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Illegal Scouting Group Cracked Down On Simultaneously in Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka; Searches in Three Cities, Executives Arrested

On the 18th, police authorities simultaneously searched an illegal scouting group in the three cities of Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka, arresting a total of 12 executives and others on suspicion of violating the Employment Security Act. The group maintained a nationwide network, referring scouted women to sex-industry venues across the country.

Illegal Scouting Group Cracked Down On Simultaneously in Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka; Searches in Three Cities, Executives Arrested

Overview of the Simultaneous Nationwide Searches

Under coordination by the National Police Agency, the Metropolitan Police Department, Aichi Prefectural Police, and Osaka Prefectural Police carried out a joint search on August 18, 2022 against the illegal scouting group "Black Star" (tentative name). They simultaneously searched 12 locations across the three cities of Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka, arresting a total of 12 of the group's executives and middle managers on suspicion of violating the Employment Security Act (unlicensed operation of fee-charging employment placement).

The Group's Organization and Methods

Black Star had a three-tier organizational structure of "supervisors," "area managers," and "field scouts," with several to more than a dozen members stationed in each city.

The method—beginning with street pickups, followed by contact via social media and an "interview" at a family restaurant, then gradual steering toward the sex industry—is common to other illegal scouting groups. Many of the women who became victims said, "At first it was a story about ordinary modeling or hospitality work."

The Wide-Area Nature of the Crackdown

This sweeping crackdown shows that a single scouting group had cast its organization across multiple major cities, and that handling it through a single police station or single prefecture is insufficient. The National Police Agency stated, "As a response to wide-area crime, we will continue to strengthen multi-jurisdiction cooperation."


This article is compiled based on publicly available information.