Mitsubishi UFJ Bank reports that a former employee stole customer assets worth billions from safe deposit boxes at two Tokyo branches. The employee has been dismissed.
Nippon TV News NNN Mitsubishi UFJ Bank announced that a former employee had stolen customer assets from a safe deposit box. After interviewing the individual, the total amount of damage is estimated to be around several billion yen. The incident is said to have taken place at two branches in Tokyo: Nerima and Tamagawa. The former employee admitted to his actions and has already been dismissed. Mitsubishi UFJ Bank stated, “We are investigating the facts in consultation with the police to fully clarify the matter, and are reporting our findings to supervisory authorities and other relevant authorities.”
>The total damages are estimated at several billion yen. Assuming the bank that employs them pays the full amount, how much will the employees have to pay? 100-200 million?
The former employee admitted to his actions and has already been dismissed. It was the same with Nomura Securities, don’t report this as a former bank employee, report it as a factory worker at the time.
>>24 The Tokyo Central Bank in Naoki Hanzawa was modeled after Mitsubishi UFJ, but Mizuho Bank was closer to the Tokyo Central Bank in terms of its involvement with real anti-social forces (Tokyo Central made illegal loans to pseudo-anti-social forces, but Mizuho made illegal loans to real anti-social forces) and the inevitable administrative punishment (Tokyo Central avoided punishment, but Mizuho was punished).
The tax office leaks tax payment information to prefectural tax offices, and it seems that the employees of the prefectural tax offices sell the information of high-income taxpayers to illegal businesses.
I’m sure even the person himself doesn’t know this. I can see the registration identification information and coins and jewels, but I can’t figure out the cash.
He stole a billion yen worth of goods, so there’s no way he’ll get away with just dismissal. He should be held criminally liable and he should also be made to pay compensation.
The quality of the employees has gotten worse since they cut down the number of stores. I went there recently and they didn’t even know how to reissue my credit card.
It seems like it would be pretty hard to gather evidence. There’s no way there would be footage of the customer putting something in the safe deposit box, right?
This happened at multiple branches and for a large amount of money, so I wonder why it wasn’t discovered until now. In response to the complaint that something that had been put in there had disappeared, it was never lost. The customer’s memory was wrong, so maybe it was left unattended for years?
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