An alleged leader from Japan’s Yakuza crime syndicates has pleaded guilty to trafficking nuclear materials from Myanmar as part of a global web of trades in drugs, weapons and laundered cash ...
A Japanese Yakuza leader has pleaded guilty in the US to conspiring to traffic nuclear materials from Myanmar. Takeshi Ebisawa "brazenly trafficked nuclear material, including weapons-grade ...
An alleged leader in Japan’s Yakuza pleaded guilty on Wednesday to charges of attempting to traffic nuclear material sourced from war-ravaged Myanmar with the understanding that Iran would use ...
The leader of a Yakuza Japanese crime syndicate who was charged by US officials with trafficking nuclear materials from Myanmar has admitted guilt, the US Justice Department has said in a statement.
A leader from Japan’s Yakuza crime syndicate has admitted to ‘brazenly’ trafficking nuclear material from Myanmar to be used by Iran. Takeshi Ebisawa was captured during an undercover ...
9 (UPI) --A leader of Japan's Yakuza crime syndicate who tried to ... alleging he tried to sell nuclear material secured from Myanmar to an undercover federal agent posing as an Iranian general.
The nuclear material came from an unidentified leader of an "ethnic insurgent group" in Myanmar who had been mining ... sent to Ebisawa's attorneys. The Yakuza membership shrunk to 20,400 in ...
They described the Yakuza as a 300-year-old Japanese crime ... Ebisawa’s global network crisscrossing Japan, Thailand, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Denmark, and the U.S., dating back to ...