Journalists are seen in front of the residence of former Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn in Tokyo on Thursday morning. Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-hoon
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Ex-Nissan boss Ghosn served 4th arrest warrant; calls it 'outrageous'

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alwaysspeakingwisdom Today  08:34 am JST

Announce a press conference

on Twiiter aka the internet

but he was not supposed to use the internet

and he violated the terms of his bail

so

he is now

in jail.

NHK reported yesterday that he was allowed to use the Internet, as long as it was from a computer at his lawyer's office.

Also, well-known public figures usually don't post their own messages on Twitter -- they have a staffer or somebody do it for them. Nothing in Ghosn's bail terms prohibited him from having someone post Twitter messages on his behalf.

And "violating the terms of his bail" was not given as the reason for his arrest.

He was arrested on fresh charges -- not for bail condition violations.

28 ( +31 / -3 )

I tell you, Twitter has gotten more public-eye people in trouble than not! Trump’s continued folly, Trudeau’s comments regarding Saudi, Musk and his stock comments, and the list goes on. And now Ghosn. Don’t uber-wealthy people learn from others’ errors? Sheesh!

20 ( +23 / -3 )

But of course!!

And, once again, he will be detained indefinitely!! Certainly for at least 10 days.... so they can "waterboard" him over these new charges. Without any video recording, without his lawyers present!!!

Funny how they did this the day after he announced a news conference!!!

The J prosecutors are beneath contempt!! They are nothing more than inquisitors from the dark ages!!

13 ( +33 / -20 )

Lets all see what the judge does in less than 48 hours from now.

13 ( +15 / -2 )

Akie, Maehara, abe, Ishihara, so many...may be immune. But just because they are, doesn’t mean he should be too. You can’t just let everybody off. Horimon (live door) didn’t.

13 ( +14 / -1 )

@daito_hak

When you report something. be sure to be honest and report it correctly. I don't know about Brazil and Lebanon, but the above statement about France is utterly wrong. France has a system called in French "détention provisoire" which means temporary detention and which is an exceptional measure with variable duration. This is usually used for serious crimes with serious evidence and when for example releasing the person would constitute a danger for the society. There is no special regime for foreigners, the temporary detention applies equally to anyone regardless of being a foreigner or not, therefore it is used only exceptionally for foreigners too.

Here are the relevant paragraphs from the British government document. I think I have reported the content accurately. If something is incorrect, take it up with the British authorities. I didn’t write the document.

*If you are remanded in custody pending investigations, an Examining Magistrate (Juge d'Instruction) will be appointed for the duration of the investigations which he/she will conduct. The Examining Magistrate may question you from time to time during this remand period. Your lawyer will have access to the judicial file and will be present at any appearances before the Examining Magistrate as will an interpreter. You can be remanded for periods varying from 4 months to 12 months at a time according to the charges and the seriousness of the offence. These periods can be renewed at the request of the Examining Magistrate but have to be agreed to by another judge (juge des libertés et détention). *The period between arrest and trial is often quite long and can vary greatly. From our experience a prisoner can remain on remand up to 24 months.

*

What provision is there for bail?*

*French penal procedure may allow the person charged with an offence or under investigation to remain at liberty (liberté provisoire e.g. remanded on bail). However, *because of the difficulty of guaranteeing that the accused will present themself for further investigation and trial if they are not a resident of France, foreigners charged with an offence are almost invariably placed on remand.

*Applications for bail are also unlikely to be accepted in the case of a person who faces serious charges.* You may be able to obtain bail against a large cash deposit and/or on the condition of residing in France pending the investigation and trial.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/332128/Prisoner_Pack_France_June_2014.pdf

11 ( +14 / -3 )

Announce a press conference to defend yourself against prosecutors innuendo and leaks. And get arrested again within hours. So the mear mention of defending yourself gets you arrested. Prosecutors are doubleling down on exposing their distance from lady justice. Medieval barely expresses the backwards system and those who simply follow orders, as its their best excuse for partaking in an unjust system.

10 ( +28 / -18 )

I get the hostility toward the Japanese criminal justice system, but given its heavy-handed methods, it still doesn't mean that Ghosn is innocent of any of these crimes. He's being charged with funneling a massive amount of money from the company to his family. Sounds like something that needs to be investigated to me.

