Pubdate: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 Source: Kyodo News (Japan) Copyright: 1998 Kyodo News HIGH COURT UPHOLDS KADOKAWA'S JAIL TERM IN DRUG CASE TOKYO, March 1 (Kyodo) -- The Tokyo High Court on Monday rejected the appeal of publisher Haruki Kadokawa against a guilty verdict and a four-year prison term for conspiring to smuggle cocaine into Japan from the United States in 1993. Presiding Judge Toshimaro Kojo upheld the ruling by the Chiba District Court which sentenced Kadokawa to four years in prison for conspiring with a photographer and a board member of an affiliated firm to smuggle some 80 grams of cocaine into Japan. Kadokawa, 56, who was president of Kadokawa Shoten Publishing Co. at the time of the crime, had appealed that he was innocent of all charges. The lower court found Kadokawa guilty of conspiring with Kyoko Sakamoto, 45, a board member of Kadokawa Shoten's entertainment subsidiary, to instruct the 49- year-old photographer who worked for the publishing house to smuggle the cocaine from Los Angeles. The photographer, Takeshi Ikeda, was arrested July 9, 1993 at Narita airport and received a two-year prison sentence in January 1994. Ikeda testified at Kadokawa's trial in the Chiba District Court that he smuggled the drug under instructions from Kadokawa. In the Tokyo High Court hearings of the appeal, however, Ikeda said he had provided false testimony at the district court. Prosecutors argued that his testimony to the high court was unnatural and untrustworthy. The district court also ruled that Kadokawa embezzled 31 million yen from Kadokawa Shoten to pay for cocaine used by Kadokawa and Sakamoto from March 1987 to November 1992. Sakamoto is appealing to the Supreme Court against her prison sentence of two and a half years. Kadokawa resigned as president after his arrest in August 1993, and sold all his 1.6 million Kadokawa Shoten shares in March 1995. He established a publishing firm in March 1995 after being released on bail. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady