Authors: Robert Whiting
The aforementioned ‘Black Current’ article by Kyodo, April 2, 1992, was also informative, as was the article in the respected weekly
Shukan Asahi, ‘Hachi Nin No Shisha Tachi No Sagawa Jiken’
[‘The 8 Deaths of the Sagawa Incident’], December 18, 1992, pp. 27–29, which describes, among other things, the suicide of Hiroshi Aoki, former chief secretary to former PM Noboru Takeshita, found hanging from a rope in his Tokyo apartment, with his wrists and ankles slashed for good measure, on April 26, 1989, the morning after Takeshita announced his resignation. (The resignation and the suicide followed the disclosure that Aoki had obtained 50 million yen from an employment firm called Recruit Cosmos in a shares-for-favors scandal in 1989. However, it was widely rumored that there were other factors that had driven Aoki to kill himself, and the authorities regarded his death as an impediment to the Sagawa investigation.) The article also discusses the demise of Yasutoshi Kuwabara, chief secretary to Takeshita in his home province of Shimane, who also hanged himself in June 1991. Kuwabara thus became the twenty-fifth political aide to have committed suicide to atone for or cover up scandal in the postwar era. In addition, there was the former Diet member connected to the case who died unexpectedly from ‘water on his lungs’ in 1991, while resting in a Tokyo hospital to ‘stay away from the media’.
Takeshita was the fourth postwar prime minister to resign because of scandals. His successor lasted three months before being ousted in a sex scandal and was followed by two more prime ministers in the next four years.
The sequence of events describing West Tsusho, its activities in the United States, its relationship with Prescott Bush, and the revelation the company was a gang front were made in documents obtained from the US Securities and Exchange Commission by the Japanese Kyodo News Service and published on June 8, 1991, in the
Asahi Shimbun, Nikkan Sports, Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Asahi Evening News
, and
Japan Times
of the same day.
The author also relied on ‘Web of Intrigue’,
Far Eastern Economic Review
, March 19, 1992; Robert I. McCartney, ‘The President’s Brother Is Sued’, Washington Post Service, June 17, 1992; and the follow-up story, ‘Sagawa Tied to Yakuza over Golf Course in New York’,
Mainichi Daily News
, February 18, 1992.
CRAZY WONG AND THE GOLD SCAM
The gold scam story was related by Nick Zappetti, longtime Tokyo jeweler Ome Asakura, better known as ‘Crazy Wong’, and Yutaka Mogami, who translated some court documents in relation to Wong’s suit. Franco and Roberto have fled to parts unknown.
The first quote by the Akasaka boss was confirmed by Nomura and Zappetti’s wife Yae.
There are minor discrepancies in the respective accounts. Wong says he may
have had a receipt for $40,000, as described by Zappetti, but that he can’t remember for sure. He did say that he had obtained a receipt for the
entire
amount, however, which he procured some days after his purchase of the fake gold, something which Zappetti did not mention. Zappetti said that he thought Crazy Wong, being the professional that he was, had been able to tell whether the rest of the gold was real or not. Wong said he only went along with the deal without unwrapping every piece because he had trusted Nick – his ‘friend’ of thirty years.
Crazy Wong was convinced that Zappetti set him up because Zappetti’s business was starting to fail and he needed the money.
‘If Nick was really a victim,’ said Wong, ‘then he should have apologized to me. The incident was his responsibility. But he never did. When I went to talk to his wife, Yae, about the matter, she said it wasn’t any of her concern. She said, “Why don’t you sue my husband and send him to jail?”’
Wong denied any ties to the Japanese underworld and said he was an honest jeweler. If gangsters sometimes came to his shop to buy and sell, he said he couldn’t help it. He also said he was not aware the gold Franco and Roberto had had been smuggled.
After Zappetti died, in 1992, Wong tried unsuccessfully to pursue the suit with Zappetti’s widow. No one ever heard from Franco or Roberto again (or Zack). Zappetti put in a request to Interpol to track them down, but they were never found. Zappetti went to his grave trying to figure the scam out. Twice during the succeeding five years Wong was robbed by Chinese gangs infiltrating the city to the tune of several hundred thousand dollars’ worth of cash and merchandise.
