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Know Your Historic San Francisco Massacres: Golden Dragon, 1977 ...
src: sfcitizen.com

The Golden Dragon Massacre or GDM (traditional Chinese: ???????; simplified Chinese: ???????; pinyin: J?nlóngji?lóudàtúsh?; Jyutping: Gam1lung4zau2lau4daai6tou4saat3) was a gang-related shooting attack that took place on September 4, 1977 inside the Golden Dragon Restaurant, located at 816 Washington Street in Chinatown, San Francisco, California. The five perpetrators, members of the Joe Boys, a Chinese youth gang, were attempting to kill members of the Wah Ching, a rival Chinatown gang. The attack left five people dead and 11 others injured, none of whom was a gang member. The perpetrators were later convicted and sentenced in connection with the murders.


Video Golden Dragon massacre



Shooting

At 2:00 a.m., Pacific Standard Time on Sunday, September 4, 1977, Joe Boy gang member Tom Yu was informed by phone that members of the rival Wah Ching gang, including Michael Louie, one of its leaders, were present at the Golden Dragon restaurant in San Francisco's Chinatown (Chinese: ??????????). The Golden Dragon was selected not only because it was a favored hangout of the Wah Ching, it was also favored by Hop Sing Tong members and was co-owned by Jack Lee, a Hop Sing elder.

Chester Yu (Tom's brother), Curtis Tam, Melvin Yu, and Peter Ng, all members of the Joe Boys (Chung Ching Yee) gang, took firearms and ammunition from a closet in a friend's home in Pacifica, where they had been staying during the weekend, and Chester Yu drove the group to the restaurant in a car stolen earlier that evening by Peter Cheung. Forty minutes later, at 2:40 a.m., Chester Yu parked the stolen car near the Golden Dragon and stayed in the driver's seat while the others went to the restaurant. Armed with a .45-caliber Commando Mark III rifle (a modern clone of the Thompson submachine gun), two 12 gauge pump-action shotguns, and a .38-caliber revolver, Curtis Tam, Melvin Yu, and Peter Ng donned nylon stocking masks, and entered the restaurant, looking for members of the Wah Ching. From 50 to more than 100 people, many of whom were tourists, were present at the restaurant at the time of the shooting.

According to Chester Yu, Ng had instructed Tam to fire a shot in the ceiling first so that "when the people panic and get down on the floor, we will decide who to shoot." Instead, without warning, the three randomly opened fire on the patrons inside the crowded restaurant, killing five people, including two tourists, and wounding 11 others, none of whom was a gang member. According to unofficial sources, the gunman wielding the rifle went directly to a man at a table and shot him, continuing to shoot after he had fallen to the floor, then redirecting his automatic rifle randomly into the crowd, accompanied by two shotgun blasts from the other gunmen. The intended targets, who were sitting at a table at the back of the restaurant, were not injured. Up to 10 members of the Wah Ching, including their leader Michael Louie, ducked under tables during the gunfire. Triad member Raymond Kwok Chow, then 17 years old, was among those who survived the attack. Yu then drove the shooters back to the house in Pacifica.

The cast of Proctor and Bergman were eating at the Golden Dragon after their show at the Great American Music Hall when the incident occurred. When Army veteran Peter Bergman realized the perpetrators had emptied their weapons he rose from cover in time to see their faces as they exited. He later testified in their conviction.

The shooting lasted less than 60 seconds. Police called it the worst mass murder in San Francisco history. After returning to Pacifica, the Joe Boys slept the rest of the night and heard the news of the killing while eating breakfast later that day. The perpetrators retrieved the weapons from the closet, cut them into pieces in the garage, and asked Tony Chun-Ho Szeto, another Joe Boy who had brought the breakfast of wonton soup, to dump the pieces into San Francisco Bay. Szeto drove Chester Yu to a location within sight of Kee Joon's, a Burlingame restaurant where Szeto worked, and together they dumped the parts into the Bay near San Francisco International Airport.

Motive

The incident was motivated by a longstanding feud between two rival Chinatown gangs, the Joe Boys and Wah Ching. The assassination attempt was retaliation for the death of Felix Huey (Chinese: ???), a 16-year-old Joe Boys member who was killed in a shootout with the Wah Ching in Chinatown's Ping Yuen (Peace Garden) housing project (Chinese: ????????) on 4 July 1977. Huey's murder, in turn, was seen as a reprisal for the earlier death in May of a Wah Ching member.


