Former president of Tokyo Medical University omission of 100 million yen report Reward for fraudulent entrance examination July 25 14:16

The former President of Tokyo Medical University, Masahiko Usui, who was found to have an unfair entrance exam problem, had not filed a personally received reward from parents of the examinees before and after the entrance examination. I was able to find out that the leak was pointed out by interviewing the people concerned.

Regarding Tokyo Medical University, it became clear that there were many years of illegal entrance examinations, such as deducting the scores of female students and roam life uniformly, and adding points of specific examinees illegally. In August, the investigation committee announced the results of the investigation, in which former president Masahiko Usui was leading the series of unauthorized entrance examinations.

According to the people involved, as a result of the investigation by the Tokyo Regional Taxation Bureau in response to this problem, former President Usui asked about 20 million per year before and after the entrance examination from parents of the examinees who asked for a favorable arrangement for the entrance examination. It turns out that I personally received the yen as a reward.

The former President Usui had not declared such a reward at all, and the NTA pointed out to the former president about 100 million yen of omissions in the five years until the adulthood.

He also pointed out that he received the same kind of gratitude to former President Susumu Suzuki, and that he had missed the declaration of several million yen in the four years until his son.

The additional taxation including the underreported tax is about 40 million yen by former President Usui and several million yen by former President Suzuki, and it seems that the two have already filed revised tax.

NHK interviewed two attorneys in writing, but had no response so far.

Former President Usui and former President Suzuki have been accused of bribery in a corruption case in which the former director of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology was charged with having his son pass by Tokyo Medical University without authorization. Insists on innocence.