8. BLACK RIDER
Material in this section came from interviews with Zappetti, Frank Nomura, Vince Iizumi, Yae Koizumi, Leron Lee, Barry Nemcoff, Yutaka Mogami, and Tokyo attorney Kozo Tanaka, who represented Zappetti in the Nihan Kotsu appeal, as chief counsel. It is Vince Iizumi’s conviction that his father would never have won the appeal, as was Tanaka’s. Said the lawyer, ‘Mr. Zappetti did not properly understand his situation. If I had not acted he would not have received
any
money. No other lawyer could have pulled that off. But still they criticized me. Neither he nor anyone in the family ever thanked me. It was only after he had recovered that he changed his mind and said he deserved more. Some of the things he says are bullshit.’
Zappetti, of course, went to his grave believing just the opposite was true, that he had been denied his chance for legal victory and, like so many other
gaijin
, victimized by his adopted country.
Zappetti complained about his sexual impotence to anyone who would listen. However, when a sympathetic listener, US Embassy official Barry Nemcoff, told
him about a new prosthetic penile device on the market in the United States, Zappetti’s interest immediately turned to business. He wanted to find a way to import and market the devices in bulk in Japan for Japanese men, because, as he put it, they had such small genitalia they were bound to want to own the much larger US product.
Zappetti showed the note from his attorney to the author. The nighttime visit to the lawyer’s office was related by Zappetti, with great relish.
RIO BRAVO
The ‘Lazy and illiterate’ remark was made by Yoshio Sakurauchi, the speaker of the Lower House of Parliament in Japan, in January 1992. His exact words were, ‘American workers want to get high salaries without working. They cannot take orders because 30 percent of them are illiterate.’
Nakasone’s remark was, ‘The level of knowledge in the United States is lower than in Japan due to the considerable number of blacks, Puerto Ricans, and Mexicans.’ He made it in 1986. See Terry McCarthy, ‘Why Japanese Are Rude about Foreigners’,
Independent
, reprinted in
Singapore Straits Times
, January 31, 1992.
A NOTE ABOUT JAPAN BASHING
America’s neurosis in regard to Japan was tempered by a comparative lack of interest in its most important ally and a corresponding lack of knowledge that was at times stunning. In 1991, when asked by a touring Japanese news crew what ‘Japan bashing’ (perhaps the most widely understood English phrase in Japan after ‘okay’ and ‘sex’) meant, a Houston official replied, in all seriousness, that it was an activity whereby ‘Japanese walk down the street and hit other Japanese over the head with a pole’. Sometime earlier, a D.C. lawmaker quizzed a visitor from Tokyo University as to when North Japan and South Japan were going to reunite. A 1993 survey revealed that two out of every five Americans were unaware the United States even had a trade problem with Japan.
A NOTE ABOUT FREE TRADE
A clear-cut reflection of the differences between the concept of Japanese capitalism and American capitalism was the exercise in the early 1990s involving NTT, the giant semi-state-owned corporation, when it concluded the price of the pagers they were purchasing was out of line with the global norm and as a result they demanded the major pager manufacturers lower their prices by nearly 50 percent. Only Motorola, the lone foreign maker in the group, was able to comply with such a dramatic drop. Within a month, however, Motorola was
asked to raise its unit price back up to correspond with what the Japanese makers could meet. In the United States, the business most likely would have all shifted to the cheapest supplier. (From an interview with Dr Robert M. Orr.)
Another reason son Vince did not want to remain in his father’s business was a conflict over strategy. Vince’s main complaint was about his father’s and Yae’s insistence on keeping the Roppongi branch going, purely out of ‘pride’. ‘They should have sold the Roppongi place and gone with Yokota, which was raking in the money,’ he said, ‘but they didn’t want to give up the prestige of having a place in Roppongi.’
The psychiatrist Shu Kishida was the author of
Monogusa Seishin Bunseki
(Tokyo Seishi, 1978). (His philosophy made an interesting contrast to that of another Japanese psychiatrist, Misao Miyamoto, trained and educated in the States, who said Japan was suffering from a neurosis he called ‘narcissistic infantilism’.)
The comment in regard to
Rising Sun
, by Michael Crichton, was made by
Bungei Shunju
editor Hidesuke Matsuo. The Japan expert was Kent Calder.
Zappetti related all the details of domestic strife with his wife Yae Koizumi in an interview with me – and indeed to anyone else who would listen. She, however, did not want to submit to a formal interview on the subject. Still, I, along with many others, witnessed them arguing many times in the restaurant. The headwaiter’s remark about their relationship was, ‘They love each other … but they also hate each other.’ The estimate of Yae’s wealth was made by Zappetti. I personally witnessed the battle of the lights and music.
