Two U.S. Marines referred to prosecutors over Tokyo restaurant thefts

Tokyo's Metropolitan Police Department has referred two U.S. Marines to public prosecutors over cash thefts from restaurants. The pair are believed to have carried out more than 10 such crimes nationwide, causing over ¥10 million in damage. They admitted to the allegations, citing family medical expenses as the motive.

Tokyo's Metropolitan Police Department referred two U.S. Marines to public prosecutors on February 13, 2026, accusing them of breaking into restaurants and stealing cash. The suspects, aged 20 and 26, are both stationed at the Iwakuni Base in Yamaguchi Prefecture. Investigative sources indicate the men were on vacation in Tokyo when they allegedly targeted two restaurants in the Kabukicho district of Shinjuku Ward between 7 and 8 a.m. on December 24, 2025, taking a total of about ¥27,000 in cash.

The pair reportedly used an electric tool to force open a key box outside one restaurant and entered using the key inside. Staff discovered the break-in and reported it to police. On the same day, more than ¥10 million was stolen from another restaurant in Shinjuku Ward, and the police are probing whether the Marines were involved.

The suspects are believed to have committed over 10 similar thefts at restaurants across Japan, resulting in more than ¥10 million in total damage. They have admitted to the crimes, stating they did so to cover family medical expenses. Such incidents involving U.S. military personnel can strain U.S.-Japan relations, though further details remain under investigation.

Relaterade artiklar

Tokyo police referred a private lodging operator in the capital and two Chinese nationals, including its leader, to public prosecutors on Tuesday for offering services on weekdays in violation of local regulations and ignoring an improvement order. The suspects have admitted the allegations. The company's 34-year-old leader stated he believed the operations were acceptable because other operators were doing the same.

Rapporterad av AI

Kanagawa Prefectural Police arrested 45-year-old Yoshitaka Mizuno, an employee of a major Japanese trading company, on suspicion of violating the Special Criminal Act under the Japan-U.S. status-of-forces agreement. Mizuno, who had returned from work in Iraq earlier that day, is accused of entering the U.S. Navy's Yokosuka base without authorization on October 23 last year using a fake ID card. The case came to light after he was cited for a parking violation near his home in Tokyo's Minato Ward.

The National Police Agency announced on Thursday that it took action against 1,322 people under the age of 20 last year for crimes linked to tokuryū, anonymous and transient criminal groups. These organizations involved youths in offenses such as fraud and theft.

Rapporterad av AI

A man randomly assaulted four passersby near the north exit of JR Mito Station in Ibaraki Prefecture on Friday evening. The victims, aged 17 to 59, included two with broken noses and two with minor injuries. Police are searching for the suspect, described as a man in his 60s wearing a yellow down jacket, who fled the scene.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj