Dead young men and pyramid schemes

Society & Culture

A summary of the top news in Chinese society and culture for October 25, 2017. Part of the daily The China Project newsletter, a convenient package of Chinaโ€™s business, political, and cultural news delivered to your inbox for free. Subscribe here.


Three months after the death of Li Wenxing ๆŽๆ–‡ๆ˜Ÿ, a 23-year-old college graduate who fell victim to a pyramid scheme company, the cause of his death was finally confirmedย (in Chinese) as accidental drowningย by police in Tianjin, the city that neighbors Beijing. But the news provoked suspicion and mistrust from Chinese internet users and members of Liโ€™s family. On July 14, Li was found dead in a small pond near a highway on the outskirts of Tianjin. Notes found with Liโ€™s body suggested that he had been under the influence of a company operating a pyramid scheme since May.

Li was a recent university graduate dreaming of becoming a programmer, and had accepted a job offer from a software company on the recruitment site Boss Zhipin. The job required Li to go to Tianjin, but after he set off for the city on May 20, Li was completely cut off from the outside world while being brainwashed by the scam company.

On the same morning that Liโ€™s body was discovered, Zhang Chao ๅผ ่ถ…, another college graduate who was involved in a similar pyramid scam, was found dead about 20 kilometers away from the pond where Li drowned. The body of another young man from Shanxi Province was discovered on July 13 in a pond close to where Li died. These deaths have sparked an uproar over pyramid scheme gangsย in China, and prompted a nationwide crackdownย in August.

According to the Beijing Youth Daily, local police were investigating pyramid scheme scams before Liโ€™s death. But on October 25, the Tianjin police announced the cause of his death as โ€œaccidental drowning,โ€ and there will be no criminal investigation about it.

In an interviewย (in Chinese) with Wangyi News, Liโ€™s sister Li Wenyue ๆŽๆ–‡ๆœˆ said that she did not accept the police judgement and vowed to hire a lawyer to pursue the case. โ€œI just canโ€™t wrap my mind around โ€˜accidental drowning,โ€™โ€ she stated. โ€œThe police couldnโ€™t give me a compelling answer because there was no surveillance camera nearby or any witnesses.โ€