The man who crashed his car into San Francisco's Chinese consulate has been identified as Zhanyuan Yang, a 31-year-old San Francisco resident. After the crash, he was shot and killed by police. Authorities found a cache of replica guns and a book on political assassinations in his apartment. Yang's life took a different turn as he drove his car into the consulate, ending in a fatal encounter with law enforcement. This incident has raised concerns and prompted further investigation into his motives and background.
12 years ago, Zhanyuan Yang was a rising entrepreneur in college in China. But four days ago, his life took a different turn, as he drove a car into the Chinese consulate in SF and was shot dead by police. Here's what we know about his life before this. https://t.co/nJJgLhKCXP
12 years ago, Zhanyuan Yang was a rising entrepreneur in college in China. But four days ago, his life took a different turn, as he drove a car into the Chinese consulate in SF and was shot dead by police. Here's what we know about his life before this. https://t.co/tWC9AIEGi9
Inside the apartment of the man shot dead by SFPD after crashing a car into the Chinese consulate: a cache of replica guns and a book on political assassinations. via @jonahowenlamb @lihanlihan @sfstandard https://t.co/wejequIPRd
UPDATE: A 31-year-old San Francisco man has been identified as the driver who was shot and killed by police after crashing a car into the Chinese consulate. https://t.co/nPje6EPNUL
BREAKING: The man who crashed his car into San Francisco's Chinese consulate on Monday before being shot and killed by police has been identified by officials as Zhanyuan Yang, 31, of San Francisco. Read more by clicking the image below. ⬇️ https://t.co/U0fooY4IYX
The man who crashed a car into San Francisco's Chinese consulate has been identified. https://t.co/nG52tjlpGB