A New Jersey-based sister-in-law of Zappetti’s who saw the couple together said she was impressed at Yae’s devotion. ‘The beauty queen seemed to be more interested in Nick’s money,’ Mary Zappetti recalled in a 1998 interview, ‘but Yae, she really cared for Nick. I could tell.’
The ‘transistor salesman’ remark was originally made by then French President Charles de Gaulle, when then Japanese Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda visited France. Said de Gaulle, ‘I expected a statesman and I got a transistor salesman.’ Others quickly picked up on it.
President Reagan was invited to Japan by the Fuji-Sankei communications group. (Said Zappetti, ‘It was his reward for letting the Japanese win at trade.’)
For material on Trump and Yokoi, see ‘Trump’s Tower’,
Vanity Fair
, May 1995.
Zappetti also wrote a letter to American financial operator T. Boone Pickens, offering his help in ‘any way possible’. In the late 1980s, T. Boone Pickens had bought a ‘controlling interest’ of 26 percent in Koito Manufacturing Company, a parts supplier for the automotive giant Toyota Motors, and found he could not even get himself appointed to the board, so entrenched was the almost feudal
system of subcontractors and suppliers. (Toyota, which owned 19 percent of Koito’s stock but was Koito’s largest customer, held three board seats.) Pickens complained loud and long about Japanese monopolistic practices, but government officials were totally indifferent. Toyota was a corporate community, they said, not a toy for leveraged buyout artists from abroad. Pickens did not respond to Zappetti’s missive. Eventually he gave up and sold his shares.
THE FALL
The stock compensation scandals were widely reported during the early 1990s. Interestingly enough, the minister of finance at the time was Ryutaro Hashimoto, who, having vowed to clean house, then proceeded to preside over a series of other financial scandals as prime minister throughout the rest of the decade, before being forced to resign in 1990.
The material about Susumu Ishii is from the interview in
Shukan Posuto
, August 2, 1991, pp. 36–40.
For material on the Tokyo stock crash, the Nomura scandal, and the fallout from the Sagawa-Kyubin, the author relied on the newspaper accounts and other reports in the Japanese media during the scandals in the early 1990s, among them the interview with Shin Kanemaru,
Shukan Asahi
, May 31, 1991, pp. 20–24; ‘
Beikoku nara, Okurasho Kambu Mo Kemusho Iki’
[‘If This Were America, the Head of the Finance Ministry Would Go to Prison Too’],
Shukan Asahi
, July 26, 1991; ‘
Tabuchi Kaicho No Jinin de Sumu no Ka?’
[‘You Think This Will End with the Resignation of Chairman Tabuchi?’] and ‘
Yakuza to Sejika Ni Kuwareta Nisen Oku Yen’
[‘2 Trillion Yen Eaten by the Politicians and the Yakuza’], both in
Shukan Asahi
, August 2, 1991. Also referenced were the interview with Susumu Ishii in
Shukan Posuto
, August 2, 1991; ‘
Nomura Shoken Kambu was “Soba Soju” wo Mitomeita’
[‘The Management of Nomura Securities Admits Manipulating the Market’],
Shukan Asahi
, September 6, 1991; ‘Black Current’; and ‘
8 Nin No Shisha Tachi No Sagawa Jiken’
[‘The 8 Deaths of the Sagawa Incident’],
Shukan Asahi
, December 18, 1992, pp. 27–29.
The Inagawa family insolvency was reported in ‘Late Inagawa-kai Boss Left Billions in Debts: Family’,
Asahi Evening News
, June 5, 1992.
Senator Hollings’s callous, xenophobic remarks were the subject of an acerbic editorial, in the ‘Hollings’ Stupid Remarks,’
Mainichi Daily News
, March 7, 1992. The remarks were made by Ernest Hollings, a senator from South Carolina, on March 2, 1992, at a speech at a factory in his home state. Hollings later issued a statement denying he was engaging in Japan bashing, explaining that the mushroom reference was intended as a joke. Hollings exact quote was, ‘You could draw a mushroom cloud and put beneath it, “made in America by lazy and
illiterate Americans and tested in Japan.”’ Hollings’s remarks were in response to the widely quoted remarks made earlier by House of Representatives Speaker Yoshio Sakurauchi, in January 1992, to the effect that American workers were lazy and illiterate.
The final visit to Hokkaido was described by Zappetti, as was his plot to wreak revenge on enemies.
EPILOGUE