10 ( +21 / -11 )

the April 11 press conference can still go on, with his lawyer speaking on his behalf.

Ok

What's next? Are they now going to arrest his lawyer on trumped-up charges?

So are you saying a lawyer disseminating prejudicial evidence via the internet shouldn't be held in contempt of court?

ONLY IN JAPAN....

10 ( +18 / -8 )

Ghosn should have kept quiet.

10 ( +18 / -8 )

The BBC, Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times, Bloomberg, CNBN

Yeah right, as if anyone here thinks these guys know better. These news orgs attacking Ghson proves they are fake news

10 ( +15 / -5 )

Just an aside, but does he live in the building shown in the picture? That building was built in the 70s and it is hard to believe a billionaire would live there.

9 ( +17 / -8 )

BS! Other Japanese involved in large scandals were never prosecuted because they were protected by a mafia system.

So by your own admission, they are kept out of the justice systemin the first place. That makes the rest of your post irrelevant.

For the avoidance of doubt, I was referring to those who were formally indicted by the justice system.

7 ( +14 / -7 )

Hopefully he has prepared his lawyer to make the statement in his place on the 11th.

6 ( +20 / -14 )

Arrested again just hours after scheduling a press conference: Japanese "justice" strikes again. The Japanese persecutors are happy to leak their partial and biased version of events to the media, but when Ghosn tries to respond they immediately lock him up.

Meanwhile, the former head of the Japanese Olympic Committee walks away from a corruption scandal: there is zero chance of him being arrested. Friends of Abe accused of rape are not allowed to be arrested. Bureaucrats sell off public land cheaply to Abe's mates and the prosecutors see nothing wrong: no arrests are made there either.

I think it's disgusting that the Japanese "justice" system completely ignores crimes committed by those connected to Abe, but they go after Ghosn like a pack of rabid dogs. It's a disgrace.

6 ( +19 / -13 )

The omens for Reiwa are not good, if Japan's politicians do not seek to bring their legal processes into the form more befitting of a democratic state of law and justice.

Go Carlos. I am cheering for you.

5 ( +20 / -15 )

Anyway, he really must have something shocking to say that they want to hide and arrested him again within LESS than 12 hours after his tweets.

He’s hired a set of hot shot lawyers. They can say anything that needs to be said. That’s what he is paying for.

Just an aside, but does he live in the building shown in the picture? That building was built in the 70s and it is hard to believe a billionaire would live there.

It has been reported that he had trouble finding a landlord who would rent to him.

To grant bail in the first place says foreigners are treated differently to locals, and for bail conditions to be so ambiguous just top off the tenuous nature of laws in Japan.

According to British government advisories, the three countries where he holds citizenship (France, Brazil, and Lebanon) typical typically do not grant bail to foreign nationals. Those same advisories say foreign nationals will spend 24 months in pretrial detention in France, 18 months in Brazil, and as long as the authorities want to hold you in Lebanon.

Even Renault is turning on him and the French are investigating him.

I am surprised that no one else has mentioned this. The BBC, Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times, Bloomberg, CNBN, and others have all reported that Renault has turned over evidence of questionable activities by Ghosn to French authorities. Renault has also decided to terminate his pension.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47808730

The French prosecutor is at this time of writing only investigating the case of his wedding at Versailles which according to his lawyers in France, the matter is really not a big deal even if proven.

Not true. There is much more to it than that.

Renault SA and partner Nissan Motor Co. have uncovered payments made under Carlos Ghosn that allegedly went toward corporate jets, a yacht and his son’s startup, leading the French carmaker to alert authorities about potential wrongdoing, according to people familiar with the matter.

The transactions at Renault, Nissan and their Amsterdam-based venture RNBV were revealed in probes and amounted to millions of euros to companies in Oman and Lebanon that may have then been used for the personal benefit of former head Ghosn and his family, said the people, who asked not be be named because the details aren’t public.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-04-02/ghosn-s-spending-on-yacht-jets-is-said-to-draw-renault-scrutiny

5 ( +16 / -11 )

Face it! Carlos Ghosn was treating Nissan as his own private piggy bank, taking 10s of millions of dollars for his private use. He deserves what he gets! All of it!

Not until the incompetent prosecutors prove up there cases. Think they can do it without a confession?

