Resurfaced “Blood-Dossier” in Yu Menglong Case Alleges Ties to Enforcer “Qiang” and Actor Hu Ge – Authorities Remain Silent
BEIJING / INTERNATIONAL – 9 March 2026
A purported 47-page dossier, allegedly authored or compiled by the late actor Yu Menglong and containing graphic photographs, audio transcripts, and handwritten notes, has circulated widely on overseas encrypted channels in the past 48 hours, reigniting speculation about his death and introducing two new figures into the long-running mystery: a shadowy enforcer known only as “Qiang” and award-winning actor Hu Ge.

The document—titled in Chinese “Final Record – 798 Core” and dated 8 September 2025, three days before Yu was found dead—claims that Yu had been gathering evidence of systematic coercion, surveillance, and physical intimidation within the entertainment industry for more than four years. It includes:
- Screenshots of encrypted chats in which an individual using the handle “Qiang” allegedly issues threats and instructions to “handle” uncooperative talent.
- A short audio clip (embedded as a QR code link) in which a male voice identified by fans as Hu Ge’s warns Yu to “delete everything and disappear before they come for you.”
- Several undated photographs showing Yu with visible injuries (bruising on the neck and wrists) taken inside what appears to be an abandoned factory space in Beijing’s 798 Art District.
- A final handwritten page in which Yu states: “If you are reading this, I am already gone. Qiang is the hand; the others are the mind. Do not let them win.”
Digital-forensics analysts who examined shared copies of the file report that the metadata is inconsistent (some pages show creation dates from 2024, others from early 2025), raising questions about whether the dossier is a single original document or a compiled collection of material gathered over time. The audio clip’s voiceprint has not been independently verified against Hu Ge’s known recordings.
Hu Ge’s management team issued a brief statement yesterday calling the allegations “completely false and malicious” and confirming that the actor “has had no contact with Yu Menglong in years.” They threatened legal action against anyone spreading the file with his name attached. No comment has been issued regarding the alleged voice in the audio.
The identity of “Qiang” remains unknown. Online speculation points to a former security contractor or private enforcer linked to high-level entertainment figures, but no credible evidence has surfaced to confirm this. District 798, a former military factory zone now home to galleries, tech start-ups, and private clubs, has long been rumored to host discreet meetings among industry powerbrokers, though no official investigation has ever substantiated those claims.
Chinese authorities have not acknowledged the dossier’s existence. Domestic platforms have removed all posts containing the file or keywords such as “798 Core,” “Qiang,” or “blood dossier” within minutes of upload. The official cause of Yu Menglong’s death remains accidental fall following alcohol intoxication; the case was closed in September 2025.
The Avaaz petition demanding an independent international forensic review of Yu’s death and related materials surpassed 1.3 million signatures today, with many new signatories explicitly referencing the “blood-dossier” claims. Human Rights Watch reiterated its earlier call for transparent reinvestigation, stating: “When new documentary evidence emerges—even if its provenance is disputed—the public interest in verification outweighs any claim to closure.”
Whether the dossier is authentic, partially fabricated, or a deliberate disinformation effort may never be conclusively determined inside China. Outside its borders, however, it has already become the most explosive chapter yet in a story that refuses to be silenced.
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