Playwright and actor Jeremy O. Harris has been in custody in Japan since mid-November after customs officers at Naha Airport in Okinawa allegedly found a small quantity of MDMA in his bag, local officials say. Harris, 36, was arrested on Nov. 16 on suspicion of violating Japanese customs and narcotics laws after officers reported discovering 0.78 grams of crystal containing the synthetic drug, commonly known as ecstasy, in a tote he carried while entering the country from Taiwan.
According to officials cited in Japanese and U.S. media reports, Harris was immediately taken into custody and later referred to prosecutors in Naha, who received a formal criminal complaint on Dec. 4. Under Japanese procedure, investigators can hold a suspect for up to 23 days without filing an indictment, and authorities say they are still weighing charges. Customs and police representatives have said no other drugs were found in his luggage and believe the MDMA was likely for personal use, while declining to disclose any statements Harris may have made during questioning.
TheWrap reported that Harris faces a potential sentence of up to seven years in prison if convicted, reflecting Japan’s strict stance on drug offenses that has ensnared tourists and public figures before. Officials say he flew from London’s Heathrow Airport, transited through Taiwan’s Taoyuan International Airport and arrived in Okinawa on a sightseeing trip, a common route for visitors heading to the resort islands.
The arrest halts a busy professional run for Harris, whose play “Slave Play” became a lightning rod on Broadway and earned a record-setting slate of Tony nominations. He has writing and producing credits on the film “Zola,” worked as a co-producer on HBO’s “Euphoria” and appears as fashion designer Grégory Elliot Duprée on the Netflix series “Emily in Paris.” Recent projects include new stage work and the film “Erupcja,” for which he had been slated to appear at the Red Sea International Film Festival before organizers quietly removed him from programming after news of the arrest.
Representatives for Harris have not responded to multiple requests for comment from entertainment and news outlets. Japanese authorities say the investigation remains active, with prosecutors now responsible for deciding whether to indict the playwright on full smuggling charges under narcotics control statutes or pursue a lesser case built around possession for personal use.





















































