From February 22 to 23, local time, Kei Komuro, the husband of The eldest daughter of Prince Fumihito of Akinobu Palace, took the second New York State Judicial Examination. Japanese media reported that Kei Komuro looked depressed and unconfident, in stark contrast to before.

Kei Komuro, who walks with his head down.
According to the Daily Mail, quoted by the daily magazine "Women Themselves", unlike many young people who showed a "relieved" expression after the exam, Kei Komuro stretched his face and walked with his head bowed. It may be that in the past two months, I have been at home preparing for the exam, I have not exercised enough, I look slightly bloated, and my hair is a little disheveled, which is very different from the capable image when I returned to China last September.
The chamber was photographed with a bulging stomach and disheveled hair.
Kei Komuro took the New York State Judicial Examination last summer but failed to pass and failed to qualify as a lawyer. After he and Makoto settled in New York, they were under a lot of financial pressure. If they still fail the second judicial examination, the life of the small room couple will face two major problems: visa and work.
According to the analysis of a Japanese reporter based in New York, komuro's qualification to stay in the United States may still be a student visa, and may take advantage of the OPT program with an extended period (one-year professional internship period after graduation). If this is the case, his visa will expire around May this year.
When he returned home last summer, he Kei Komuro, who had a braid, was lean and capable.
Typically, the pass rate for the February exam is lower than for the judicial exam in July each year. Someone advised the rooms that if they insisted on living in the United States and if they wanted to qualify as lawyers, they could consider moving outside of New York.
It is said that Komuro and the Japanese Consulate General in New York discussed the issue of future visas, and the recommendation made by the Consulate General to Komuro was to "leave New York". After the Feb. 10 shooting near the apartment where the couple lived, the Consulate General wanted them to move out of New York more clearly.
The small room couple when they first arrived in New York last year.
If the goal is to obtain a visa and a lawyer's qualification, the Japanese reporter's advice is to re-enter the university in Wisconsin to study law. Because the state stipulates that as long as you graduate from a law school in the state, you can work as a lawyer even if you have not obtained a lawyer's license, that is, the "graduation certificate privilege system". Specifically, it is mainly the University of Wisconsin and the University of Marquette, two colleges and universities. Komuro can obtain a student visa if she re-enters the university, and Mako can continue to live in the United States as her spouse.
But Mako didn't seem willing to move elsewhere. Not to mention that college tuition costs about 3 million yen a year, and even if you become a lawyer after graduation, your annual income is much lower than in New York. According to people working in the legal profession in New York, "The average annual income of a lawyer in Wisconsin is about 15 million yen, compared with about 10 million yen in the first year of work." But in New York State, the first year income is around 16 million to 17 million yen. Of course, the cost of living there is also much lower than in New York. ”
Mako walking alone on the streets of New York.
The population of Milwaukee, Wisconsin's largest city, is only about 600,000, which is not comparable to New York. Komuro specializes in mergers and acquisitions, and New York is certainly the most suitable place.
Not only that, but New York also has many cultural facilities such as art galleries and museums, which means that Mako has relatively more options for future employment. If in Wisconsin, It would be much more difficult for Makoto to find a job in her professional field. In addition, in New York, Mako is free to go out as an ordinary person without attracting attention, and she worries that she will receive attention again in smaller cities.