5 ( +6 / -1 )

All most certainly guilty. If he confessed straight away, he could of already served 6 months of his jail time.

some people are so gullible, why should a person confess to crimes they didn't commit, "almost certainly" does not equal guilty, its the J prosecutors job to compile evidence to show 100% guilt, then a confession isnt required. Many Japanese have spent years in prison for crimes they didnt commit and in almost all cases it was the J prosecutors not doing their jobs correctly that stole those persons freedom and lives from them. Now imagine if it was one of your family members wonder if people would have so much blind faith in Japans justice system then. This isnt about Japan bashing its basic human rights

4 ( +20 / -16 )

He is guilty as hell and so happy today he is back in jail. people just dont get it, if hes guilty as hell why has the trial started , prosecutors should have mountains of eveidence and dont even require a confession, should be a fast trial with the judge reading a guilty verdict.

did you come to this conclusion from all the leaked information by the J prosecutors to the media? these same prosecutors who have a history of manipulation evidence, forced confessions leading to false prison terms. Unless you have a direct phone number to the prosecutors office then it would seem youve concluded your information from these media leaks. LMFAO

4 ( +19 / -15 )

but he was not supposed to use the internet and he violated the terms of his bail

NHK reported yesterday that he was allowed to use the Internet, as long as it was from a computer at his lawyer's office. He was arrested on fresh charges -- not for bail condition violations.

so it seems the prosecutors dont want him to tell his side of the story, since he clearly didnt break any terms of his bail. Facts are a biatch

3 ( +17 / -14 )

@bullfighter

The document you refereed to is incomplete and does not constitute a full description of the French law in any shape or form. It just describes the general procedure associated with the temporary detention system and does not clarify that it is an exceptional measure as I explained. In Japan temporary detention is not exceptional but rather is applied without rules in place to protect the defendant. See for example the recent story of a young US citizen being kept in jail for months now for basically no reason other than breaking a lamp. That does not happen in France. And in France as it is also written in the document you linked, a lawyer will have access to the judicial file and will be present at any appearances before the Examining Magistrate. This is not the case in Japan, so by definition your comparison between France and Japan makes no sense.

3 ( +6 / -3 )

This whole thing stinks to high heaven. Nissan loved G when they were broke and he was a savior. In fact, the auditor brought these issues to Nissan's attention early in his tenure and Nissan said to forget about it. 

Only later when Renault was trying to take over Nissan were these issues (which he probably is guilty of) "suddenly discovered". Of course like any good corporate citizen, Nissan went straight to the police (excuse me while I *** myself laughing).  

The cops thought 23 days in jail would break him. It didn't, so they re-arrested him 2 more times before he made bail, which is really rare in Japan. The entire justice system is predicated on getting the suspect to confess regardless of what the evidence says. 

As to the new arrest, I think the Police and the Prosecutor are getting desperate. They didn't like it that he made bail. They really don't like criminal suspects giving press conferences and setting the narrative. So they have re-arrested him on a "new" charge to ether break him or shut him up.

3 ( +5 / -2 )

Keep at it, Ghosn. Make the prosecutors actually do their jobs and prove up the cases against you instead of merely relying on a confession.

Japan should be absolutely ashamed at its "justice" system.

3 ( +5 / -2 )

He may not tell the truth but he deserves a chance to talk.

Don't let him run away, and let him have the conference.

2 ( +16 / -14 )

This is an internal matter that should have been dealt with by Nissan. Ghosn should never have been arrested in the first place. As Ghosn stated, this is only about keeping him quiet and not allowing him to hold a press conference. He is being railroaded by a kangaroo court system in a corporate coup. It's an absolutely disgusting situation that should not happen in a so-called 'modern' country.

2 ( +17 / -15 )

This is the most draconian farce I've ever seen. He's being prosecuted in the court of public opinion with a one-sided story. One thing is for sure, I will never buy a NIssan as long as I live. This may have nothing to do with the quality of their cars but I won't give money to anybody who smears an innocent man.

2 ( +17 / -15 )

@goodlucktoyou: There are no 'plea-deals' in Japan. You can serve some of your sentence in your home country, but from application, which you can't file UNTIL you've served half your time has been take taking people on average another 3 years to get approved.

2 ( +6 / -4 )

All any of us want to know is the truth so obviously Ghosn should have just made a press release rather than warning he would do it. No reason his lawyer or his representative cannot do this on his behalf at any time though so bring it on.

