An alleged leader of a Japanese organized crime syndicate has been charged with attempting to sell weapons-grade nuclear materials from the leader of an ethnic insurgent group in Myanmar, according to a new indictment from the US Justice Department.
Takeshi Ebisawa, an alleged leader in the yakuza who was arrested in 2022 on charges over drug and weapons trafficking conspiracies, faces several new charges for allegedly attempting to sell nuclear materials to someone he believed was an Iranian general, in exchange for a significant weapons cache.
According to the new indictment, Ebisawa in 2020 told a confidential source for the Drug Enforcement Administration and an undercover DEA agent that he had access to nuclear materials he wanted to sell, asking if they had a buyer for uranium.
Ebisawa sent pictures โdepicting rocky substances with Geiger counters measuring radiation,โ according to the indictment, as well as pages of what Ebisawa saidย wereย lab analyses โindicating the presence of the radioactive elements thorium and uranium.โ
The undercover agent allegedly agreed to help Ebisawa sell the material to another confidential source who was posing as an Iranian general.
The agent asked Ebisawa if the material was usable for nuclear weapons, saying that Iran needed โit for nuclear weapons.โ
โI think so and I hope so,โ Ebisawa said, according to the indictment.
In 2021, Ebisawa told the undercover agent that an unnamed leader of an insurgent group in Myanmar, the country formerly known as Burma, could sell nuclear material, including uranium, through Ebisawa to the fictitious Iranian general to fund a large weapons purchase, the indictment says.
In a recorded video call,…
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