April 25, 2012 10:45 PM
- Text
Japan political power broker acquitted in scandal
TOKYO — Ichiro Ozawa, the veteran Japanese lawmaker who engineered the ruling party's rise to power, was acquitted Thursday in a political funding scandal that has damaged his chances of becoming prime minister.
The scandal also cost Ozawa his membership in the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, though he continued to wield great influence as a political power broker. The acquittal means his membership could be reinstated, allowing him to exert even more sway.
The 69-year-old was charged last year with overseeing false accounting by his former aides in a murky 2004 land deal. Prosecutors claimed the three aides, who were convicted last year and have since appealed, acted under Ozawa's orders, but the Tokyo District Court said it found no evidence of that.
Though Ozawa played a key role in the party's historic rise to power in 2009, defeating the long-ruling conservatives, he is unpopular with voters and has a negative image as an old-style, wheeling and dealing "shadow shogun." He still has a loyal core of supporters, many of them young politicians whose careers he helped launch.
Prosecutors alleged Ozawa was fully aware of false bookkeeping by the three aides to cover up questionable funds used in the land deal, and that he authorized the false entry of the transaction in an annual political funds report to the government.
Ozawa repeatedly told the court he had no knowledge of his aides' actions. He said his indictment was based on an "unjust and illegal" investigation and demanded that the trial be scrapped.
The three aides, who were tried as a group, were given suspended prison terms of up to three years for failing to register a 400 million yen ($5 million) loan from Ozawa to his funding body in the Tokyo land deal and for accepting 100 million yen ($1.3 million) in illegal donations from a construction company.
Ozawa's trial also caught attention as it revealed that prosecutors had fabricated one of the aides' remarks in interrogation documents. The court later excluded some prosecution documents from the case, leaving prosecutors to make the case without hard evidence showing Ozawa's role.
Even as the scandal brewed, Ozawa wielded a great deal of influence within the ruling party. He lost a party leadership vote to then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan in 2010, but several months later played a key role in pressuring Kan to resign.
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has indicated that his party would consider reinstating Ozawa's party membership if he was acquitted.
Ozawa stood trial after a judicial panel comprising ordinary citizens sought his indictment, despite earlier decisions by prosecutors to drop the case due to insufficient evidence. He alleged that his indictment was an "abuse of state power intended to eliminate me socially and politically."
© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The scandal also cost Ozawa his membership in the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, though he continued to wield great influence as a political power broker. The acquittal means his membership could be reinstated, allowing him to exert even more sway.
The 69-year-old was charged last year with overseeing false accounting by his former aides in a murky 2004 land deal. Prosecutors claimed the three aides, who were convicted last year and have since appealed, acted under Ozawa's orders, but the Tokyo District Court said it found no evidence of that.
Though Ozawa played a key role in the party's historic rise to power in 2009, defeating the long-ruling conservatives, he is unpopular with voters and has a negative image as an old-style, wheeling and dealing "shadow shogun." He still has a loyal core of supporters, many of them young politicians whose careers he helped launch.
Prosecutors alleged Ozawa was fully aware of false bookkeeping by the three aides to cover up questionable funds used in the land deal, and that he authorized the false entry of the transaction in an annual political funds report to the government.
Ozawa repeatedly told the court he had no knowledge of his aides' actions. He said his indictment was based on an "unjust and illegal" investigation and demanded that the trial be scrapped.
The three aides, who were tried as a group, were given suspended prison terms of up to three years for failing to register a 400 million yen ($5 million) loan from Ozawa to his funding body in the Tokyo land deal and for accepting 100 million yen ($1.3 million) in illegal donations from a construction company.
Ozawa's trial also caught attention as it revealed that prosecutors had fabricated one of the aides' remarks in interrogation documents. The court later excluded some prosecution documents from the case, leaving prosecutors to make the case without hard evidence showing Ozawa's role.
Even as the scandal brewed, Ozawa wielded a great deal of influence within the ruling party. He lost a party leadership vote to then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan in 2010, but several months later played a key role in pressuring Kan to resign.
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has indicated that his party would consider reinstating Ozawa's party membership if he was acquitted.
Ozawa stood trial after a judicial panel comprising ordinary citizens sought his indictment, despite earlier decisions by prosecutors to drop the case due to insufficient evidence. He alleged that his indictment was an "abuse of state power intended to eliminate me socially and politically."
Add A Comment +
Popular Now in MoneyWatch
- TSA defends pat-down of 4-year-old at Kan. airport
- 4 steps to achieve any goal
- 10 Best Countries To Live and Work Abroad
- 4 Things Not to Buy at Costco
- Confusion over content rights greets Google Drive
- TSA screeners charged in LA drug trafficking probe
- Why sloppiness is killing your job search
- Joshua Ledet continues to impress on 'Idol'
- Marines discharge sergeant for Facebook posts
- The 7 Interview Questions You Must Ask
- Making "bring your child to work day" meaningful
- Top 10 Places to Live in 2011
- The new rules on dressing for success
- The top 10 sales tactics that beat cold calling
- Do you have to sign termination papers?
- A better free credit score service
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Feds probing insider trading by Goldman exec
- Digi stock dives after earnings falls short
- Senate OKs renewing Violence Against Women Act
- Travelers face patchwork of free vs. paid Wi-Fi
on Facebook
- Christians of the Holy Land
- Rush Limbaugh Arrested On Drug Charges
- After donated kidney fails, doctors recycle transplant in rare procedure
- Joy in the Congo: A musical miracle
on CBS News