Monday, November 4, 2019

Office of the Public Prosecutor finally accepted a criminal complaint I filed (unrelated to the complaint made to the police)

Update: After writing this post earlier I called the Public Prosecutors Office in Kyoto and learned that the case has been formally accepted as of November 1. Now there is an investigative period after which the prosecutor makes a determination whether to indict or not.

So I will leave the following up for general reference, as it has been a very trying time waiting for the process to be engaged, and there are legal issues that may be of general interest to the public.

There are legal questions related to the investigative and indictment process as well, but I will wait until they come into play specifically.

This is the response I received from the Supreme Public Prosecutors Office in Tokyo requesting that they contact the Kyoto regional Public Prosecutors Office to have them timely accept the complaint. The complaint has yet to be accepted, though it was filed in August, and this notice was received a couple of weeks ago. And there are other criminal complaints to follow, which I've already discussed with the local prosecutors office. 

Once they accept a complaint, they have an obligation to investigate, so there are various possible reasons for their delay. They can even formally refuse to accept a complaint if they have legal grounds for doing so, but in this case, the content is proven beyond reasonable doubt by documentary evidence already submitted, so the delay is somewhat unusual according to at least one attorney I've consulted. And refusing to accept a valid complaint is a crime in and of itself, one of which several counts have been committed against me by the police, etc., in violation of Article 193 of the Penal Code of Japan: Abuse of Power.


It bears noting that due to the criminal collaboration of CIA operatives I don't easily have recourse to complaining to the US Consulate in Osaka or Embassy in Tokyo, though eventually I will have to. I have contacted the High Commissioner on Human Rights with the UN in Switzerland in relation to the ongoing and multifaceted legal imbroglios that have swept up my children by the racist Japanese judiciary, and was told to send documents, etc., but don't have time to translate them, etc. Since neither the US nor Japan has ratified the special protocols of the UN Human Rights Treaty, they can't be held accountable. Some Japanese in international marriages, being indirectly encouraged by their corrupt government, think it is OK to kidnap children and keep them from their parents (look up the Hague Convention). Only international pressure over many years has brought about any progress in that area: https://www.facebook.com/sauvonsnosenfants.japon/.

I had to consult another attorney when my attorney suddenly resigned after I consulted the Kyoto Bar Association in regard to his performance.

So, I need to retain a new attorney...


Meanwhile, it's like a running battle here with the various intelligence agencies, as well as corrupt local law enforcement and justice system that is rife with institutional racism here in Japan, aside from the bureaucratic machinations at play. And the Starbucks and other stores that bear the name of an American franchise (Starbucks and Tullys in Japan are owned by Japanese companies).


And there the scores of young women trying to make a scene in conjunction with operators of local night life establishment, or so it would seem. 


One woman I met not long ago would go to work at the cafe after leaving her 8 hour shift in her corporate office, and has told me that she is married and her husband is in the USA taking an MBA. She's a nice girl, very friendly and quite pretty, but her story is a little suspect, a that is a not infrequent occurrence with women I meet there. In this case, her story has components that overlap with another woman I've described on this blog (an attorney) whose husband also went abroad while she stayed in Japan. She is suspected of working for the CIA, MI6 or Japanese Public Security Intelligence Agency, so the latest girl could represent a pattern. Is a corporate career reason enough for a supposedly recently married couple (@30 years of age) would decide to live apart from each other? American/British colleges operate MBA programs here in Japan, but I digress...


I can't go into the details of the criminal complaint to which this notice refers until the trial goes public.







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