Unlicensed part-time job analyzing cell phones and identifying commanders, no pay – seven cases of serial robberies jointly investigated by police in four prefectures
Police authorities believe that an anonymous, mobile crime group is involved in a series of robberies that have occurred in the Tokyo metropolitan area, and are rushing to identify the mastermind behind them. The key lies in analyzing mobile phones. To prevent the investigation from reaching him, the leader uses a highly confidential app and assigns young people he has gathered through illegal part-time jobs to roles such as carry out the operations and act as lookouts. A senior investigator said, “There are bound to be holes. We have confiscated many mobile phones and will piece together the data through analysis,” he said emphatically. The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department and the Saitama, Chiba, and Kanagawa Prefectural Police established a joint investigation headquarters on the 9th. Seven robberies that took place in four prefectures are being investigated as possibly being related. Seven of the cases occurred between late August and early October. Several men armed with weapons broke into the homes of elderly people and pawn shops, assaulted people, stole money and valuables, and then fled. The cases in Nishi Ward, Saitama City, Tokorozawa City, and Kokubunji City all have similar methods, with the victims being bound with adhesive tape. In the Tokorozawa City incident, the Saitama Prefectural Police arrested four suspects, including self-proclaimed part-time worker Seijun Sato (25), who is believed to be the perpetrators, and Morita Rikiya (24), whose occupation is unknown, on suspicion of robbery and assault. Both suspects have also hinted at their involvement in the Kokubunji incident. There are also notable cases in which a single suspect is suspected of being involved in multiple crimes, such as the arrest of company employee Yuji Todoroki (24) by the Kanagawa and Chiba Prefectural Police in connection with the incidents in Atsugi and Yachiyo. According to the Joint Investigation Task Force, the mastermind communicated with the perpetrators through multiple accounts on the highly confidential app “Signal.” So far, it has been discovered that in two cases in Saitama Prefecture and the incident in Kokubunji City, and in two cases in Kanagawa Prefecture and the incident in Saitama Prefecture, some of the account names of the leaders were the same. A total of about 25 people were arrested in connection with this series of incidents, including not only the perpetrators but also those who were alleged to have acted as lookouts, disposed of stolen goods, and transported accomplices. Many of them applied for illegal part-time jobs on social media but did not receive any payment. Despite being advertised as a “white-collar job” or “driver job,” there were cases where workers were threatened into taking part in a robbery or instructed to commit another robbery when they went to collect their payment. The Metropolitan Police Department is collecting cell phones of related suspects and is rushing to analyze them, and a senior investigator commented, “There’s no point in just catching low-level suspects. We have to go through each and every phone and poke them up,” he said. Meanwhile, another executive said, “Even if they threaten you with illegal part-time work, they won’t kill you. Please talk to the police and those around you.” 2024-10-14 07:07 Jiji.com *Related thread [Chiba] The suspect in the “illegal part-time job” robbery in Chiba, Yachiyo, was identified as Kishimoto Ranmaru through smartphone analysis of a suspect in a different case [Tarumon ★]. https https
I guess it’s the people who call people stupid for working for free who get caught. The idiots who jump to conclusions without even looking at >>1 are the ones who get caught. Anyone who has had their personal information leaked in the first place will get caught.
Although the names used by young people working shady part-time jobs aren’t necessarily DQN names, many of them are given names that make them easy to identify.
>>15 Apparently, you’re screwed as soon as they ask for your ID. You can’t show the real thing, and even if you show a fictitious ID for an investigation, under current law it would be considered a forgery of a public document.
The LDP/Komeito leader Ishiba Gerard will continue to increase the number of poor people, so there will be an endless supply of people to carry out the actions.
There was a Yakuza on 5ch going crazy about the Philippines, but these guys were part of that same lineage lol. Looking at their faces, they looked more like the bullied underdogs than Yakuza lol. These guys were bossed around by those scrubs, gave up their lives, got prison time, and ended up unpaid lol. I wonder what kind of life those guys who did shady part-time jobs had in their lives lol.
The low-level Yakuza have always been disposable. Nowadays, it’s just the idiots who don’t realize they’re Yakuza and apply for shady part-time jobs who are being weeded out lol.
>>49 This kind of thing is legal as a sting operation The problem is that the sting doesn’t get any information from higher-ups Only a fool would apply, but there are fools who apply lol.
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