Is against natural justice for Japanese police to keep these new charges in reserve. What else are they holding back? How many times can they do this?

How many times can a man be arrested? Or is he forever damned? The answer my friend is blowing in the wind...

2 ( +5 / -3 )

A mea culpa.

As regards the " third world " in my earlier post, I don't mean to imply that buying of freedom from justice by the rich or " First" world leaders twisting " third" world for favors is condoned. It's not, they don't like it and are appalled every time it happens, but it's a reality the world over that rich people are almost always judged by a different yardstick. " Third" world countries , too , do have their own shares of the good, the bad and the ugly, probably prone to abuse by the rich. In THIS instance, we have ALWAYS expected BETTER from a " First" world country that Japan ought and portrays itself to be.

2 ( +4 / -2 )

This is becoming a game of poker where the stake get higher and higher, The Japanese prosecutors are ramping up the charges, which raises the stakes, IF, they are right they win, if not they loose, but there is more than money at stake here, Mr Gosan and the prosecutors could win or loose a lot of reputation. This has become a international scandal, I am sure the prosecutors will want a solid conviction and they are confident that they will get one, but the world media is watching with great interest, if it goes wrong who knows what the backlash will be on Japan, will they be judged as being old fashioned, archaic judicial system, it could have an impact on investments as investors could think why should I invest in a so called backward thinking country, would I get any help? it could come across as its stacked all against any investors or business wanting to do business with Japan, is it a good safe bet? probably not, it all depends on the out come of the court trial.

2 ( +4 / -2 )

Rather than complain here, simply don't buy anything Nissan.

Sadly it seems Ghosn doesnt have any high profile friends to promote his cause, unlike those how are against the Sultan of Brunei, so he's pretty much on his own.

I would be very interested to see an investigation into the relationships between the Nissan Execs and the Judiciary within Japan.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

Is this embarrassing in terms of a modern Japan?

1 ( +17 / -16 )

Even Renault is turning on him and the French are investigating him. 

The French prosecutor is at this time of writing only investigating the case of his wedding at Versailles which according to his lawyers in France, the matter is really not a big deal even if proven. Also an investigation does not mean he is guilty.

I have no sympathy whatsoever for the man. 

Nobody cares about what is your sympathy for him.

 Conspiracy theories of him being set up are ludicrous to say the least 

That's not the point. Again the point is that he is being put in jail for arbitrary charges and without being proved guilty. It's amazing how people are avoiding the real issue just for the sake of blindly defending Japan.

thankfully the prosecutors here aren't that silly

Ah yeah, so for example what is your comment on them refusing to prosecute and charge the people involved in the Kake Gakuen scandal whose wrong doings have been actually proven? This is your double standard which is actually silly and ludicrous

1 ( +15 / -14 )

Maybe the movie of all of this will be a comedy?

1 ( +1 / -0 )

What a disgusting farce all this is. The so called "prosecutors" just want to stop Ghosn telling the truth to the world at the press conference. This case makes Japan look so bad and just like a 3rd world country.

And yes as I said when this farce started, he should just have escaped from Japan to a country with no extradition treaty. With his wealth it would have been easy to arrange his escape. He is never going to get any justice in Japan who just have to send him away for many years to save face.

0 ( +20 / -20 )

ironsword Today  08:18 am JST

What a disgusting farce all this is. The so called "prosecutors" just want to stop Ghosn telling the truth to the world at the press conference. 

And that wouldn't even work anyway -- the April 11 press conference can still go on, with his lawyer speaking on his behalf.

What's next? Are they now going to arrest his lawyer on trumped-up charges?

Ghosn may very well be guilty, and if he is, he should be punished.

However, the criminal justice system in Japan is well behind the times, and engages in practices unbecoming a free and modern country.

They do things I'd expect to see in some third-world tin-pot dictatorship, not a country that is supposed to be a first-world democracy.

0 ( +13 / -13 )

Absolutely ridiculous. Let's keep throwing more possibly trumped up charges against Ghosn to detain him again so he doesn't expose Nissan's internal issues.

Let the man speak. It may show that he was complicit to some extent with orchestrating his compensation, but it definitely will expose Nissan's hand in all of it as well. Oh, we can't have that, can we. What a farce.

