Former daughter-in-law of Takefuji, “published a book to make money,” living together with a white corpse, living a horrifying life.
His arrhythmia is getting worse. If I don’t take my medication, I’m afraid I’ll go into cardiac arrest due to acute heart failure.
I have to pay my bill now, so please send me 9,800 yen.
The man pretended to be the dead woman’s boyfriend and sent such short messages to her father, begging for money.
On January 7, the Osaki Police Station of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department re-arrested Nozomu Takashima, 64, an unemployed former writer with no fixed address, on suspicion of fraud and theft. Takashima was also arrested last December on suspicion of abandoning a body in his apartment in Shinagawa Ward, Tokyo.
The body is believed to be that of Ms. A, a woman in her 50s who lived with Takashima and was in a relationship with him; Ms. A died around August 2008 due to illness. Takashima had been living alone for nearly five years, leaving the body in his room.
The god of moneylenders is here.
The life he shared with the skeleton was horrific.
He had no particular job and seemed to have been in dire financial straits. He was in arrears of rent for a long time. When Tokyo District Court officials entered the room in December of last year to enforce the rent, they found the room in a state of disarray and covered in garbage. At that time, Mr. A’s body was found under leftover food and other items in the living room, leading to his arrest for abandonment of a corpse. There was a strong odor in the room, and neighbors frequently complained about it.
The seized smartphone revealed that Takashima frequently asked her father, who was in his 80s, for money by sending him short messages pretending to be Ms. A and asking him to “send money” to her account. The total amount of money he asked for was more than 300,000 yen. He told the police that he did it because he was having trouble eating.
Although Takashima lived a life of horror, he enjoyed a glamorous life in the early 1990s after graduating from Chuo University’s Faculty of Law.
He joined “Takefuji” (bankrupt in October ’10), a major consumer finance company, and married the daughter of the company’s founder and chairman Yasuo Takei (died in August ’06). She became his son-in-law (now divorced). Thereafter, he served as the head of the Human Resources Department and the General Manager of the President’s Office. As an executive, he was dressed in a luxurious suit and lived a very comfortable life. His books include “Takefuji’s Way of Making Money: The God of Money Lenders, Here I Am” and others.
Running for the House of Councillors
However, his life took a dark turn after he left Takefuji for some reason. In July 1995, he ran for the House of Councillors election in his home district of Shimane as an official candidate of the then Shinjin Party, but was unsuccessful. As a writer, he was unable to produce any hits and was forced to live a difficult life.
He was a former detective with the Kanagawa Prefectural Police and crime journalist Taihei Ogawa said, “He pretended to be someone else, and he was a public institution.
He said, “There have been many cases of people pretending to be someone else and fraudulently receiving pensions from public institutions, but this case is unique. The suspect pretended to be the daughter of an elderly man in his 80s and cheated him out of money. Under normal circumstances, even a father would not send money just by exchanging short messages. The suspect’s father, who is the deceased woman’s father, said, “I’ll lend him money, but I want to see his face once in a while, and I want to hear his voice.
The suspect understands the “special relationship” between the deceased woman and her father. I believe that the suspect was well aware of the “special relationship” between the deceased woman and her father. For example, the father had a special illness that prevented him from seeing or talking to her in person. There are also many questions, such as why the body was left unattended for five years and was not discovered even after complaints from nearby residents.
The life of the former son-in-law of Takefuji’s founder has been a downward spiral. Takashima stated, “I was so upset that I didn’t know what to do.
PHOTO: Kyodo News