Two Marines assigned to Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni were indicted on charges tied to multiple alleged thefts in Japan, according to U.S. military and Japanese authorities.
Prosecutors in “various prefectures” charged Cpl. Malik Lewis and Lance Cpl. Damien Helms with offenses including trespassing, larceny, attempted larceny, and being an accomplice to larceny, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing spokesman Maj. Joseph Butterfield said.
Lewis, 26, and Helms, 20, are flight equipment technicians with Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 12, part of Marine Aircraft Group 12. They are in Marine Corps custody, Butterfield said.
According to a Feb. 17 news release from Iwakuni city, prosecutors alleged the Marines used a stolen key to enter businesses in Kabukicho, a nightlife district in Tokyo’s Shinjuku ward, and stole about $170 in cash between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. Dec. 24. Tokyo police referred the case to prosecutors on Feb. 13, the release said.
The Fukuoka District Public Prosecutors Office also indicted both men on March 24 on charges of trespassing, larceny, and attempted larceny, a spokeswoman said Wednesday. She declined to provide details.
The Yomiuri Shimbun reported that prosecutors alleged the pair broke into six restaurants in Nakasu, a nightlife district in Fukuoka city, on the morning of Dec. 20 and stole cash worth about $2,652.
Lewis was also indicted March 5 by the Hiroshima District Public Prosecutors Office, according to Sankei Shimbun. Authorities alleged he broke into a business in Hiroshima city’s Naka ward on Dec. 18 and stole about $1,452 in cash. He also allegedly tried to steal items from another business but fled after a security alarm sounded, Sankei reported.
Yomiuri Shimbun reported March 17 that police in Yamaguchi prefecture referred a case against Lewis for allegedly breaking into a business and attempting to steal cash on the night of Dec. 18. As of Tuesday, prosecutors had not decided whether to indict in that case, a spokesman said.
Butterfield said the Marines were “actively working” with Japanese authorities.
“Under our Status of Forces Agreement, the Government of Japan has primary criminal jurisdiction. We will continue to make the Marines available for all required judicial process proceedings and will closely monitor the proceedings without interfering in the Japanese judicial process,” he wrote.