Yu Menglong’s Death: From Official Accident Ruling to Allegations of Torture – A Case That Tests China’s Information Control
More than four months after Chinese actor Yu Menglong, 37, fell to his death from a Beijing apartment on September 11, 2025, the #JusticeForYuMenglong campaign continues to gain momentum worldwide. Petitions on platforms like Avaaz have surpassed 740,000 signatures as of early 2026, reflecting deep public skepticism toward the official narrative of an “accidental fall after heavy drinking.”
Beijing police closed the case within hours, stating no criminal involvement and attributing the death to a drunken mishap at the Sunshine Upper East complex. Yu’s management agency and his mother echoed this, urging the public to accept the findings and cease speculation. However, a flood of unverified leaks has challenged this conclusion. An alleged autopsy report, widely shared online, details pre-fall injuries: fractured ribs from blunt trauma, internal hemorrhaging, genital tearing suggestive of sexual assault, broken teeth, a fractured nose, and crude abdominal incisions—possibly to retrieve a swallowed USB drive containing compromising material.

Neighbor audio recordings from around 5 a.m. capture screams, pleas of “Don’t touch me!”, furniture crashing, and a cold voice demanding “Drink it all!” Some reports allege Yu endured days of captivity and abuse at a private gathering involving over a dozen entertainment figures, including directors and investors accused of coercion and exploitation. Additional claims include the killing of his corgi, Fuli, in front of him, and dark-web videos purportedly showing torture—though many such materials remain unverified and may be fabricated.
Within China, discussion faces ruthless suppression: hashtags erased, accounts suspended, rumor-mongers detained, and even food-delivery note features disabled to block coded protests (e.g., carp-to-dragon symbols playing on “Yu”). His mother’s public acceptance video has raised coercion concerns, with her current status unclear. Independent civilian investigators, including a group of women who conducted on-site fieldwork in Beijing, produced a 40-page report questioning the timeline—suggesting Yu may have died days earlier (possibly September 9) based on weather, audio, and site analysis—directly contradicting police accounts.
The campaign has spilled overseas: vigils in Los Angeles, Times Square billboards, and rallies in Taiwan and the U.S. amplify calls for an independent probe. Analysts view this as emblematic of broader distrust in China’s justice system, where swift closures protect elites amid economic pressures and historical grievances. Human rights groups note parallels to past cases of suppressed scandals in the entertainment industry.
While much evidence remains contested and lacks independent verification, Yu Menglong’s fate—once a gentle star in Eternal Love—has become a symbol of unresolved pain under opacity. The movement asks whether collective global pressure can force transparency, or if systemic silence will prevail.
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