0 ( +14 / -14 )

I don't know whether he's innocent or guilty of the charges at hand, but the lack of transparency in Japan's legal system make it very difficult to find the truth in the whole matter. If this all goes to trial, I doubt it will be a fair one regardless of his actual guilt or innocence, so it's situations like this that Japan really needs to consider a proper jury system instead of the half-baked tatemae lay judge thing going on now.

0 ( +14 / -14 )

disgusting.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

No wonder he cheated on his taxes or whatever the heck he did...just look at his apartment!

They obviously weren't paying him enough; poor guy is the CEO of a 600-lb gorilla and he's roughing it in a 2-LDK where his toothpaste freezes in the winter as he's sucking in carbon monoxide fumes, schlepping kerosene jugs up the stairs?

Was INTERAC renting him out to Nissan, or what?

0 ( +0 / -0 )

So by your own admission, they are kept out of the justice systemin the first place. That makes the rest of your post irrelevant.

Please read properly people post or stop pretending you don't understand. You should be understanding that I am precisely talking about the fact that Japanese justice system does not rely on rule of law but rather is directly influenced by external entities, the government being one of them. So that makes my post totally relevant and calling it irrelevant precisely shows that you don't have arguments to reply to it.

-1 ( +13 / -14 )

Ghosn should have kept quiet.

and why should he, the prosecutors and Nissan continually leak information of his case on a almost weekly basis

-1 ( +15 / -16 )

Prosecutors are desperate for a conviction, to save face and their 99% record. Otherwise careers will stall, and transfers to remote offices will follow. The establishment fear a loss of their authority.

-1 ( +13 / -14 )

LOOK, the vast majority(myself included), point the REAL, 3rd world, dictator dream "justice system" Japan has & employs MOSTLY against JAPANESE btw.

All we want is to see a FAIR trial, if the prosecutors have the evidence, by all means toss Ghosn in jail! But this system of forced confessions & forced detention with no lawyers etc is truly barbaric, I mean we see this in China, NKorea, Russia etc, why on earth does Japan want to be in that crowd...… and make no mistake Japan IS!

Some of us wish for BETTER from Japan, sadly its NOT happening & in fact getting worse over time...……...

-1 ( +13 / -14 )

Should I laugh? or cry? BRAVO Japanese prosecutors, this is a total hatred. 28 days of freedom for 9 million USD, meaning $321,428.57 per day this is a profitable deal for Japan.

-1 ( +3 / -4 )

There is a Japanese criminal law that covers "aggravated breach of trust"?  Maybe so.   Were these transactions executed in, or from Japan?  Does Japan have standing?  It isn't illegal to cause a company to lose money, and it happens all of the time.

-1 ( +1 / -2 )

The telling thing is at the initial arrest, a representative of the Prosecutors office gave a statement saying that other countries should respect the Japanese system? Why would you have to do that? Unless they know it's hardly a defensible argument. On average 30 years incarceration and its exposed the prisoner was innocent. Courts ruthlessly accept a confession after the defendant says it was forced. Carlos might have broken some laws he might not have, but you just can't trust the Japanese legal system to make a decision that involves truth.

-2 ( +13 / -15 )

I get the hostility toward the Japanese criminal justice system, but given its heavy-handed methods, it still doesn't mean that Ghosn is innocent of any of these crimes.

That's not the point. The point is that his rights of the defense and his rights of innocence until proven otherwise are not respected precisely because he is being kept in jail for an outrageous amount of time without being proved guilty. Why people can't understand that?

This new arrest did not come without any reason. It came under the action of Nissan pushing the prosecutors for it because they knew Ghosn wanted to talk publicly about the matter soon and they don't want that. This is disgraceful that prosecutors and the justice system can be manipulated like that.

-2 ( +13 / -15 )

All most certainly guilty. If he confessed straight away, he could of already served 6 months of his jail time. He is wasting everybodies time and his. He could of done a plea deal, spent 5 years here, then deported to France for another 5 years in prison. But his choice is 6 months on remand, 15 years in prison then deportation to France for another 5 years in prison. If I was super rich. I would go for the 10 year option then retire in my many multimillion dollar mansions and luxury cruisers.

