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Japanese football official sentenced for viewing child pornography images | Football News

Masanaga Kageyama was on a flight to Chile for the Under-20 World Cup when the crew raised the alarm.

A senior Japanese Football Association official has been sentenced to an 18-month suspended jail term in France for “viewing child pornography images” during a plane journey.

Masanaga Kageyama, the association’s technical director, was arrested during a stopover at Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris on the way to Chile last week, according to Le Parisien newspaper.

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It is believed he was heading to Chile for the Under-20 World Cup.

“The facts were discovered by the plane’s flight crew, who raised the alarm after noticing that the convicted man was viewing child pornography images on the plane,” the court prosecutor’s office in Bobigny, north of Paris, said on Tuesday.

The court sentenced the 58-year-old on Monday to a suspended jail term of 18 months and a fine of 5,000 euros ($5,830) for importing, possessing, recording or saving pornographic images of a minor below the age of 15.

His sentence includes a ban on working with minors for 10 years and a ban on returning to France for the period.

Kageyama will also be added to the French national sex offenders’ register.

Le Parisien reported that flight attendants caught him viewing the images on his laptop in the business class cabin of an Air France flight.

He claimed to be an artist and insisted the photos had been generated by artificial intelligence.

During his court appearance, the report said, Kageyama admitted viewing the images, saying he did not realise it was illegal in France and that he was ashamed.

He was held in police custody over the weekend until his court appearance on Monday. He was released after the hearing.

Kageyama is responsible for implementing measures to strengthen Japan’s football teams, including the national team, as well as educating coaches and nurturing youth players.

He was a professional J-League footballer himself and also coached several J-League clubs. He had also managed Japan’s under-20, under-19 and under-18 teams.

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Celtic: Sebastian Tounekti not viewing club as stepping stone

Tounekti, who has signed a five-year deal, revealed other clubs were interested before he completed his move in the final moments of a “hectic” final day of the summer transfer window.

Celtic’s failure to reach the Champions League was no deterrent to Tounekti, who was delighted to make “a nice start” at Rugby Park.

He gave Kilmarnock a tough time down Celtic’s left, but stressed his ability to play on the opposite flank.

“My strongest position is on the left, but I have also played some games on the right so I can play there if the manager wants me to play there,” he said.

“I feel like it is only the beginning. I have so much more to show, so hopefully I’ll bring more out throughout the season.”

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Senators Set in Their Viewing

The June issue of Glamour magazine has national affairs editor David France writing about a word association game he played in New York City with campaigning Texas Gov. George W. Bush. France reports the game took a “dark turn” when Bush, a lock for the GOP presidential nomination, was asked to respond to “Sex and the City,” an urbane, ribald comedy series that chronicles the libidinous adventures of four single females in New York City.

“The face of the man who would be president, blistered in purple fury,” France writes. “He turned toward me for the first time, only to narrow his eyes and glower. He was giving me the politician’s equivalent of a pro wrestling belly-butt!”

Why in the world had Bush “snapped,” France wondered, given that he had been clueless about “Sex and the City” and had to be informed by an aide that the target of his wrath was “an HBO television show?” Was it hearing “sex” mentioned that set him off? In retrospect, France speculates that Bush thought he was being asked to comment on sexual activity in New York.

In any case, this got me to thinking about four U.S. senators who last week gave TV a belly-butt in a letter to the Federal Communications Commission assailing the “rapidly declining standards of broadcast television” through a “rising tide of glorified violence and increasingly explicit sexual content.”

The senators say they are concerned primarily about TV seen by the nation’s children, and their sincerity is not at issue. Nor is that some Americans find much of television as revolting as they do and agree with them that broadcasters should should be strongly nudged by the Feds to do more in the public interest instead of counting their profits and treating the publicly owned airwaves as their private golden goose.

Putting aside for the moment whether the senators’ charges are justified, however, I wondered why they were not explicit about the non-cable television they were indicting so broadly.

Although listing as sources recent studies by the Center on Media and Public Affairs, the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Parents Television Council, their five-page report mentions no show titles or specifics about the “rising tide” beyond noting the mention of Fox’s “Beverly Hills, 90210” in a New York Times article about TV’s emphasis on teenage sex.

Why so vague?

Was it possible that they had gathered no empirical evidence of their own, and were working entirely from surveys and viewing TV through the eyes of their staffs and others? Was it possible that, like Bush in New York, they hadn’t seen what they were attacking? And if so, shouldn’t they have, given their unique influence as senators and the ferocity of their protests in lobbying the FCC to “reexamine the public interest standard and the license renewal process” under which broadcasters operate?

Is this the way things are meant to operate in the nation’s great pantheon of lawmakers?

Phoning the foursome on this topic, I got callbacks from Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) and Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (D-Conn.). An aide to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) promised to check his schedule, but never got back to me. An aide to Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W. Va.) said the veteran senator was too busy to comment on the strongly worded plea for reform he had signed. No doubt he was tied up in research, watching more of those squalid shows.

Shortly before rushing off to participate in a Senate vote, Brownback said on the phone that the PTC survey “quantifies what everybody sees.” What he sees?

“I’ve seen some of the World Wrestling Federation [UPN’s ‘WWF Smackdown!’],” he said. “I will watch some of Sunday evening [TV]. I’ve seen clips that we pulled from some [offending] shows.” Could he be specific?

“I’m not remembering the shows that the clips were out of,” he said.

Brownback said the TV his children watch on Friday nights is “just replete” with “sexually suggestive content.” He couldn’t recall the names of those shows, either, but added: “I’m seeing this as a parent sitting there watching in disgust. The message given to my children is that sex is recreational, it’s fun, it’s without consequence.”

Then why allow his children to watch, and why, if he’s so disgusted, does he watch with them? “We don’t regularly,” he said. “I’ll just sit there till things get to a certain point.”

Along with McCain, meanwhile, Lieberman has been among the Senate’s most vociferous critics of TV. Yet he too is an infrequent viewer. “There’s only so much I watch myself,” he said from a cell phone in his car.

As one of the nation’s most influential, most quoted TV critics, so to speak, shouldn’t he more closely monitor the medium he consistently faults?

Lieberman didn’t sound pleased by the tone of the question: “Forgive me,” he said, “I’m busy! I flip the dials. I read some of the reports on content.”

Just the same, maybe these guys should see for themselves if they’re going to be talking the talk.

Not that the letter to the FCC isn’t on the mark in demanding more from broadcasters, who are required by law to serve “the public interest, convenience and necessity.” The senators correctly urge that the public get something in exchange for the epic freebie–rights to additional digital-channel spectrum space–granted broadcasters by the Telecommunications Act of 1996. That $70-billion gift has no strings attached. And for what reason–good conduct?

On the other hand, if the majority of Americans agree with the senators about TV becoming, for the most part, a moral moonscape that harms children, they have a strange way of showing it.

Take the vile “WWF Smackdown!,” where growling 250-pounders are sent flying across the ring by punches that miss by half a foot. “There is a case where these kids watch violent acts that are presumably faux and artificial,” said Lieberman, “but they can’t distinguish that.” Yet support for this series alone has lifted UPN from network oblivion.

The means is available for parents to block such fare from their homes. That would be the V-chip, a law-mandated gizmo for new TV sets that allows viewers to electronically bar from their homes programs they find objectionable. Goodbye, “WWF Smackdown!”

Yet the V-chip–which could settle TV’s hash for good if it didn’t shape up the way its critics want it to–has generated little interest among the public. And if most parents don’t give a damn, why should anyone else?

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Howard Rosenberg’s column appears Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. He can be contacted via e-mail at [email protected].

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