Japan's yakuza mob weakens

Discuss all mafia families in the U.S., Canada, Italy, and everywhere else in the world.

Moderator: Capos

Post Reply
outfit guy
Sergeant Of Arms
Posts: 523
Joined: Sun Sep 18, 2016 3:06 pm

Japan's yakuza mob weakens

Post by outfit guy »

User avatar
Wiseguy
Filthy Few
Posts: 9523
Joined: Tue Sep 16, 2014 11:12 am

Re: Japan's yakuza mob weakens

Post by Wiseguy »

Good article.
All roads lead to New York.
ChristianMB1
Prospect
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun Jun 21, 2020 5:28 am

Re: Japan's yakuza mob weakens

Post by ChristianMB1 »

The Yakuza crackdown has been so brutal because of how public the clans were prior to Japan doing their own RICO in the late 90s.

After the war, the government directly handed off policing to the Yakuza (which had existed underground since the 15th century) because the government was too weak to do anything and it’s within organized crime’s interest to prevent petty crime, and the Yakuza in turn agreed to generally keep civilians out of everything. The government quickly rebounded in a miraculous economic recovery, but the Yakuza was too deeply entrenched by that point to get taken out, so they begrudgingly allowed them to stick around despite how pathetic it made Japan’s LE look. It’s not hyperbole that Yakuza families had giant coroporate-style HQs and that made men were given ID cards.

After the American Mafia got busted due to RICO and new policing technology in the 90s, the Japanese government realized they didn’t have to tolerate powerful organized crime, so they adopted the same legal strategy and technologies in the late 90s-early 00s. At that point, the members never stood a chance. Some people theorize that the Yakuza will recover and go back underground like they existed during Imperial times, but I don’t find that likely because the openness is so fundamental to their operation at this point.

The Yakuza is absolutely done for and will probably not exist at all in 30 years.

If you want some news about Japanese gangland happenings, read up on the “Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi split”. The Yamaguchi-gumi, the largest Yakuza clan, with around 8,000 members, split because their don (oyabun) Keichi Shinoda has no trust amongst the capos. A capo named Kunio Inoue split off to form the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi and took several of the YG’s gangs with him in 2015. There’s been a few shootings and stabbings, but no full-scale war.
Slumpy
Straightened out
Posts: 169
Joined: Thu Jan 14, 2016 10:37 am

Re: Japan's yakuza mob weakens

Post by Slumpy »

The stake to the heart for them was the fact that they registered their members with the government. They know exactly who is involved and at what level so when the Yakuza exclusion ordinances came down it was very easy to ostracize members. It's illegal to employ Yakuza members. They can't even buy cell phones.

But a new breed of organized criminal will promulgate to fill the vacuum eventually, and they will be more secretive.
Post Reply