-2 ( +13 / -15 )

Agree with other posters here defending Ghosn's actions. He is not guilty because CEOs should be free to spend company money any way they see fit and do what they want. At least this is the case in more civilized countries in the West where CEOs are protected

-2 ( +12 / -14 )

See for example the recent story of a young US citizen being kept in jail for months now for basically no reason other than breaking a lamp. That does not happen in France.

The guy is also charged with assaulting a cop, not just breaking a lamp. Generally, in Japan if you cause property damage, you make restitution, say you are sorry, and you walk away. This applies to gaijin as well as Japanese. At least one Japan Times gaijin editor can testify to this.

I cannot speak to a French equivalent, but one example of "American justice" that even critics of Japan have had to acknowledge is the case of young American man who spent three years in jail, mostly in solitary confinement, with no charges being brought. After his release, he committed suicide.

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/09/nyregion/kalief-browder-held-at-rikers-island-for-3-years-without-trial-commits-suicide.html

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/24/nyregion/kalief-browder-settlement-lawsuit.html

I personally think that limits need to be placed on Japanese prosecutors but I also think that the Japanese treatment of Ghosn needs to be compared with the reality of countries like the US and France, not their ideals.

I would also note that the British document is based on the experience of British authorities in helping Brits busted in France. In other words, it is based on French reality, not French legal theory.

-2 ( +1 / -3 )

Announce a press conference

on Twiiter aka the internet

but he was not supposed to use the internet

and he violated the terms of his bail

so

he is now

in jail.

-3 ( +20 / -23 )

Who predicted it? SmithinJapan? Anyway, he really must have something shocking to say that they want to hide and arrested him again within LESS than 12 hours after his tweets. I hope he made tons of videos with his side of the story. And more outrage needed.

-3 ( +14 / -17 )

@'WISDOM'

Read the news properly - Nothing to do with the Twitter post. That was made on his behalf. These are further 'charges' referring to some 'payments' in Oman. Probably a load of old tosh - but nevertheless. Totally embarrassing for the legal system to do this however...and yes probably bought about by the announcement of a press conference. But he has most definitely not violated his bail conditions.

Yes - he has been staying in that apartment as Nissan terminated the lease in the Mushroom Building in Azabu. I love close by and see the press camped out.

-3 ( +13 / -16 )

shame on nissan, rnault, mitsubishi, and prosecutors.

how low they can go to destroy a person.

-3 ( +15 / -18 )

Hahaha this made my day. Good to hear the thief is back where he belongs!

Good Faith Investments?? What a troll and he should get another decade just for that. Well done to the prosecutors!

-3 ( +15 / -18 )

Japanese prosecutors absolutely hate when people defy them and keep silent during interrogation, hate it with every single fiber of their body and also afraid, because if they wont get him atleast on something ,every and each exec prosecutor will be shamed and most likely demoted.at this point its about saving their legal career.

That said, this additional arrest simply means they dont think they are able to get the original charge stick 100% and he has quite good chance of getting innocent, so they try to get anything at all to stick... it would be very interesting to see what they can find illegal in using a fund that is legally under his discretion .

-3 ( +13 / -16 )

Also , I really hope he had his speech prepped for delivery by lawyer ... at this point he shouldnt really care about saving nissan image so I truly hope he spills all their grey doings.

-3 ( +11 / -14 )

I have always being saying that bullying runs in the Japanese genes

this is nothing but bullying, harassment justice.

They are probably out to take back all the remunerations he received from Nissan

in the form of bail money.

Most companies, Ministries and even the prime ministers office all keep secret slush funds

which is used at the discretion of those handling the fund and the public is never informed

how the funds are used.

-3 ( +12 / -15 )

Does he get his bail money back? Will he have to apply for bail once again?

-4 ( +7 / -11 )

This whole thing is just casting the Japanese criminal justice system and the Nissan senior management as a farce. I can't believe they're pushing this so much. What a joke.

-4 ( +13 / -17 )

the Prosecutors office gave a statement saying that other countries should respect the Japanese system? 

I do not respect this system at all. They are just playing a game of chess now.

Next move to apply for Bail again. Then they’ll have something else oh Ghosn.

-4 ( +11 / -15 )

Don't let him run away, and let him have the conference.

how could he , he was monitored almost 24/7 and surrendered his passports, cant have a conference if your back in detention again how convenient for the prosecutors.

