Tadashi Irie

Tadashi Irie (入江 禎, Irie Tadashi, born December 9, 1944 in Uwajima, Ehime)[1] is a yakuza, the head (kumicho) of the Osaka-based 2nd Takumi-gumi[2] and the grand general manager (so-honbucho) of the 6th Yamaguchi-gumi.[1] He is regarded as the number-three leader of the 6th Yamaguchi-gumi, the largest known yakuza syndicate.[2]

Career

Irie began his career as a yakuza when he joined the Fukui-gumi, a Yamaguchi affiliate based in Osaka. He later joined the Takumi-gumi in 1978 when Masaru Takumi, then the number-two member (wakagashira) of the Fukui-gumi, became an executive underboss (jikisan) of the 3rd Yamaguchi-gumi. Prior to this he was the head of his own clan, the Irie-gumi, which he formed in 1975, but following this he merged it into the Takumi-gumi.[1]

He was known for his unwavering loyalty to Masaru Takumi; he had been offered the Yamaguchi-gumi's executive position several times, but he repeatedly declined, preferring to be Takumi's henchman.[1] In 1997 when Takumi was assassinated by the Nakano-kai, he succeeded as the head of the Takumi-gumi,[3] making excessively ruthless organized attacks on the Nakano-kai in retaliation.[1]

He entered the Kobe headquarters of the Yamaguchi-gumi in 1997 when he became the head of the Takumi-gumi. He was promoted to wakagashira-hosa (one of the number-three underbosses) in 2005,[1] and following the start of the sixth era headed by Shinobu Tsukasa from the Kodo-kai of Nagoya, he flew the de facto number-three position (so-honbucho).[4]

He has been involved in the Yamaguchi-gumi's important yakuza wars such as the Osaka War (1975–1978, against the Matsuda-gumi) and Yama-Ichi War (1984–1989, against the Ichiwa-kai).[1]

On December 1, 2010 — just 2 weeks after the arrest of the "number-two of the Yamaguchi-gumi" Kiyoshi Takayama[5] —, Irie, as the "number-three of the Yamaguchi-gumi",[2] was arrested on suspicion of compensating the relatives of a hitman (a member of the Takumi-gumi[6]) who had been jailed for murdering a senior member of the Nakano-kai.[7] He was charged with paying 3.9 million yen ($46,555) to the hitman's relatives,[3] whom he had paid a total of at least approximately US$250,000.[8] He was released on bail on December 24 of that year,[9] and received a jail sentence of 10 months in March 2011.[6]

Preceded by
Masaru Takumi
Kumicho of Takumi-gumi
1997-present
Succeeded by
(none)

References


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