The Yakuza Landscape Today

Golden Crimes: Growing Smuggling Problem Exposed by High-Profile Robberies

Society

Gold smugglers who evade consumption tax requirements at Japanese customs can make large profits by selling the precious metal at tax-inclusive prices. The trade has expanded since the 2014 hike in consumption tax to 8%, and the huge sums of money involved have led to robberies of gold and cash.

Nagoya Fall Guys

The Noguchi brothers are well-known underworld figures in their Nagoya base. As leaders of a hangure gang, they have a history of automobile and other theft, attracting the attention of police authorities. They are also known as free spenders with a taste for night life.

With a wide circle of acquaintance, the Noguchis seem to take some influence from local yakuza gangs and hangure groups in the Kantō region. They basically assembled a team for the Fukuoka job, however, from friends and associates. Lured by the prospect of easy money in what they believed was a mutually agreed gold heist, they ended up the fall guys of the whole affair.

So, who was pulling the strings behind the scenes?

“There was definitely some kind of mafia group elsewhere in Asia involved,” says the investigating police officer. “They’re systematically smuggling gold into Japan for huge profits. At the heart of it, there must be a leadership battle in the gold smuggling business. We believe it likely that someone gave out information about a rival’s transaction to set a trap.”

Profits in the gold business are simple and based around Japan’s 8% consumption tax. While in many other countries, gold transactions are not subject to consumption tax, in Japan they are. Domestic sales prices always include tax. Gold importers have to pay the tax at customs, but smugglers who bypass this requirement can achieve an 8% profit margin simply by selling at the tax-inclusive price.

next: A Gold-Smuggling Triangle

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