Former Nissan Motor Co Ltd (OTC: NSANY) CEO Carlos Ghosn’s flight from Japan, where he was facing fraud charges, to Lebanon was the result of an elaborate, detailed plan involving more than 10 people that took months to work out and exploited a security gap at the Osaka Airport, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. Citing unnamed sources, WSJ said an operative working with Ghosn noticed a potential security hole at Osaka’s Kansai International Airport months earlier: private jet terminal security was lax and oversized luggage wasn’t put through scanners.