Family of China murder victim loses B.C. lawsuit against family of executed killer
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Supreme Court has dismissed a lawsuit filed by the family of a man murdered in a “contract killing” in 2017 in China, against the family of the killer who they say used the victim’s funds to buy homes in Metro Vancouver.
Justice Gordon Funt’s ruling says the case was both “extraordinary,” involving a lead defendant who was executed in China in 2020, and “ordinary,” for hinging on the burden of proof.
The lawsuit was filed in 2018 by the family of Changbin Yang against Long Ni, who was in Vancouver at the time of the killing but would later be arrested and executed in China for having ordered the murder.
The lawsuit named Ni, his wife and daughter as defendants, alleging he borrowed the equivalent of $113 million from Yang to invest in the Chinese mining industry, but instead used it to buy several B.C. properties.


