
Am 25. Dezember wurden in einem Gerichtsgebäude in der Präfektur Fukushima drei ukrainische YouTuber anstelle von mehrmonatigen Haftstrafen zu Geldstrafen von jeweils 100.000 Yen (650 US-Dollar) verurteilt. Wären sie in einem anderen asiatischen Land als Japan gewesen, wären ihre Strafen möglicherweise härter ausgefallen.
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2025/12/27/digital/nuisance-streamers-japan-south-korea-phillipines-2025/
5 Kommentare
They were arrested in September. They were finally sentenced this month.
Original arrest article. [Ukrainian YouTuber arrested in Japan over Fukushima livestream](https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2025/09/27/japan/crime-legal/youtuber-arrested-fukushima-livestream/)
Hopefully they do something about these. Ridiculous the amount of these you see walking through Shibuya / Shinjuku / etc nowadays.
Johnny Somali show Japanese legal system is so unreliable when it comes to dealing with foreign trolls the individual vigilantes need to act instead.
Part of the problem is that the police here are so slow and unequipped to coordinate with other agencies that many of these people will be gone before any action can be taken. It shouldn’t be hard to identify them from their streams and flag them to be rejected for visas or entry permission.
Japan takes arrest records very seriously, so there is a high chance that his immigration screening will not go smoothly. He will likely be completely rejected under the immigration ecosystem that Japan will be utilizing in the future.