成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Remembering a heroic witness 30 years after Wah Mee Massacre

Feb 18, 2013, 4:09 PM | Updated: Feb 19, 2013, 10:20 am

The deadliest mass killing in Seattle history took place at an after-hours gambling club accessed t...

The deadliest mass killing in Seattle history took place at an after-hours gambling club accessed through a doorway in Maynard Alley. (成人X站 Radio/Tim Haeck)

(成人X站 Radio/Tim Haeck)

Thirty years ago, a bleeding man stumbled through a doorway leading from a private gambling club into an alley in Seattle’s International District. He had just escaped the deadliest mass killing in Seattle history.

It became known as the Wah Mee Massacre, the murders of 13 people inside an after-hours gambling club accessed through a doorway in Maynard Alley. Fourteen people were tied up, robbed and shot.

“If you’re going to commit a robbery, you want to get away,” said former deputy prosecuting attorney William Downing. He was just five years out of the University of Washington law school at the time when he and classmate Robert Lasnik, now a federal judge in Seattle, caught the case.

Two men entered the club sometime before midnight on Feb. 18, joined by a third man. All of the customers of the Wah Mee Club were shot in the head at close range. The killers then left the club in the early morning hours of Feb. 19, 1983. But Downing says one gambler, Wai Chin somehow survived.

“He was absolutely a hero of a witness, Wai Chin. By his managing to get out, to speak, despite being shot through the throat, to communicate to the authorities where to look in their investigation, that was absolutely critical,” said Downing.

Freelance journalist Todd Matthews first began researching the case 15 years ago.

“There is really no reason that Wai Chin should have survived that night. People recalled that he was the weakest of the bunch, he was old, he was frail.”

As the executions began, Wai Chin tried to hide.

“He managed to sort of wiggle his way beneath one of the gaming tables as the shots were being fired and the bullet that struck him went through his jaw,” said Matthews. His bindings were not very tight and Wai Chin got to his feet and headed for the door. “It really was a miracle that he survived.”

Matthews, who wrote the book “Wah Mee,” said it seems clear that the plan from the start was to kill all the witnesses.

“I think it was completely shocking to Benjamin Ng and Willie Mak that anybody survived and I sometimes think about that night and them wondering, how did they know to find us?”

Wai Chin, the only survivor of the Wah Mee Massacre identified Ng and Mak and testified at their trials. They were both convicted of aggravated murder in 1983. Ng got life in prison and Mak was sentenced to death but it was reduced to life in prison on appeal. A third man, Tony Ng fled to Canada but was captured and acquitted of murder in 1985. He was convicted of multiple counts of robbery and assault and remains in prison.

Former prosecutor and now Judge William Downing remembers visiting the Wah Mee Club a few months after the killings.

“It was probably the most eerie experience I ever had as a prosecuting attorney, going into the scene of the crime, there were still blood stains, things knocked over, upended. It was chilling to be there.”

Today, the club remains locked. Outside, the Maynard Alley entrance looks much the same, except for some newer purple paint.

“The club is locked up, frozen in time and I don’t think that anyone could do anything with that space,” said Matthews.

“It’s treated with a certain amount of reverence for the valuable lives that were lost and it’s been closed off with no other use made of it,” said Judge Downing.

Wai Chin passed away 10 years after the massacre at age 72.

Benjamin Ng and Mak are serving life in prison without parole, but Tony Ng has a chance for release, perhaps within a few years.

MyNorthwest News

zip line spokane...

MyNorthwest Staff

Zip it good: Spokane鈥檚 zip line nears takeoff

Spokane's long-awaited zip line is nearing completion, promising a thrilling adventure for residents and visitors alike by July's end.

2 hours ago

Planes clip wings at SEA Airport....

成人X站 7 News Staff

Planes clip wings at SEA, passengers deplane

Two Alaska Airlines planes clipped wings at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Saturday afternoon, prompting passengers to deplane.

14 hours ago

Federal Way Police car at crime scene....

Frank Lenzi

Federal Way shooting leaves teen dead, child wounded; suspect at large

An 18-year-old man was shot to death, and an 11-year-old child was hit by a stray bullet Saturday morning in Federal Way, police said.

21 hours ago

Seattle Police at the scene of a quadruple shooting in Pioneer Square....

Frank Lenzi

Three shot to death, one wounded in Seattle’s Pioneer Square

Three people were shot to death and a fourth was seriously wounded early Saturday morning in Pioneer Square, Seattle police said. According to a post on the SPD Blotter, just after 1 a.m., officers near First Avenue and South Washington Street heard a disturbance. They found four adults with gunshot wounds. Two men and a […]

24 hours ago

horoscope wsdot...

MyNorthwest Staff

Your horoscope is wearing a hard hat, thanks to WSDOT

Explore how WSDOT blends astrology and horoscopes with traffic safety for a unique approach to road awareness and cosmic guidance.

1 day ago

FILE - Cassie Ventura, left, and Sean "Diddy" Combs appear at The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Cost...

Associated Press

Key moments from first week of Sean 鈥楧iddy鈥 Combs鈥 sex trafficking trial

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Testimony in the sex trafficking trial of hip-hop mogul Sean 鈥淒iddy鈥 Combs began this week, opening a window into what prosecutors say was the sordid world of group sex, drugs and violence beneath the glittering, jet set persona cultivated by the Bad Boy Records founder. Much of the testimony was hard […]

1 day ago

Remembering a heroic witness 30 years after Wah Mee Massacre