
Hard-Up Yakuza Struggle to Earn a Living
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A Century of the Yamaguchi-gumi
To see how the yakuza came to rule a vast business empire, we must look back at the history of its most successful gang, founded over a century ago.
In 1915, a former fisherman named Yamaguchi Harukichi gathered some 50 Kobe longshoremen together to form the original Yamaguchi-gumi. In addition to dock work, the group became involved in managing performers of naniwabushi, a popular form of recitation accompanied by music, operating gambling joints, and providing security at theaters.
Yamaguchi’s son Noboru took over the organization, but died in 1942 at the age of just 41 from injuries sustained in a fight. During World War II, most of Japan’s young men were in the military, so the Yamaguchi-gumi was largely inactive. It was not until Taoka Kazuo was named as the third-generation leader in June 1946 that the gang’s fortunes truly began to rise.
The prewar yakuza were largely divided into the bakuto, who ran gambling operations, and the tekiya, who set out stalls at festivals. Drinking rituals created quasi-paternal and -fraternal bonds within the organizations, which were both feared and relied on by local businessmen and citizens. However, their income was unstable and would sometimes dry up.
Taoka was a bakuto and had been hard up during the war. When he became leader, he vowed to ensure all members would have legitimate employment. This was a landmark transformation in the history of the yakuza dating back to the Edo period (1603–1868) and a first step toward the Yamaguchi-gumi becoming modern yakuza.
Taoka took the lead in forming companies. He became president of a construction firm named Yamaguchi-gumi and founded a company to supply longshoremen in Kobe’s port. He also set up an office at his home for a talent agency.
Affiliates started their own companies in such areas as construction, dock work, finance, and real estate. The Yamaguchi-gumi became a corporate body with the capacity for violence. An astute combination of these two aspects led to its national dominance. From the 1950s, the gang was sustained by the success of singing superstar Misora Hibari and the wrestling exploits of Rikidōzan. Taoka himself was vice-chairman of the Japan Pro Wrestling Alliance, which Rikidōzan established.
The Yamaguchi-gumi approached other yakuza groups to suggest putting on shows together. Agreement brought mutual benefit, but refusal meant possible reprisals. The gang’s power attracted money, which funded even greater power in turn. By the mid-1960s, it was Japan’s largest criminal organization, with 10,000 members and a national presence.
This success drew police attention, however. From 1964, the authorities set their sights on arresting Taoka. The first stage of the police strategy was to cut him off from his sources of income. He was forced to resign successively as president of the dock work company and a board member of the talent agency. With these moves, he withdrew from legitimate business.
From this point onward, the gang no longer ran companies directly. Instead, it handed its business over to corporate shatei, or “younger brothers”—businessmen outside the organization with whom it had close ties. The shatei ran the finance, real estate, and other companies, covertly paying their dues and calling on the gang when they needed muscle. Despite the clear relationship, it was difficult for the police to limit the activities of these external operators who had undergone no formal drinking ritual to officially put them in the yakuza.
This business model became standard under Taoka, and the Yamaguchi-gumi went from strength to strength. Taoka died in 1981 at the age of 68. His successor, Takenaka Masahisa, took over in 1984, but was gunned down the following year, sparking the Yama-Ichi War of 1985–87—a gang conflict between the Yamaguchi-gumi and the Ichiwa-kai, which had splintered off due to a succession struggle in the main group. Watanabe Yoshinori then effectively ran the organization as wakagashira for several years before officially taking the position of fifth-generation leader in April 1989.
Senior members of the Yamaguchi-gumi talk to the press at the home of its leader Taoka Kazuo on November 1, 1978, following an assassination attempt on Taoka. Pictured are Oda Hideomi, Yamamoto Ken’ichi, and Yamamoto Hiroshi. (© Jiji)
Yamaguchi-gumi Timeline
1915 | Founded in Kobe. |
1946 | Taoka Kazuo becomes third-generation leader and the gang enters a period of rapid growth. |
1981–84 | A leaderless period following Taoka’s death. |
1984 | Takenaka Masahisa becomes fourth-generation leader. |
1985–87 | A faction known as the Ichiwa-kai forms in opposition to Takenaka’s appointment. One of its affiliate members shoots Takenaka, starting the Yama-Ichi War, involving more than 300 clashes. |
1989 | Watanabe Yoshinori of the Yamaken-gumi based in Kobe becomes fifth-generation leader. |
1997 | Watanabe’s second-in-command, Takumi Masaru, is shot by a member of the rival gang Nakano-kai. |
2003 | Clashes take place between the Yamaguchi-gumi and Tokyo’s Sumiyoshi-kai in the Kita-Kantō War. |
2005 | Tsukasa Shinobu (born Shinoda Ken’ichi) of the Kōdōkai group in Nagoya becomes sixth-generation leader. |
August 2015 | The Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi splits from the main organization under the leadership of Inoue Kunio. |
April 2017 | The Ninkyō Dantai Yamaguchi-gumi splits from the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi under the leadership of Oda Yoshinori. It later changes its name to the Ninkyō Yamaguchi-gumi. |
Tightening Legal Restrictions
Under Watanabe Yoshinori, the Yamaguchi-gumi reached its peak earning capacity in the final years of the bubble era. It became the center of the criminal world, with leadership over ultranationalists, corporate extortionists, and motorcycle gang members used as a reserve corps. However, the state was no longer able to ignore the gang’s vast funds and the illicit means used to acquire them.
Crackdowns began. As globalization accelerated, the yakuza members’ status as gangsters who could proudly display their faces and crests was an increasingly obvious anomaly compared with their peers in other countries. The state staked its pride on stamping them out.
The Act on Prevention of Unjust Acts by Organized Crime Group Members came into force in 1992. The government intensified its attack with numerous follow-up amendments. An expanded interpretation of conspiracy connected underlings’ crimes to the kumichō, who also became a target for damages under civil law. The yakuza’s vaunted pyramid structure began to crumble. By 2005, when Tsukasa Shinobu rose to leadership, the gang was putting an ever-greater emphasis on not doing anything that would harm the kumichō. At the same time, jikisan were enduring the squeeze of higher tribute payments.
Local ordinances drove a wedge between gangsters and their civilian collaborators by legally considering anyone who associated with the yakuza to themselves be “antisocial forces.” By October 2011, this sort of legislation was active in all 47 of Japan’s prefectures. Celebrity Shimada Shinsuke was forced to retire from show business in August of the same year because of his ties to organized crime. The offering up of this popular TV star as a sacrifice sent a powerful message to society. Gang members were not allowed to have bank accounts or rent property, and were effectively deprived of their rights to make a living.
Yakuza organizations are now getting by with drastically reduced income. Despite their swaggering front, they risk complete collapse. And nobody knows that better than the gangsters themselves.
(Originally published in Japanese on September 11, 2017. Text by Itō Hirotoshi. Banner photo: Guns and other smuggled items recovered from the Inagawa-kai gang on display at Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department Headquarters on August 21, 2006. © Jiji.)