
Employees demonstrate the Cerberus, Orochi, and other incapacitating items on their boss.
If you go to the online store of Sano Kiko, a machining and engineering company in the town of Moka, Tochigi, they’ll tell you that their best-selling product is set of metal fixtures for kitchen sink drains. Order now, and it even comes with a free sponge!
But you know what’s even more amazing than a free sponge? This other product in Sano Kiko’s lineup.
おはようございます、佐野機工です☺️💚
— 佐野機工|進化系防犯グッズ+暮らしの銅雑貨の会社 (@sano_kiko) March 1, 2023
栃木県真岡市は晴れ☀️/4℃🌡
今日から3月!
弊社の防犯製品 #ケルベロス を押し込むようにガツーン‼️と勢いよくスタートしたいものです💨#倒されているのは社長#瞬間拘束できます#企業公式冬のフォロー祭り#企業公式が毎朝地元の天気を言い合う pic.twitter.com/9YXBwfan1F
That’s the Cerberus, part of Sano Kiko’s security product offerings. The shaft is made of lightweight stainless steel, and when it’s not being used to take down someone brandishing a knife, the tip looks like a large broom or squeegee. Thrust it at your target, though, and the thick black band wraps closed with lightning speed, like an immobilizing slap bracelet.
And the Cerberus is just the tip of the crazy iceberg, as Sano Kiko demonstrates in this video featuring the rest of their security products.
おはようございます☺️💚
— 佐野機工|進化系防犯グッズ+暮らしの銅雑貨の会社 (@sano_kiko) March 2, 2023
せっかくなので佐野機工の防犯製品ラインナップをバチーンと一気にご覧ください💪💥💥💥
☑不審者の自由を奪って隙をつくる
☑誰でも簡単に使える
そんな防犯製品を警察と共同開発しています👮♂️🚔#倒されているのは全部社長#瞬間拘束できます #繰り返し使えます pic.twitter.com/YRML8LTqm3
The first restraining polearm shown in the montage is the Fudou, which uses a more compact band that stays tethered to the pole after it wraps.
The Benkei is a pronged pole with no wrapping function, but which can be used to catch or hook arms, legs, or weapons the attacker may be swinging.
And last, the Orochi is a restraining snap strap with a handle.
▼ The powers of the Cerberus, Fudou, and Benkei combined
Oh, and in case you’re wondering which unlucky member of the staff got picked to be on the receiving end of all that, that’s Sano Kiko’s president.
▼ A man who not only stands by his products, but gets knocked down and tied up by them too.
Depending on how security and policing are handled in your part of the world, the emphasis on polearms might seem surprising. Because of Japan’s strict gun control laws, though, in Japan the vast majority of weapon-based crimes involve knives or bludgeons, not firearms, so being able to subdue a criminal from outside arm’s length often allows for dangerous situation to be resolved without resorting to deadly force.
Unlike Sano Kiko’s kitchen fixtures, though, the security products lineup isn’t offered to individual buyers, but only to organizations properly licensed and trained to handle such equipment.
Source: Twitter/@sano_kiko via IT Media
Top image: Twitter/@sano_kiko
Insert images: Sano Kiko, YouTube/有限会社佐野機工 (1, 2, 3, 4), Twitter/@sano_kiko
● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!








Japanese dad turns smash-and-grab thief son in to police, shopkeeper’s polearm technique criticized
Starbucks Japan ready to get Year of the Horse started with adorable drinkware and plushies【Pics】
7 great places to see Mt. Fuji from without having to climb it
Disillusionment at Tsukiji’s tourist-target prices led us to a great ramen restaurant in Tokyo
Beautiful sightseeing boat is a floating tea ceremony venue in east Japan’s best hot spring town
Sayonara, spuds! McDonald’s Japan halts sales of medium and large orders of French fries
Is “The Most Annoying but Most Delicious” ramen from 7-Eleven truly the most delicious?
Japan’s oldest largetooth sawfish in captivity back on display in Mie Prefecture
The etiquette rules for visiting Shinto shrines in Japan
Tokyo store that only sells black shirts sheds light on why it’s opening mid-pandemic
Tokyo adding new anti-littering fines in Shibuya and Harajuku, will require more trash cans too
Japan may add Japanese language proficiency, lifestyle classes to permanent foreign resident requirements
Lacquerware supplier to emperor of Japan and Pokémon team up for new tableware
Starbucks Japan releases new zodiac chilled cup drink for 2026
7-Eleven Japan’s ramen-cooking robot whipped us up a bowl of noodles【Taste test】
Cyberpunk anime meets traditional culture in Ghost in the Shell gold leaf Japanese changing screens
Hello Kitty Choco Egg figures are an adorable trip through three periods of Japanese pop culture【Pics】
Japan’s otoshidama tradition of giving kids money at New Year’s gets a social welfare upgrade
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
7-Eleven Japan starts new temporary luggage storage service in over 300 branches
Starbucks teams up with 166-year-old Kyoto doll maker for Year of the Horse decorations【Photos】
Tokyo considering law requiring more trash cans following litter increase in heavily touristed area
Tokyo’s Tsukiji sushi neighborhood asks tour groups to stay away for the rest of the month
Nintendo’s Kirby now delivering orders at Kura Sushi restaurants, but not in Japan
Tokyo event lets you travel back in time, for free, to celebrate 100 years since Showa era start
Sanrio theme park in Japan announces plans to expand into a Sanrio resort
Stamina-destroying “Paralysis Noodles” are Tokyo’s newest over-the-top ramen innovation
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s deadliest food claims more victims, but why do people keep eating it for New Year’s?
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
The top 10 annoying foreign tourist behaviors on trains, as chosen by Japanese people【Survey】
Starbucks Japan reveals new sakura drinkware collection, inspired by evening cherry blossoms
Leave a Reply