-4 ( +11 / -15 )

I would want my 1 billion yen back pronto. With interest. Anyway, he is suspected of something else, not yet guilty, so it seems a bit over the top to drag you out of your home at 5 o’clock in the morning. Even Japanese lawyers think this additional arrest is way over the top. It was funny when the news show I was watching mentioned in closing “wonder how kaigai will be judging us once again over our judicial system, shinpai da”.

-4 ( +11 / -15 )

Nobody cares about what is your sympathy for him.

Why are you getting so triggered and even responding to me then? He is guilty as hell and so happy today he is back in jail. Think I'll be happy for a decade at least too haha

-4 ( +13 / -17 )

I take extreme offence to those saying Japanese justice system is like a third-world country. No !! besides " third world " being an econo- capitalistic construct, Ghosn would lo......ng have bought his freedom or have France lean on the " third- world" leader to release him and would now be enjoying himself in a paradise somewhere.

Japan just has an EVIL justice system especially when it comes in collision with foreigners. It's a system meant to DOMINATE or SUBJUGATE foreignness, affirm and sate their inate need for superiority. I know, I SHOULD know, I went through it in a Civil case. It was NOT civilized.

-4 ( +10 / -14 )

Face it! Carlos Ghosn was treating Nissan as his own private piggy bank, taking 10s of millions of dollars for his private use. He deserves what he gets! All of it!

-4 ( +2 / -6 )

Shogun era democracy, this is no democracy

-5 ( +12 / -17 )

An elite criminal getting arrested for committing an incredible number of crimes? How outrageous!

He was putting on weight again so it's nice to see he'll get back down to a healthier size

-5 ( +14 / -19 )

Even Renault is turning on him and the French are investigating him. I have no sympathy whatsoever for the man. Conspiracy theories of him being set up are ludicrous to say the least and thankfully the prosecutors here aren't that silly

-5 ( +14 / -19 )

If I was a billionaire possibly facing spending my golden years in jail I'm run away to a country which does not have an extradition treaty with Japan

-6 ( +14 / -20 )

At this point in time it seems both prosecutors & defense are making themselves look bad, but the prosecutors are used to it by now I guess having been doing so for so many decades & counting

-6 ( +11 / -17 )

Ghosn has upset the harmony of Saikawa and Nissan and the Tokyo prosecutor's office. So....commanded harmony. Reiwa!

-6 ( +10 / -16 )

The Tokyo prosecutors are emulating the Chinese secret police, the North Korean secret police and the Gestapo with a dash of vindictiveness and defensiveness characteristic of passive/aggressive behavior. Japan is really becoming a police state and their treatment of Ghosn is a bleak display of this jackboot behavior by the prosecutors. Of course, the French will do nothing about this. Ghosn's lawyers will speak out and they really need to go all in a la Saul Alinsky (wonder how many readers know about Alinsky) to isolate, divide and polarize individual prosecutors and police. So much for reiwa....

-6 ( +10 / -16 )

I predicted his arrest just hours before it happened..

anyway, he should have fled. he is never going to receive justice in Japan, the system is a farce.

-7 ( +14 / -21 )

I can't imagine how a Japanese lawyer, judge, or police could be proud of their system.

-8 ( +6 / -14 )

By defamation of Carlos, will decrease the stock price further so they can buy out the remaining shares. 7/11 Japan bought out the main US headquarters so now 7/11 is Japanese, how is it any different?

-9 ( +5 / -14 )

According to British government advisories, the three countries where he holds citizenship (France, Brazil, and Lebanon) typical typically do not grant bail to foreign nationals. Those same advisories say foreign nationals will spend 24 months in pretrial detention in France, 18 months in Brazil, and as long as the authorities want to hold you in Lebanon.

When you report something. be sure to be honest and report it correctly. I don't know about Brazil and Lebanon, but the above statement about France is utterly wrong. France has a system called in French "détention provisoire" which means temporary detention and which is an exceptional measure with variable duration. This is usually used for serious crimes with serious evidence and when for example releasing the person would constitute a danger for the society. There is no special regime for foreigners, the temporary detention applies equally to anyone regardless of being a foreigner or not, therefore it is used only exceptionally for foreigners too. In any case, the rights of the defense is fully respected contrary what Japan does.

Now instead of using the fallacious argument which tells to people to look somewhere else, you better respond to the case in place, that is the Japanese system being manipulated by Nissan and not respecting Ghosn's rights.

