Japan's Pop King Held for Fraud
Flamboyant producer falls from grace after admitting swindling investor out of £3 million
Ten years ago, he was one of Japan's richest and most flamboyant characters, a celebrated pop producer who once boasted that he had lost track of how much money he had made.
But Tetsuya Komuro's fall from grace was complete yesterday when he was arrested on suspicion of fraud, accused of swindling an investor out of ¥500m (£3m), by selling him rights to music he did not own.
Television footage showed investigators marching into Komuro's luxury flat in Tokyo, while the 49-year-old was shown in Osaka, being driven from a hotel in tears. Police said Komuro had admitted the allegations.
Avex Group Holdings, the label behind Komuro's most successful acts, said it "very much regretted" his arrest. According to media reports, the investor agreed to make a ¥550m down payment for the copyrights to 806 of Komuro's songs, even though the producer knew the rights were not his to sell.
Komuro's knack of spotting budding pop talent generated more than 170m CD sales and made him one of Japan's richest men in the mid-1990s. The peroxide blond Komuro was never given to moderation - he drove Ferraris and owned villas in Hawaii, Bali and Malibu, and once boasted to a tabloid newspaper: "As my bankbook only shows up to 10 digits, I've lost track of my money."
At the height of his wealth he spent ¥20m reserving the entire first-class cabin on a flight from Tokyo to Los Angeles.
While his acts sold millions of CDs in Japan, Hong Kong and Taiwan, they were practically unheard of elsewhere, though he did co-write Together Now, the theme tune for the France 1998 World Cup, with Jean-Michel Jarre.
Komuro, who launched his career in 1984 as a keyboard player with the group TM Network, is understood to have fallen into debt after a series of failed overseas business deals and an expensive divorce.
But Tetsuya Komuro's fall from grace was complete yesterday when he was arrested on suspicion of fraud, accused of swindling an investor out of ¥500m (£3m), by selling him rights to music he did not own.
Television footage showed investigators marching into Komuro's luxury flat in Tokyo, while the 49-year-old was shown in Osaka, being driven from a hotel in tears. Police said Komuro had admitted the allegations.
Avex Group Holdings, the label behind Komuro's most successful acts, said it "very much regretted" his arrest. According to media reports, the investor agreed to make a ¥550m down payment for the copyrights to 806 of Komuro's songs, even though the producer knew the rights were not his to sell.
Komuro's knack of spotting budding pop talent generated more than 170m CD sales and made him one of Japan's richest men in the mid-1990s. The peroxide blond Komuro was never given to moderation - he drove Ferraris and owned villas in Hawaii, Bali and Malibu, and once boasted to a tabloid newspaper: "As my bankbook only shows up to 10 digits, I've lost track of my money."
At the height of his wealth he spent ¥20m reserving the entire first-class cabin on a flight from Tokyo to Los Angeles.
While his acts sold millions of CDs in Japan, Hong Kong and Taiwan, they were practically unheard of elsewhere, though he did co-write Together Now, the theme tune for the France 1998 World Cup, with Jean-Michel Jarre.
Komuro, who launched his career in 1984 as a keyboard player with the group TM Network, is understood to have fallen into debt after a series of failed overseas business deals and an expensive divorce.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Footage Shows Murdered Japan Teacher With Suspect
- Japanese Pop Producer Arrested for Fraud
- Japan Frets Over Growing Marijuana Problem
- Panasonic Ready for Sanyo Takeover
- Tokyo to Sack Defence Chief for Denying Japan's Wartime Acts
- Japan's Air Force Chief Faces Sack Over Second World War Comments
- Japan's Largest Stockbroker Admits Crisis As Losses Mount
- Japanese School
- Sword and Blossom: A British Officer's Enduring Love for a Japanese Woman
- Japan and Asia: Historical Disputes, Nationalism, and Mistrust
- Japan and the Samurai Warrior (593-1877 A.D.)
- Japan’s World-Record Hot Dog Eater Injures Jaw While "Training"
- Japan's Royal Birth: A Future Successor Has Been Born
- Chestnut’s Hot Dog Hopes Run High for the Fourth
- Japanese on Edge After Two Children Are Murdered
- Aquarius Now: The Lessons of "Living Treasures"
- Star Trek’s George Takei Comes Out
- New Year's Eve Destinations - Japan
- Japan Life
- Princess Masako: Japan’s Crown Princess Pregnant



