This article needs additional citations for verification .(September 2022) |
Eight Immortals Restaurant murders | |
---|---|
Location | Iao Hon, Portuguese Macau (present-day Macau, China) |
Date | 4 August 1985 9:10 p.m. |
Target | Zheng family |
Attack type | Mass killing |
Deaths | 10 |
Perpetrators | Huang Zhiheng |
Motive | Unpaid gambling debts |
On 4 August 1985, Chinese gambler Huang Zhiheng murdered a family of ten in the Eight Immortals Restaurant in Portuguese Macau (present-day Macau SAR, China). He stabbed or strangled each of his victims to death before dismembering their bodies and disposing of their remains in the ocean and dumpsters. Huang purportedly committed the murders because the Zheng family owed him a gambling debt of 600,000 patacas (or US$75,047).
The Eight Immortals Restaurant was a Chinese restaurant in the Iao Hon section of Nossa Senhora de Fátima parish in Macau, then a Portuguese colony. [1] [2] The modest dining establishment, connected to the Eight Immortals Hotel, was owned and operated by Zheng Lin (鄭林), a former street hawker who had moved his business from a stand into a formal restaurant in the 1960s. Zheng lived near his restaurant with his family, who helped him run the business. The restaurant was a financial success, but Zheng and his wife were noted to be heavy gamblers. [3]
Huang Zhiheng (Chinese :黃志恆, sometimes spelled Huang Chih-heng) was born on the Chinese mainland as Chen Shuliang (Chinese :陳梓梁) before emigrating to Hong Kong in the 1970s. In 1973, Huang murdered a man over a debt at his victim's home in Quarry Bay. He fled to Guangzhou, where he cut off the tip of his left index finger and burned his fingerprints in an attempt to avoid being linked to the murder. After living in Guangzhou for several years, Huang married the daughter of his landlord, named Ms. Li. The woman's family disapproved of the marriage, so the couple eloped to Macau. Huang subsequently became involved in Macau's gambling scene, becoming acquainted with the Zhengs in the process. Huang was aged around 50 at the time of this encounter. [4] [3]
During one evening of gambling in 1984, Huang and Zheng became involved in a series of high stakes bets against each other. In the end, Huang won 180,000 patacas (or US$20,000) from Zheng and his wife. The Zhengs were unable to pay the debt, so a verbal agreement was made that the Zheng family would cede their restaurant's mortgage to Huang if the debt was not repaid within one year. Huang agreed. The family remained indebted after this year. Huang would later claim that not only had the family failed to repay him but continued to lose money in further bets, allegedly owing a total of 600,000 patacas (or US$75,047). [4]
The Zheng family were last seen alive by a delivery man on the afternoon of 4 August 1985. That evening, after the restaurant had closed, Huang entered the establishment and demanded that the family pay 30,000 patacas (he later claimed that he dropped his demand to 20,000 patacas) of the debt they owed him. Huang grew increasingly agitated when Zheng Lin refused to turn over ownership of the restaurant. Eventually, Huang became physically aggressive, taking Zheng's son hostage and forcing the other eight family members to bind and gag each other. Huang later claimed that one family member broke free and started to scream, causing him to stab her in the neck with a broken bottle he had brandished as a weapon. He then proceeded to kill all nine family members, either by strangulation or with the bottle. He briefly left the restaurant to lure one of Zheng's sisters inside, where he killed her as well. [4]
Huang dismembered the bodies over the course of eight hours and wrapped them in plastic trash bags, which he then dumped into the ocean or threw into dumpsters. Afterwards he cleaned the restaurant, recovered some money and a safe key from Zheng's corpse, and spent the night at Zheng's nearby residence. [5] [3] The next morning, the delivery man found the restaurant locked, with a note on the door stating that it would be closed for three days. The delivery man visited the Zheng residence, where Huang answered the door and claimed the family had taken a trip to the mainland.