Maps Golden Dragon massacre



Victims

The five victims fatally shot at the restaurant were later identified as:

  • Denise Louie (???), 21
  • Calvin M. Fong (???), 18
  • Paul Wada (????), 25, a law student
  • Fong Wong (??), 48, originally from Hong Kong, a waiter at the Golden Dragon
  • Donald Kwan (???), 20

Survivor of San Francisco's 1977 Golden Dragon massacre speaks ...
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Aftermath

Nighttime tourism in Chinatown was depressed as restaurant reservations were cancelled en masse following the shooting. Although the Golden Dragon reopened shortly after the shooting, it closed as early as 10 P.M. in the week following the shooting for lack of business that would normally keep it open until 3 A.M. One week after the shooting, two members of the Joe Boys were shot by suspected Wah Ching gunmen, leaving one Joe Boy dead and the other critically wounded, in what police called a revenge-motivated shooting. Business and tourist traffic remained depressed for several weeks following the shootings, although other immigrants stated the rising cost of labor in Chinatown was to blame for increased prices and decreased business.

Arrests and convictions

The San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) announced they were close to solving the crime soon after the shooting, but Chief Charles Gain criticized the Chinatown community for its silence and "abdication of responsibility" due to "the subculture of fear" of the gangs. Gordon Lew, an editor of a local Chinatown newspaper, in turn criticized SFPD for relying on information and cooperation from community leaders linked to the underworld, leading to community distrust of SFPD, and concluded that "committing suicide is not a virtue among the Chinese". Joe Fong, former head of the Joe Boys, said in an interview from prison that SFPD officers had been paid to protect gambling operations in Chinatown, which Chief Gain disputed as part of the police culture prior to his ascension to chief. SFPD Lieutenant Daniel Murphy, head of the investigation, said "because so many innocent people were killed and injured, this time we have been getting more cooperation out of the residents and witnesses in Chinatown than we normally do."

Mayor George Moscone announced a US$25,000 (equivalent to $101,000 in 2017) reward for information leading to the conviction of the shooters two days after it occurred. The unprecedented reward was eventually increased to US$100,000 (equivalent to $404,000 in 2017), and was collected by Robert Woo, a Joe Boys member.

Five men from the Joe Boys were eventually arrested and convicted for the massacre, with three of them still serving prison sentences as of 2013. The perpetrators involved with the murders were Curtis Tam, Melvin Yu, Peter Ng, Chester Yu, and Tom Yu; the first three identified were Ng, Melvin Yu, and Tam, all 17 years old at the time of the shooting.

Curtis Tam was the first person to be arrested for his involvement in the attack, in March 1978. Tam, an emigrant from Hong Kong, was 18 years old and attending Galileo High School during the time of his arrest. Curtis Tam was identified as a suspect seven months after the shootings, and after his arrest, confessed and implicated 11 other participants.

The weapons used in the attack were recovered by police from San Francisco Bay in April 1978 after Chester Yu showed them where they had been dumped.

Tam went on trial on July 31, 1978 and was convicted on September 5, 1978 of five counts of second degree murder and 11 counts of assault. In September 1978, Melvin Yu was convicted of five counts of first-degree murder and 11 counts of assault. Tom Yu was convicted of five counts of first degree murder, eleven counts of assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury, one count of conspiracy to commit murder, and one count of conspiracy to commit assault with a deadly weapon. He was sentenced to life imprisonment in state prison. Peter Ng was convicted of five counts of first degree murder.

Release and parole of perpetrators

In October 1991, Curtis Tam was released from prison. In 2014, Melvin Yu was granted parole, and during the parole hearing, he said that he had plans to live with a cousin in Hong Kong and expected to be deported back to there. Although, as of 2017, a spokesperson for the Chinese Consulate of San Francisco states that there is no record for deportation requests for Yu, and Yu has been living in San Francisco.

Tom Yu is eligible for parole in 2017.

Peter Ng can seek parole in 2020, after being denied eight times, most recently in 2015.

Long term results

An ex-Joe Boys member, Bill Lee, wrote about the killings and his life as a Joe Boys gangster in his book, Chinese Playground: A Memoir.

The Golden Dragon Massacre led to the establishment of the SFPD's Asian Gang Task Force, credited with ending gang-related violence in Chinatown by 1983.

Robert Woo, the informant who collected the $100,000 reward, was killed during a shootout with police while robbing a jewelry shop in Los Angeles on December 19, 1984.

The Golden Dragon restaurant continued operation shortly after the massacre, but was closed in January 2006 after a failed health inspection. The restaurant also owed a year's worth of paychecks to its employees. It was reopened as the Imperial Palace Restaurant.


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See also

  • List of massacres in the United States
  • Wah Mee massacre, a similar mass shooting in Seattle
  • 101 California Street shooting, another mass murder that took place a short distance away from the Golden Dragon, in San Francisco's financial district, in 1993.

Columbine Mine Massacre: The Sacrifice Made to Earn Rights for ...
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References


Walking and Drinking Beer: March 2013
src: 2.bp.blogspot.com


External links

  • Morris, Brockman (2000). Bamboo Tigers: of San Francisco Chinatown's Golden Dragon Massacre 1977. self. Retrieved 17 July 2017. 
  • Kamiya, Gary (8 July 2016). "Chinatown gang feud ignited one of SF's worst mass homicides". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 12 October 2017. (subscription required)
  • Notes Underworld, AsianWeek

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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