Chinese police leave dead street racer’s body lying in the road

ericmaxman

Senior Newbie
Senior Member
Jul 18, 2008
664
216
1,543
Kuala Lumpur


The dead body of a Chinese street racer who killed himself in a horrific accident has been left in the road as a warning to other drivers.
The driver, 28-year-old Tao Lung, was speeding along in a £79,000 Jaguar F-Type when he crashed while trying to overtake another car.
The two cars were speeding at over 150mph on the residential street when another car pulled out of a house, causing one of the two racers to crash after it failed to brake in time.

Lung, who was driving in Kunming city, Yunnan province, China, struck the kerb and hit a tree that tore off the roof and a wheel, throwing him from the vehicle
He was then run over by the second car which killed him instantly.



One said: 'Because the people here who drive fast are rich the police don't want to tackle them.'
When police arrived they did not cover up the body, but left it exposed in full view of the crowd.
A resident said: 'I think they wanted to get the message across that driving like this has a cost, sometimes its more than someone might want to pay. I think that was why they left the body lying there for so long.'
The corpse was left lying in the middle of the road for at least an hour in full view of pedestrians and other motorists, including children.
Police concluded their investigation, cleared away the wrecked vehicle, and only then was Lung's body loaded into a funeral van.
The Jaguar sports car he was driving has a supercharged engine and can accelerate from 0-60mph in just 4.2 seconds, with a top speed of 186 miles per hour.



China is responsible for at least 220,000 road deaths every year, more than any other country in the world, and contributing almost a quarter of people killed on the world's roads.
The country has roughly a third of the vehicles of the US, but has 20,000 more fatalities each year.
While street racing may be more famous in America and Tokyo, the Beijing Evening News reports that it is a growing trend in China, especially among young men.
Videos from across the country are regularly posted on YouTube and feature heavily modified cars going bumper-to-bumper, often in heavy traffic.
The races reportedly take place for respect and prestige, rather than money, with some clubs requiring members to be under a certain age and have cars worth a certain value.

TL:DR

- Tao Lung, 28, was killed instantly after crashing in Kunming City, China
- His £79,000 Jaguar F-Type hit another car and a tree, throwing him out
- He was then run over by a second car as his body fell into the road
- When police arrived they deliberately left the body uncovered

sos
 

cvkit17

2,000 RPM
Senior Member
Mar 20, 2012
2,884
1,354
1,713
Kuala Lumpur
It is not a good thing that children got a view of that idiot dead salty fish. But on the good side, it served him well.
 

Supra_Fanatics

Beyond 20,000 RPM!
Senior Member
Sep 17, 2008
20,673
3,998
1,713
Seems like there will be a new half cut in China now...really think of your loved ones before racing on the streets...
But the car seems to be quite tough to be in one piece...

Deaths also due to him flying out of the car...racing + no seatbelts....:banghead:
 

DLegend

Official Contributor
Senior Member
Feb 16, 2004
430
14
5,018
Penang
jayjaynyc.blogspot.com
such a new and nice car.... must be rich man son showing off.
 

ken yeang

6,000 RPM
Senior Member
Feb 2, 2006
6,617
1,327
1,713
i sakit hati becoz of the wrecked car:bawling:, not the spoilt-brat racer boy-boy.....:rolleyes:
 

Supra_Fanatics

Beyond 20,000 RPM!
Senior Member
Sep 17, 2008
20,673
3,998
1,713
judging from the car condition, he will be saved if only he use seat-belt.
Got to agree with you. Definitely he wouldn't had died...
 

Wanggot

Senior Member
Senior Member
May 22, 2006
3,906
62
3,148
Jay Bee
Don't see any towing truck around.
Usually they the 1st to arrive.
 

ixeo

4,000 RPM
Senior Member
Jun 26, 2005
4,788
3,080
5,213
KL, Malaysia
Chinese from China.

So Chinese Police, not China Police.
Technically, he is correct.

Police in China is sort of like a Public Officer, they do not carry guns but function like our police. Its called public security bureau, if you translate directly from Chinese its "public peace department".

According to the Wiki
The PSB's alternate English name has been re-defined as China Police.
Law enforcement in China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So yes, China Police, not Chinese Police.

Clearly the dead guy wasn't using his seat belt. LOL. :stupid:
 

Random Post Every 5 Minutes

Car type : Black colour Proton Saga Iswara Aeroback

Number plate : MAQ8316

Car stolen area : Sri Rampai(setapak), KL

date : just now 6/23/2013 midnight

Nothing special about my car, all UNMODIFIED my car's back left signal light has some RED sellotape on it to prevent rain water going in.

sigh...old saga they also want to steal

Anyone spot it pls call me 016-3586077 thanks!!
Ask a question, start a discussion or post something for sale!
Post thread

Online now

Enjoying Zerotohundred?

Log-in for an ad-less experience