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    • Japanese gangsters

      • yakuza, Japanese gangsters, members of what are formally called bōryokudan (“violence groups”), or Mafia -like criminal organizations. In Japan and elsewhere, especially in the West, the term yakuza can be used to refer to individual gangsters or criminals as well as to their organized groups and to Japanese organized crime in general.
      www.britannica.com/topic/boryokudan
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YakuzaYakuza - Wikipedia

    Sumiyoshi-kai. Inagawa-kai. Yakuza (Japanese: ヤクザ, IPA: [jaꜜkɯdza]; English: / jəˈkuːzə, ˈjækuːzə /), also known as gokudō (極道, "the extreme path", IPA: [gokɯꜜdoː]), are members of transnational organized crime syndicates originating in Japan. The Japanese police and media (by request of the police) call them ...

  3. 5 days ago · Key People: Taoka Kazuo. yakuza, Japanese gangsters, members of what are formally called bōryokudan (“violence groups”), or Mafia -like criminal organizations.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Yakuza (Japanese: ヤクザ, [jaꜜkɯza]), also known as gokudō (極道, "the extreme path"), are members of transnational organized crime syndicates originating in Japan. Syndicates. Four largest syndicates.

    Name
    Japanese Name
    Headquarters
    Reg. In
    関東関根組
    Tsuchiura, Ibaraki
    2018
    絆會
    Amagasaki, Hyogo
    2018
    神戸山口組
    Kobe, Hyogo
    2016
    浪川会
    Omuta, Fukuoka
    2008
  5. Aug 20, 2023 · Yakuza organizations are under the leadership of an oyabun or kumichō, who issues directives to their subordinates, known as kobun. In this context, the Yakuza ranking structure reflects a variation of the traditional Japanese senpai-kōhai (senior-junior) model.

    • The Ninkyo Code and Humanitarian Aid
    • How The Yakuza Began with Japan’s Social Outcasts
    • Why The Yakuza Are More Than The Japanese Mafia
    • Tattoos and Rituals of A Yakuza Member
    • A History with The Drug Trade and Sexual Slavery
    • How They Started “Legitimate” Real Estate
    • The Yakuza Enter The Business World
    • The Fall of The Yakuza
    • A Criminal Public Relations Campaign

    In the spring of 2011, Japan was devastated by one of the most brutal tsunamis and earthquakes in the country’s history. The people of the Tōhoku region saw their homes torn to shreds, their neighborhoods shattered, and everything they knew lost. But then help arrived. A fleet of more than 70 trucks poured into the towns and cities of Tōhoku, fille...

    Japanese Yakuza history begins with class. The first Yakuza were members of a social caste called the Burakumin. They were the lowest wretches of humanity, a social group so far below the rest of society that they weren’t even allowed to touch other human beings. The Burakumin were the executioners, the butchers, the undertakers, and the leather wo...

    It didn’t take long before the Japanese Yakuza was a full-blown group of criminal organizations, complete with their own customs and codes. Members are meant to observe strict codes of loyalty, silence, and obedience — codes that have remained throughout Yakuza history. With these codes in place, the Yakuza were like family. It was more than just a...

    Part of what signifies Japanese Yakuza members’ loyalty is how they will change their very appearance. New Yakuza members would cover themselves from head to toe in elaborate, complex tattoos (in the traditional Japanese style known as irezumi), slowly and painfully etched onto the body with a sharpened piece of bamboo. Every part of the body would...

    Historically, the Japanese Yakuza have largely carried out what many would consider to be relatively small-time crimes: drug dealing, prostitution, and extortion. The drug trade, in particular, has proven extremely important to the Yakuza. To this day, nearly every illegal drug in Japan is imported by the Yakuza. Among the most popular is meth, but...

    Up until recently, the Japanese Yakuza have been at least somewhat tolerated. They were criminals, but they were useful – and sometimes, even the government took advantage of their unique skills. The Japanese government has called on them for help in military operations (though the details remain hazy), and in 1960, when President Eisenhower visite...

    After getting into real estate development, the Japanese Yakuza moved into the business world. Early on, the Yakuza’s role in white-collar crime was mostly through something call Sōkaiya – their system for extorting businesses. They would buy enough stock in a company to send their men to stockholder meetings, and there they would terrify and black...

    And as they made deeper inroads into the world of legitimate business, the days of Yakuza violence were waning. Yakuza-related murders – one Japanese gangster killing another – were cut in half in a few short years. Now it was white-collar, almost-legal business – and the government hated that more than anything. The first so-called “anti-Yakuza” l...

    All that pressure just might be the real reason why the Yakuza have become so generous. The Yakuza wasn’t always involved in humanitarian efforts. Like the police crackdown, their good deeds didn’t really start until they moved into white-collar crime. Journalist Tomohiko Suzuki doesn’t agree with Manabu Miyazaki. He doesn’t think the Yakuza are he...

  6. Sep 15, 2015 · Yakuza members were, according to Reuters, arrested in 2013 for infiltrating the construction giant tasked with the Fukushima cleanup and providing illegal workers.

  7. Aug 22, 2023 · The Yakuza is a complex and formidable criminal force within Japan. Distinguished by their distinctive tattoos and stringent moral code, Yakuza members hold membership in one of the world’s most affluent criminal networks.

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