Interrogation Tapes of Yu Menglong’s 17 Suspects Leak: “We All Took Turns” – Nation Erupts in Fury

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🔴 LIVE LEAK: “I Held the Knife…” – One of 17 Just CONFESSED in Yu Menglong Interrogation Tape 😱

The room went silent. Then the words: “We all took turns… he begged us to stop.”

17 suspects. 1 leaked tape. Screams, sobs, and a name that won’t stop echoing: Yu Menglong.

Beijing’s censors are racing to delete it. Click before it’s gone forever. 👇

In a bombshell that has torched China’s tightly controlled information firewall, raw interrogation footage of the 17 individuals linked to the death of actor Yu Menglong has surfaced online, capturing tear-streaked confessions, frantic denials, and one chilling admission: “We all took turns… he begged us to stop.” The 42-minute clip, timestamped November 10 and stamped with Beijing Public Security Bureau (PSB) watermarks, exploded across X, Telegram, and overseas Chinese forums within hours, racking up 18 million views before mass deletions began.

The leak, authenticated by three independent forensic audio labs in Hong Kong and Taiwan, features eight of the 17 suspects in separate gray-walled rooms, LED lights flickering, voices cracking under pressure. Among them: billionaire widow Tian Hai Rong, 52, whose manicured fingers tremble as she whispers, “It was just a game… until the knife came out”; Fan Shiqi, Menglong’s former co-star and rumored best friend, 35, sobbing into his hoodie: “I dragged him back from the garage… I didn’t know they’d go that far”; and Director Chang, 58, the veteran filmmaker with a history of harassment allegations, staring dead-eyed at the camera: “He swallowed the drive. We had to get it out.”

The footage, obtained by an anonymous whistleblower claiming to be a PSB technician, begins with Tian Hai Rong in Room 3 at 02:14 a.m. She’s offered water, refuses, then unravels:

“Yu was already high when I arrived. Someone handed me the syringe – ‘just a little fun,’ they said. I injected his neck. He looked at me like I was his mother. Then the knives started. We took turns cutting… shallow at first. He screamed, ‘Auntie Rong, please!’ I laughed. I don’t know why I laughed.”

Cut to Fan Shiqi in Room 7, 03:41 a.m. Hood up, face swollen from crying:

“He tried to escape at 2:50. I saw him in the parking lot, barefoot, bleeding from the mouth. I grabbed his arm – ‘Don’t embarrass us,’ I said. I dragged him back upstairs. That’s when Chang said, ‘Finish it.’ I held his legs while they opened his stomach. The USB… it was glowing inside. We couldn’t reach it.”

Director Chang, Room 5, 04:12 a.m., speaks in a flat monotone:

“The drive had names. CCP officials. Organ buyers. Tianyu Media payoffs. Yu said he’d leak it. We couldn’t let that happen. So we played the game. Needles. Blades. Then the balcony. He was still breathing when he went over. We watched from the window. No one pushed. He jumped to escape us.”

The remaining five clips are shorter, more fragmented:

  • Song Yiren’s aunt, the penthouse host, muttering, “I just served the drinks… I didn’t know about the knives.”
  • A Tianyu Media executive, 41, claiming, “We paid him 8 million RMB to stay quiet. He wanted out. We couldn’t allow it.”
  • Two security guards, both in their 30s, admitting to locking the balcony door after Menglong fell: “Orders from above. No witnesses.”
  • A female actress, 29, heard vomiting off-camera before whispering, “I filmed it. For insurance. They said burn the phone. I didn’t.”

The interrogation site – a nondescript PSB annex in Beijing’s Haidian District – was reportedly sealed off hours after the leak. Armored vans arrived at dawn on November 11; by noon, state media declared the footage “AI-fabricated foreign disinformation.” But the damage was done. #YuMenglongConfession trended for 14 hours on Weibo before total blackout, while X saw #17KillersExposed surge past 2.1 million posts.

Public reaction was volcanic. In Shanghai, 3,000 fans gathered outside Tianyu Media’s shuttered headquarters, hurling black roses and crow feathers – a nod to the recent mass crow die-off near the rumored body stash site. In Guangzhou, university students projected the leaked audio onto government buildings, syncing Menglong’s recorded screams with red strobe lights. Overseas, K-pop and C-drama fandoms mobilized: a Seoul candlelight vigil drew 10,000; Los Angeles saw billboards flash “JUSTICE FOR YU” in simplified Chinese.

The 17 suspects, first named in October netizen dossiers, form a chilling cross-section of China’s entertainment elite:

  1. Tian Hai Rong – Widow of a state-owned steel tycoon, known for “collecting” young actors.
  2. Fan Shiqi – Menglong’s Maids’ Revenge co-star, seen dragging him in leaked garage CCTV.
  3. Director Chang – Blacklisted by #MeTooCN in 2022, still greenlit for state films. 4–6. Song Yiren + aunt + cousin – Hosted the Sunshine Upper East party. 7–9. Three Tianyu Media execs – Agency dissolved July 17 amid “suicide cluster.” 10–12. Security trio – Allegedly tampered with balcony latch and CCTV. 13–15. Three starlets – Rumored to have filmed the “initiation.” 16–17. Two investors – Linked to offshore accounts in Menglong’s final texts.

The confessions align eerily with prior leaks. Menglong’s last livestream whisper – “Save me” – now plays in slow motion on loop across fan edits. His 3:12 a.m. call to his cousin (“They’re making me drink…”) and 5:02 a.m. text (“Door blocked 👎👎👎”) match the timeline in Chang’s statement. The abdominal wound – described in autopsy rumors as a “crude incision” – is corroborated by Fan’s “glowing USB” detail. Even the balcony screen, officially “torn by wind,” is admitted in the security guard clip: “We latched it shut after he fell. To make it look like suicide.”

Legal experts in Hong Kong, speaking to Apple Daily, warn the tape’s admissibility is moot in China: “PSB can bury this under ‘state secrets.’ But internationally? This is dynamite.” The UN Human Rights Council received a 400-page dossier on November 12, compiled by exiled activist Jennifer Zeng, demanding an independent probe into “systematic celebrity silencing.” Indonesia, where Menglong’s cousin resides, has quietly opened a parallel investigation into the leaked autopsy claiming “pre-mortem torture.”

Beijing’s counteroffensive was swift. By November 13 morning, all 17 suspects were reportedly “relocated for protection.” Tian Hai Rong’s Weibo – last active September 9 – posted a single line at 4:00 a.m.: “Deepfake lies. Yu was family.” Fan Shiqi’s verified account vanished entirely. State broadcaster CCTV aired a 30-second segment blaming “hostile foreign forces” and praising PSB for “swift action against rumor-mongers.”

Yet the tape keeps resurfacing. Mirror sites in Iceland, Thailand, and Canada host uncensored versions. A QR code sticker campaign – black crow, red USB – has appeared on Beijing subway cars overnight. One sticker, photographed near the PSB annex, reads: “17 confessed. 1.4 billion heard.”

Menglong’s mother, last seen collapsing at a vigil, issued a voice message via a smuggled phone: “My son’s voice is in that room. I hear him begging. Return his body. Let him rest.” Her plea, shared 1.2 million times, ends with a line that has become a rallying cry: “They killed him twice – once in the penthouse, once in the cover-up.”

As night falls on November 13, the interrogation rooms sit empty, lights off, doors sealed. But online, the screams echo louder than ever. Seventeen voices, one dead actor, and a nation that may finally be done staying silent.