Carlos Ghosn's escape started with walking out the front door of his rented house and stepping onto a bullet train.
Charter jets like the one that spirited Carlos Ghosn out of Japan give customers a cloak of privacy.
Junichiro Hironaka, the lawyer for former Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn, fields media questions outside his office in Tokyo. Even Ghosn’s closest advisors were blindsided when news of his escape began to break on Dec. 31. His Japanese lawyers said they had no idea what he had planned; in an impromptu news conference outside his office, lead counsel Junichiro Hironaka seemed genuinely bewildered by what had just occurred, describing himself as “dumbfounded.” Ghosn’s U.S. representatives at Paul Weiss, the white-shoe New York law firm, had been kept similarly in the dark.
Nor is Ghosn entirely in the clear. While Lebanon is a nation that refuses, as a matter of policy, to extradite its citizens for trial abroad, he’s probably stuck there indefinitely. Japan has requested that Interpol issue a so-called Red Notice in Ghosn’s name, making it known to other law enforcement authorities that the country considers him a fugitive. His life as a globe-trotting member of the corporate elite is, at least for the foreseeable future, over.
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Japan vows to improve border checks, bail after Carlos Ghosn flightJapan's justice minister has vowed to strengthen border departure checks and review bail conditions after Nissan's former Chairman Carlos Ghosn fled the country
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History of Shinkansen Japanese bullet train Carlos Ghosn escaped on - Business InsiderThe former Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn reportedly began his escape from Japan on the country's groundbreaking and historical Shinkansen bullet train.
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Carlos Ghosn To Face Court In Lebanon As Turkey, Japan Investigate His EscapeCarlos Ghosn, the former Nissan boss who made headlines last week when he escaped house arrest in Japan, is set to be summoned by the Lebanese public prosecutor this week, according to an official.
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Carlos Ghosn escaped from Tokyo on bullet train: report - Business InsiderProsecutors are now working with police to piece together Ghosn's route and find out who helped him, local news reports said.
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Japan will pursue prosecution of Carlos Ghosn, justice minister says“Their international reputation for law, for justice, for rule of law, has been significantly tarnished,” New York Times columnist Jim Stewart says about Japan in the wake of Carlos Ghosn’s escape.
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