On 8 August 1985, a swimmer found eight pieces of human limbs in Hac Sa Beach (黑沙海灘, also called Black-sand Beach) [Note 1] . It was originally theorised that the body parts came from a group of illegal immigrants from the mainland who had been eaten by sharks, but an examination of the limbs revealed that precise cuts had been used to sever them. This finding prompted a police investigation and a search for potential missing persons. Over the next few days, forensic evidence determined that the limbs belonged to at least four separate people. A further three body parts were found on local beaches over the following week. These findings generated significant interest in the press, and several theories were raised as to what had happened. [5]
Eventually, Macau police traced the severed limbs to the Zheng family, who had been reported missing by relatives. Meanwhile, Huang reopened and continued to operate the restaurant; this was considered unusual but not unwarranted, as he was known to associate with the family and was in possession of the restaurant's ownership documents. He also began collecting rent from the family's former home. Police grew suspicious of Huang and searched his bank holdings, finding documents belonging to Zheng and student ID cards belonging to his children. Huang attempted to flee for the mainland but was captured on 28 September 1986. He was convicted of ten counts of murder on 2 October 1986. Huang's arrest, and the fact that he had continued to run the restaurant after dismembering its former owners, resulted in the urban legend that he had baked his victims into pork buns. The final body parts to be linked to the murders were found in a trash dump in 1989. [5] [4] [3]
Huang was attacked in prison by another inmate on the day after his conviction. He was sent to a hospital to convalesce, where he attempted to escape without success. On 6 October, Huang confessed and detailed to investigators how and why he had killed the Zheng family. His second and fatal suicide attempt took place on 4 December 1986, when he managed to cut his wrists with a bottle cap. Huang left a suicide note and a letter to a local newspaper explaining his actions, stating in his note that his suicide was not due to his crimes but rather to escape his chronic asthma. After his death, what was left of his fingerprints linked him to the 1973 murder in Hong Kong. [5]
The recovered remains of the Zheng family were later cremated, and the ashes scattered off the coast of Macau by relatives.
After Huang's arrest, the restaurant was immediately closed and seized by police. It was resold by early 1987 and has seen different owners in recent years. Today, the former restaurant and the apartments above it are part of Baxian Hotel.
The events surrounding the Eight Immortals Restaurant murders were depicted in the 1993 Hong Kong movie The Untold Story featuring Anthony Wong. [6] [7] [8] The film featured a fictionalized version of the murder of the Zheng family, and notably played upon the rumors that cannibalism had occurred after the murders. [7] In China, the film was also released under the names The Human Pork Bun and Human Meat Roast Pork Buns. [9] [10]
The economy of Macau is a highly developed market economy. Macau's economy has remained one of the most open in the world since its handover to China in 1999. Apparel exports and gambling-related tourism are mainstays of the economy. Since Macau has little arable land and few natural resources, it depends on mainland China for most of its food, fresh water, and energy imports. Japan and Hong Kong are the main suppliers of raw materials and capital goods. Although Macau was hit hard by the 1997–98 Asian financial crisis and the early 2000s recession, its economy grew approximately 13.1% annually on average between 2001 and 2006. Macau is a full Member of the World Trade Organization. Public security has greatly improved after handover to the People's Republic of China. With the tax revenue from the profitable gambling industry, the Macau government is able to introduce the social welfare program of 15 years of free education to all Macau citizens. In 2015, Macau's economy saw a sharp decrease due to the reduced spending by visitors from Mainland China since the Anti-corruption campaign under Xi Jinping.
Stanley Ho Hung-sun was a Hong Kong and Macau billionaire businessman. He was the founder and chairman of SJM Holdings, which owns nineteen casinos in Macau including the Grand Lisboa.
The Macanese pataca or Macau pataca is the currency of Macau. It is subdivided into 100 avos, with 10 avos called ho (毫) in Cantonese.
The United Bamboo Gang, also known as the Bamboo Union, is the largest of Taiwan's three main criminal Triads. They are reported to have roughly 200,000 members. The membership consists largely of waishengren and has had historic ties to the Kuomintang; they are said to be motivated as much by political ideology as by profit. They are known to simply call themselves "businessmen", but in reality, are also involved in organized killings and drug trafficking. The gang gained global notoriety when it became directly involved in politics in the early 1980s.
The Untold Story is a 1993 Hong Kong crime-horror film directed by Herman Yau and starring Danny Lee and Anthony Wong, with the former also serving as the film's producer.
