- Japanese prosecutors raided the Tokyo home of former Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn Thursday while the international police organization Interpol submitted a warrant for his arrest to Lebanese authorities.
- Japanese media reported earlier that there were no official records in Japan of Ghosn’s departure and that a private jet departed from a regional airport to Turkey.
- Turkey’s state-run Anadolu News Agency reported Thursday that authorities investigating Ghosn’s travels from Japan to Istanbul had arrested seven people, including four pilots, a cargo company manager and two airport employees.