Taiwan Police Honor Bomb Disposal Officer Killed 34 Years Ago
On April 28, 1992, 24-year-old officer Yang Chi-chang was killed defusing a bomb planted at a Taipei McDonald's by extortionist Chen Hsi-chieh. Thirty-four years later, the Criminal Investigation Bureau marked his death anniversary with a social media tribute, reviving public memory of his sacrifice.
What Happened
- On April 28, 1992, suspect Chen Hsi-chieh hid a bomb in the ceiling of a Taipei McDonald's, demanding NT$6 million.
- McDonald's Taiwan chief Sun Ta-wei held a press conference rejecting the demand and called police.
- Officer Yang Chi-chang, 24, volunteered to handle the device, saying "I'm on duty — I'll do it."
- A mercury anti-movement trigger detonated the bomb; Yang lost both hands and died in hospital.
- On April 28, 2026, the CIB posted a tribute calling him "forever our squad leader."
Green-Leaning Coverage
- San Li TV and Liberty Times both framed Yang as a selfless hero, centering his final words to amplify his sacrifice.
- Liberty Times added a personal angle by revealing Yang's girlfriend was a popular pop singer, Su Pei, deepening emotional resonance.
- CTS ran a South Korean warehouse fire story the same day, with no Yang Chi-chang content — suggesting unrelated material was grouped together.
Neutral Coverage
- Mirror Media led with Yang's exact last words as the headline, anchoring the report in the CIB's official tribute.
- Coverage stayed institutional in tone, highlighting the bureau's commemoration without emotional embellishment or additional biographical detail.
Blue-Leaning Coverage
- Blue camp outlets did not cover this event. [Context] The story was driven by a CIB social media post marking a police memorial anniversary — a low-politicization topic that blue-leaning outlets appear not to have picked up.
Key Terms
- Yang Chi-chang: A 24-year-old Taiwanese bomb disposal officer killed on April 28, 1992, during the Taipei McDonald's bombing case. His last words became a lasting symbol of sacrifice in Taiwan's police culture.
- Mercury anti-movement trigger: A booby-trap mechanism that detonates a bomb upon detecting motion during disarmament. It was the device that killed Yang when he attempted to remove the explosive.
Media Coverage
4 sources · 4 articles
Deep Green: 2
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Green: 1
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Neutral: 1
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