The pataca was a monetary unit of account used in Portuguese Timor between 1894 and 1958, except for the period 1942–1945, when the occupying Japanese forces introduced the Netherlands Indies gulden and the roepiah. As in the case of the Macanese pataca which is still in use today, the East Timor unit was based on the silver Mexican dollar coins which were prolific in the wider region in the 19th century. These Mexican dollar coins were in turn the lineal descendants of the Spanish pieces of eight which had been introduced to the region by the Portuguese through Portuguese Malacca, and by the Spanish through the Manila Galleon trade.
The Sociedade de Turismo e Diversões de Macau, SA is a company in Macau owned by the family of Stanley Ho. Historically, it held a monopoly to Macau's gambling industry as the only licensee for casinos. In 2002, the government of Macau began issuing more licenses and the monopoly was broken. Still, of the 41 operating casinos in Macau, 22 are owned by STDM, as of 2019.
House of Joy is a Singaporean Mandarin drama series aired on MediaCorp TV Channel 8. The series debuted on 6 November 2006 and was telecast weekday nights at 9pm. It has a total of 20 episodes. It stars Ivy Lee, Chen Hanwei, Cynthia Koh & Edmund Chen as the casts of the series.
Ho Chio Meng was the first prosecutor general of the Public Prosecutions Office of the Macau Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China. Having been appointed in 1999 and re-appointed in 2004 and 2009, he served until 20 December 2014, when he was replaced by Ip Son Sang, a judge.
Huang Na was an eight-year-old Chinese national residing in Pasir Panjang, Singapore, who disappeared on 10 October 2004. Her mother, the police and the community conducted a three-week-long nationwide search for her. After her body was found, many Singaporeans attended her wake and funeral, giving bai jin and gifts. In a high-profile 14-day trial, Malaysian-born Took Leng How, a vegetable packer at the wholesale centre, was found guilty of murdering her and hanged after an appeal and a request for presidential clemency failed.
The Legend and the Hero 2 is a Taiwanese television series adapted from the novel Fengshen Yanyi written by Xu Zhonglin and Lu Xixing. The series was first broadcast on TTV from September to October 2009, and was preceded by The Legend and the Hero in 2007.
The Journey: A Voyage was the first season of MediaCorp Channel 8's nation-building trilogy, The Journey. The season is based on first-generation Chinese immigrants who set foot on the island of Singapore to seek their fortunes and future.
Events in the year 1955 in China. The country had an estimated population of 605 million people.
The Central Leading Group on Hong Kong and Macau Affairs is an internal policy coordination group of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), reporting to the CCP Politburo, in charge of supervising and coordinating Beijing's policies towards the Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau.
Wu Kong (悟空传), also known as Immortal Demon Slayer and The Legend of Wukong, is a 2017 Chinese fantasy-action-adventure film directed by Derek Kwok and produced by Huang Jianxin, starring Eddie Peng, Ni Ni, Shawn Yue, Oho Ou, and Zheng Shuang. It is based on Jin Hezai's internet novel Wukong Biography, which retells the story of Sun Wukong in the classical novel Journey to the West and is partly inspired by the 1995 comedy film A Chinese Odyssey. The film was released in China on 13 July 2017.
Enter the Fat Dragon is a 2020 Hong Kong martial arts comedy film directed by Kenji Tanigaki and Aman Chang from a screenplay by and co-starring Wong Jing, who also acted producer with Connie Wong and lead actor Donnie Yen. The film co-stars Teresa Mo and Niki Chow. The film was a Chinese New Year streaming release on OTT platforms in China, and achieved strong streaming numbers across IQiyi, Tencent and Youku. It is also the highest grossing film in Malaysia and one of the top 10 highest grossing film in Singapore in 2020.
Nanhaipotamon is a genus of freshwater crabs, in the subfamily Potamiscinae, found in southern China and Taiwan. As of 2018, 18 species have been described. The genus is named after the South China Sea, for it occurs mostly in coastal areas. The genus was first described by R. Bott in 1968 as Isolapotamon (Nanhaipotamon), i.e., a subgenus of Isolapotamon.
Detective Chinatown is a Chinese mystery crime drama web television series. It is executively produced by Chen Sicheng, with the first season having an ensemble cast including Roy Chiu, Janine Chang, Zhang Yishang, Chen Zheyuan and Yuxian Shang, Haoming Yu and Kenny Bee joining in season two.
Zheng Yumin is a former Chinese badminton player.