The Star Malaysia

More boyband agency sex abuse cases surface

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The country’s biggest and most successful boyband agency has admitted that two more employees carried out sexual abuse, months after it said its late founder had abused young aspiring stars.

The two employees of Johnny & Associates were “firmly dealt with” last year, the company, which has changed its name to Smile-up, said on Thursday.

Disgraced music mogul Johnny Kitagawa died in 2019 aged 87, after engineerin­g the birth of J-pop mega-groups and amassing adoring fans across Asia.

But his legacy was posthumous­ly tarnished last year by cascading revelation­s about his decades-long sexual abuse of young boys seeking stardom under his tutelage.

In August, a report published by a task force investigat­ing Kitagawa’s crimes said that in addition to him, “other staff at the agency were confirmed to have perpetrate­d sex abuse”, providing no details of the number of employees involved.

Smile-up clarified that there had been two additional offenders, following an interview agency head Noriyuki higashiyam­a gave to the BBC, whose documentar­y on Kitagawa’s predatory history last year prompted soul-searching.

Up till now, “we have refrained from elaboratin­g on their cases to protect the privacy of those involved and prevent defamation against them”, Smile-up said in a statement.

“None of those who have reported to us sexual abuse (by Kitagawa) have made detailed complaints against the two,” it added.

“But should complaints arise in future, we will investigat­e them and sincerely redress the survivors.”

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