In December 2019, news broke that former Nissan executive
Carlos Ghosn, who was on bail in Japan, had fled to Lebanon with the assistance of an American former Special Operations soldier and his son. An Interpol Red Notice was issued in early 2020 for Taylor and his son Peter for their alleged involvement in smuggling Ghosn out of Japan. In May 2020, the two were arrested at their home in Harvard, Massachusetts and held at the
Norfolk County Correctional Facility to await extradition to Japan. The Taylor family set up a
Change.org petition to raise public awareness of his efforts to fight extradition. Despite efforts by their lawyers, the Taylors were denied bail in July 2020 and continued to be detained in Massachusetts because prosecutors argued that the two represented a flight risk. In court, U.S. prosecutors said Ghosn had wired more than $860,000 to a company linked to Peter Taylor shortly before the escape and that Ghosn's son later made $500,000 in
cryptocurrency payments to the Taylors. Japanese prosecutors claimed that roughly $400,000 of the initial $860,000 was spent on a private jet. Following their arrest, Taylor and his son fought extradition for ten months (see: Taylor v. McDermott) arguing that at the time of the escape there was no law in Japan against assisting in a “bail jump” and that the Japanese prison conditions are inhumane. In 2023, the Japanese parliament revised the country's laws on bail jumping in response to the escape of Ghosn. In October 2020, the
U.S. Department of State agreed to turn the two men over to Japan, but a court judge put the extradition on hold after Taylor's lawyers filed an emergency petition. The judge later rejected the petition and Taylor's lawyers appealed to the federal appeals court. and held in detention in Japan. The two appeared before a Japanese court in June Neither of the Taylors were given credit in Japan for the ten months they were held in the United States awaiting extradition. He was held in an unheated cell with only a thin mat providing protection from the concrete floor. Taylor developed frostbite while working in a prison factory where inmates are prohibited from wearing gloves and required to wash their hands multiple times a day in cold water. In October 2022, after serving 20 months in a Japanese prison, Taylor and his son were returned to the United States. As of July 2023, Taylor had not been reimbursed in full by Ghosn for $1 million in legal fees incurred by Taylor following his arrest. == Film and television ==