Yu Menglong's Death: Agents, Military Cover-Up, and Cai Qi's Potential Fall
[HPP] Cai QiSeptember 23, 202518 min
27 connections·40 entities in this video→Suspected CCP Involvement in Yu Menglong's Death
- ⚠️ Audio recordings suggest Yu Menglong was tortured, with techniques resembling those used in CCP prisons, raising suspicions of national security operatives or undercover police involvement.
- 💡 Daou suspects CCP agents participated in Yu Menglong's persecution, possibly because Yu held evidence exposing money laundering by China's elite in the film industry.
- 🕵️♂️ Among the 17 people present, some are believed to be CCP operatives whose names are unknown to ordinary citizens.
Connections to Money Laundering and Arms Trafficking
- 🔫 Yu Menglong registered trademarks for weapons and fireworks (Class 13), not film, and was linked to companies with similar categories, suggesting potential involvement in arms trafficking.
- 💰 Rumors suggest these film companies served as fronts for large-scale money laundering, potentially tied to China's military elite and even Cai Qi's illegitimate sons.
- 🧩 The case involves individuals with "heavyweight backgrounds," implying that deeper investigation could expose significant figures.
Beijing's Official Narrative and Public Reaction
- 🚨 After days of silence, Beijing's Public Security Bureau stated Yu died from an accidental fall while intoxicated, accusing others of fabricating "false stories" and "doctored videos."
- 🚫 The police bulletin led to arrests of netizens for "spreading rumors" and was criticized for lacking basic details like time, location, or hospital information, suggesting its purpose was to silence the public.
- 🌍 While online comments within China were supportive due to censorship, users outside China reacted with anger and skepticism, viewing it as a typical CCP playbook to control the narrative.
Echoes of the 2012 Ferrari Scandal
- 🔄 Yu Menglong's death is compared to the 2012 Ferrari crash involving Ling Gu, son of Ling Jihua, which exposed sex, money, and power struggles within the CCP elite.
- 💥 The Ferrari scandal, which involved a cover-up attempt and alleged military confrontations, ultimately led to the downfall of Ling Jihua and Zhou Yongkang.
- 🔍 Both cases involve sudden deaths, swirling rumors, censorship, and accusations of illegitimate sons (Cai Qi's sons in Yu's case, echoing Ling Gu's situation).
Implications for China's Political Elite
- ⚠️ The ongoing nature of Yu's case, despite censorship, indicates that the stakes are too high for a quick resolution, suggesting a deeper factional struggle within the CCP.
- 🎯 The question "Who will be the next Ling Jihua?" highlights the potential for Yu Menglong's death to be a "warning shot" of a new political earthquake among China's ruling elite.
- 🌐 Unlike 2012, the global internet prevents a total blackout, allowing overseas forums and netizens to continue investigating and speculating.
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What’s Discussed
Yu Menglong's deathCCP agentsMoney launderingArms traffickingCai QiLing JihuaFerrari scandalPolitical power strugglesChinese censorshipMilitary elitePublic security systemZhongnanhaiOnline rumors
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