Police Closed Yu Menglong Case in Hours: “Accidental Fall”—But Leaked Autopsy Photos Reveal Unexplained Scars, Tampered Scenes, and Weather That Makes the Story Impossible
Police wrapped up the investigation into Chinese actor Yu Menglong’s death in mere hours on September 11, 2025, stamping it an “accidental fall after drinking” and sealing the file with no foul play suspected. Yet fresh leaks—graphic autopsy photos and civilian analyses—are ripping the official story apart, exposing unexplained scars, signs of pre-fall trauma, a quietly altered crime scene, and basic weather data that renders the “drunken slip” explanation implausible. Everyday netizens, armed with screenshots, timelines, and public records, are now tearing through the shadows, piece by piece, fueling raw nationwide fury and raising one chilling consensus: this wasn’t an accident—it was a cover-up.

Yu Menglong, 37, was found dead at the base of a high-rise in Beijing’s Sunshine Upper East complex early that morning. Authorities declared it accidental almost immediately, citing alcohol intoxication and ruling out homicide without detailed public forensics. But alleged autopsy screenshots from the Beijing Shengtang Forensic Appraisal Center (commissioned September 13, examination September 14) tell a different tale. The documents describe multiple severe injuries inconsistent with a simple fall: deep chest trauma, bilateral pleural bleeding, multiple left-side rib fractures, liver laceration, pericardial fluid accumulation leading to cardiac arrest, genital tearing suggestive of assault, missing lower teeth, broken nose, and scalp injuries from possible tugging or blunt force. Postmortem lividity (dark red, pressure-unresponsive) and early abdominal greening indicate the body had been dead longer than the official timeline allows, with pale yellow skin and no enlarged lymph nodes noted.
These details clash violently with the “accidental fall” verdict. Civilian investigators—posting detailed 40-page dossiers on overseas platforms and hidden forums—point to mismatched death dates (some claim September 9 or 10, not 11), contradictory witness accounts, and evidence of tampering. Photos allegedly show the scene altered: barriers moved, blood patterns inconsistent with a direct drop, and no mention of alcohol levels in initial reports despite the intoxication claim. One viral analysis highlights weather records from Beijing on September 10-11: calm conditions, no rain or high winds to explain a “slip” from a secure balcony or window in an upscale compound. “If he was drunk and fell accidentally, why the pre-fall fractures and genital trauma?” one widely shared post asks. “Weather data proves no storm pushed him—someone did.”
Public outrage has exploded as these leaks spread despite heavy censorship. Hashtags demanding #JusticeForYuMenglong have been suppressed domestically, yet mirrors thrive internationally, with users archiving autopsy fragments and cross-referencing them against pre-death photos. Allegations swirl of high-level involvement—party attendees from entertainment circles, whispers of powerful connections—and even claims the body was preserved (formalin-treated) rather than cremated, possibly for plastination or hiding evidence. Yu’s mother reportedly vanished amid the controversy, and his former agency (not police) announced the death, adding to suspicions of scripted closure.
Citizen sleuths continue digging: reconstructing final hours, analyzing leaked audio snippets, and challenging the swift police verdict. “The timeline crumbles under basic checks,” one report notes. “If facts don’t add up, the whole narrative collapses.” As more pieces emerge—scars that scream torture, a scene quietly cleaned, weather that debunks the accident—the public sees not tragedy, but conspiracy. Authorities have detained individuals for “spreading false information,” yet the questions only grow louder.
The evidence leaking out changes everything. What citizens are uncovering next could expose cracks in the system too wide to ignore. In a case closed before the body cooled, the truth may finally force its way through.
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