In a recent robbery-murder case in Tochigi Prefecture, six people, including a 16-year-old high school student, were arrested. A former juvenile offender currently serving prison time for involvement in multiple robberies across Japan shared details about how illegal online jobs known as “yami baito” operate, how young people are recruited, and why preventing these crimes remains difficult.
Social media hashtags lead to criminal recruitment
According to the former offender, criminal organizations actively search social media for vulnerable users.
“Hashtags like ‘same-day cash,’ ‘debt repayment,’ ‘daily pay,’ ‘high income,’ or ‘financial problems’ attract recruiters. The more popular tags you use, the more offers you receive — from seemingly normal jobs to criminal activity. Once the conversation moves to Signal or Telegram, it’s 100% illegal.”
He explained that many young people struggling financially become easy targets for recruiters promising fast money.
“I usually survived through temporary jobs so I wouldn’t attract attention from the police. Occasionally, I accepted high-risk jobs for bigger rewards.”