Not true. There is much more to it than that.

> Renault SA and partner Nissan Motor Co. have uncovered payments made under Carlos Ghosn that allegedly went toward corporate jets, a yacht and his son’s startup, leading the French carmaker to alert authorities about potential wrongdoing, according to people familiar with the matter.

> The transactions at Renault, Nissan and their Amsterdam-based venture RNBV were revealed in probes and amounted to millions of euros to companies in Oman and Lebanon that may have then been used for the personal benefit of former head Ghosn and his family, said the people, who asked not be be named because the details aren’t public.

> https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-04-02/ghosn-s-spending-on-yacht-jets-is-said-to-draw-renault-scrutiny

No, what you are referring to are first of all so far allegations. You also don't understand that even if the French prosecutor may have received an inquiry from Renault, they have not officially opened yet a formal investigation concerning the Oman allegations, which means that I am right.

Why are you getting so triggered and even responding to me then?

I am responding because precisely nobody cares that you have no sympathy for Ghosn, that's irrelevant to the matter.

He is guilty as hell and so happy today he is back in jail. Think I'll be happy for a decade at least too haha*

Yeah, yeah, you did not allow yourself to declare people guilty when Japanese executives or politicians were caught for their wrongdoings, so why are you doing that for him?

-9 ( +5 / -14 )

That should say I'd

-10 ( +4 / -14 )

Ghosn is very lucky that prosecutors did not charge and arrest him for each month or week separately. That would be a new Guinness record!!!

-10 ( +1 / -11 )

I don't know whether he's innocent or guilty of the charges at hand, but the lack of transparency in Japan's legal system make it very difficult to find the truth in the whole matter. 

This!

-10 ( +3 / -13 )

Ghosn should have kept quiet.

and why should he, the prosecutors and Nissan continually leak information of his case on a almost weekly basis

Why should he? Because you don’t let your enemy know what you’re doing. He should of kept quiet until the press day.

-11 ( +2 / -13 )

Well done Tokyo prosecutors Well done!! Enjoy the cup noodles Ghosn.

-12 ( +20 / -32 )

A little bit arbitrary. Why would the court release him in the first place ? Either Nissan has a much stronger case now, or the court made a huge mistake past. Ghosn is a victim, obviously, of the flip-flop. Hopefully, he is OK emotionally.

-12 ( +7 / -19 )

Ghosn has sent hundreds of millions of dollars to his family and overseas "friends" for vague reasons (like buying a boat). This is all money produced by low paid factory workers etc. We need to embrase socialism.

-12 ( +7 / -19 )

Heavy lies the head that wears the crown.

-12 ( +0 / -12 )

The only issue worth noting about the Japanese justice system is that it's a farce. To grant bail in the first place says foreigners are treated differently to locals, and for bail conditions to be so ambiguous just top off the tenuous nature of laws in Japan. AND, for the defendant to declare publicly, prior to trial, his intention to clear his name via the internet, makes a complete mockery of the court.

Even if Ghosn lose, he's managed to destroy the integrity of the Japanese justice system, and my guess is he is probably ROTFL.

-14 ( +9 / -23 )

I get the hostility toward the Japanese criminal justice system, but given its heavy-handed methods, it still doesn't mean that Ghosn is innocent of any of these crimes.

Yes but the hostility is not just about Ghosn's harsh treatment, I personally think the system is so flawed, Ghosn is already receiving relatively better treatment than what a local Japanese would receive. I also think, with his new celebrity attorney, he is likely to get off, ie found not guilty of charges.

-15 ( +6 / -21 )

I kinda feel he is guilty, something my 6th sense feel about it. But then Japan is not treating him properly as Japan is giving him the raging years.

Let's see about the final chapter, probably in few days or weeks. Case needs to be closed soon, it's becoming an old book.

-15 ( +4 / -19 )

Very slick, Nissan.

They had this charge in their back pocket to serve up in case it was needed, and turns out, they felt this time it was needed to silence him.

Well played, Nissan. Well played.

-16 ( +2 / -18 )

but he was not supposed to use the internet

HAHAHA, he's not supposed to do alot of things, has he cared?

He had his lawyer request how the prosecution should run their case yesterday, and because his lawyer has celebrity status, tge court will probably grant his request.

-22 ( +2 / -24 )

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