Economy & Markets
4 min read
Man Sentenced for Sending Student to Myanmar for Fraud
The Japan Times
January 20, 2026•2 days ago

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A Japanese court sentenced a 29-year-old man to three years in prison, suspended for five years, for sending a then-17-year-old student to Myanmar for fraud. The defendant knew the student had been kidnapped. The court deemed his actions malicious but suspended the sentence due to his admission and a settlement with the victim.
A Japanese court on Monday sentenced a man, 29, to three years in prison, suspended for five years, for transporting a then-high school student to Myanmar last year to have him engage in fraud despite knowing that the boy had been kidnapped.
Public prosecutors had demanded a prison sentence of four years and six months for the defendant, Tomu Fujinuma.
Presiding Judge Yuichi Suda at Sendai District Court denounced the defendant, saying that transporting the student, including by ship, to a place from which he could not return by himself was "a malicious act."
But Suda suspended the execution of the prison sentence, noting that Fujinuma admitted the allegations against him and that a settlement deal has already been reached with the victim.
According to the ruling, Fujinuma in January 2025 transported the male student, then 17, to Myanmar from Thailand, to which the boy had been kidnapped from Miyagi Prefecture by an unidentified person, and then had him commit fraud at a fraud group hub in Myanmar.
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