional...
Thought crossed my mind, too. They just might not have enough evidence to justify the long time, Ghosn was under arrest already, let alone make him rot in jail for even longer. This way, the problem just "goes away" (literally). Would be a very Japanese "solution" to a potentially embarrassing conundrum.
And Trump kind of stoopid is now socially acceptable, or so I've heard.
I do think they did not have sufficient evidence to justify his long detention.
But I find it hard to believe that they let him go intentionally, because that would involve some lost faces. Now Ghosn is gone, wouldn't they have his trial in absentia? If they cancel his trial, there is a chance that it is intentional.
Russell wrote:So, he left his home around noon on 29 December, and took off from Kansai Airport at 23:00. That leaves an 11 hour gap, which is enough to travel by car from Tokyo to Osaka. I'm sure Ghosn didn't take the Shinkansen...
Reports have emerged about how the fugitive former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn managed to jump bail in Japan, as the country’s justice minister said border controls would be bolstered after the audacious escape.
The 65-year-old executive skipped bail nearly a week ago, fleeing Japan where he had been awaiting trial on multiple counts of financial misconduct, which he denies.
The details of his escape remain sketchy, with Japan saying it is still investigating how he managed to slip past strict security measures imposed as part of his bail conditions.
Citing people involved in the investigation, Nippon Television Network (NTV) reported on Monday that Ghosn had boarded a Shinkansen bullet train from Tokyo’s Shinagawa station on 29 December.
He got off at a station in western Osaka, arriving about 7.30pm, and took a taxi to a hotel near Kansai airport, NTV said.
He is thought to have taken a private jet the same day from the airport, bound for Istanbul, where he switched planes and continued to Beirut.
Local media reported last week that Ghosn had been caught on a security camera leaving his Tokyo home by himself at around noon on 29 December.
The exact circumstances of his flight from Japan remain shrouded in mystery.
The justice ministry said it did not have a record of Ghosn leaving Japan. “It is believed that he used some wrongful methods to illegally leave the country,” the justice minister, Masako Mori, said at a press conference on Monday.
“I have instructed the immigration agency to further tighten the departure process,” she added.
Carlos Ghosn: an arrest, an escape, and questions about justice in Japan
The Wall Street Journal has reported that Ghosn was loaded on to the flight from Osaka in a large audio equipment case, which was later found at the back of the cabin.
The newspaper cited unnamed sources close to the investigation in Turkey as saying that holes had been drilled into the bottom of the container to ensure the businessman could breathe.
Japan’s transport ministry told AFP that luggage checks were not mandatory for private jets.
“Operators of private jets decide if luggage checks are necessary or not while airline operators are obliged to conduct security checks under Japan’s aviation law,” a ministry official said.
“The security checks are carried out to prevent danger such as bombs, and to prevent hijacks,” he said, adding such risks were considered less likely for private jets.
[...]
Japan has launched an investigation into the humiliating security lapse, with prosecutors saying they would “coordinate with the relevant agencies to swiftly and appropriately investigate the matter”.
Ghosn has vowed to give his own account at an eagerly anticipated press conference in Beirut this week.
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Grumpy Gramps wrote:And all the thousands of people on the shink/in the stations/hotel didn't recognize Ghosn because "all gaijin look alike?" Pretty risky move. More must be to this, I think.
Grumpy Gramps wrote:And all the thousands of people on the shink/in the stations/hotel didn't recognize Ghosn because "all gaijin look alike?" Pretty risky move. More must be to this, I think.
Grumpy Gramps wrote:Not sure, how familiar the typical nosy baa-chan is with the case/face; I didn't talk about it within my J-mishpoche. Though the shink is a trap; once you're in there, you are committed; there is no plan B.
Grumpy Gramps wrote:I wonder, if anyone will stream the press conference later on YouTube et al
Mike Oxlong wrote:Grumpy Gramps wrote:I wonder, if anyone will stream the press conference later on YouTube et al
I've got CNBC queued up on YouTube for the live broadcast, and a bottle of Sortilege whisky.
Japan has hit back at Carlos Ghosn after the former Nissan boss’s criticisms of the country’s justice system after his dramatic escape to Lebanon, as Beirut prosecutors issued a travel ban for the fugitive.
Masako Mori, Japan’s justice minister, on Thursday accused Ghosn of making “abstract, unclear or baseless assertions” about the Japanese criminal justice system, and said his flight was unjustified.
Lebanese prosecutors issued a travel ban for Ghosn after an Interpol red notice requesting his arrest, the Associated Press reported. Ghosn, who headed both Nissan and Renault before his arrest, was also questioned by the authorities in Lebanon over a 2008 visit to Israel, deemed an enemy of the Lebanese state, for the French carmaker.
[...]
His escape, despite supposed constant supervision, has left Tokyo scrambling to respond. It has also put a spotlight on Japan’s justice system, which has been criticised as heavy-handed and unfair by human rights groups.
In a second statement on Ghosn within 24 hours, Mori said descriptions of “hostage justice” were “off the mark”.
She defended Japan’s 99% conviction rate, saying prosecutors only brought cases where they were almost certain of success. The system was designed “to avoid an innocent person to suffer from the burden of bearing judicial expenses”, Mori said. “The basic human rights of a suspect are duly taken into account by giving adequate break to the suspect during the interrogation.”
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Russell wrote:Any boxes and green berets for rent over there in Lebanon?
Grumpy Gramps wrote:And the Japanese only put another nail in their own moral coffin by issuing an arrest warrant for Ghosn's wife a day before the press conference. You can't go much lower than that.
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