The Rise of a Monster
Among all serial killers in modern Chinese history, few names created as much fear and horror as Yang Xinhai.Known across China as “The Monster Killer,” Yang became infamous for carrying out brutal mass murders across rural villages between 1999 and 2003.
Authorities believe he murdered at least 65 people and assaulted more than 20 women, although some investigators suspect the real number may have been even higher. His crimes shocked China because entire families — including children and elderly people — were often slaughtered in their homes during the night.
Yang Xinhai was born in 1968 in Henan Province, China, into a poor farming family.People who knew him described him as quiet, isolated, and emotionally distant. He reportedly struggled socially and left school at an early age.
During his youth, he became involved in petty crimes such as theft and robbery. He was arrested several times before becoming a serial killer. His repeated conflicts with society and authorities appeared to deepen his anger and hatred toward others.
Unlike many serial killers who target specific individuals, Yang developed a random pattern of violence. He attacked strangers without mercy.
Yang’s killing spree began in the late 1990s.He traveled across multiple Chinese provinces including:
He moved constantly to avoid detection, often traveling by bicycle or train.
His preferred targets were isolated rural homes at night. Villages in China at the time often had weak security, making it easier for him to enter unnoticed.
Yang Xinhai’s methods were exceptionally violent.
He usually entered homes late at night while families were asleep. He carried weapons such as:
Axes
Hammers
Shovels
Metal bars
Once inside, he attacked victims suddenly and brutally. Entire households were often killed within minutes.
Parents were murdered beside their children.
Elderly victims were beaten to death.
Women were sexually assaulted before or after murder.
Investigators stated that Yang showed almost no emotional reaction during interrogations. He later confessed that he killed because he felt hatred toward society and enjoyed the feeling of control.
One terrifying aspect of his crimes was randomness. Victims were not personally connected to him. Anyone living in a vulnerable home could become a target.
As the murders increased, fear spread through rural China.
Rumors about a “night demon” circulated widely. Because the attacks occurred across different provinces, police initially struggled to connect the crimes to a single suspect.
At the time, China’s national criminal database and DNA systems were far less advanced than today, allowing Yang to continue killing for years.
Chinese police launched one of the country’s largest manhunts.
Investigators noticed similarities between the murders:
Nighttime attacks
Blunt force trauma
Rural family homes
Random victims
Similar weapon patterns
Eventually, witness descriptions helped narrow the search.
In 2003, police received information about a suspicious man matching the killer’s description in Hebei Province.
Yang Xinhai was finally arrested in November 2003.
Reports say police stopped him during a routine identification check. Officers became suspicious because he carried false identity documents and behaved nervously.
DNA evidence linked him to multiple crime scenes.
Witness statements matched his appearance.
He quickly confessed to dozens of murders.
Police were stunned by the scale of his crimes.
During interrogations, Yang reportedly described the killings calmly and without remorse.
The trial moved quickly because of overwhelming evidence and Yang’s detailed confessions.
Chinese courts convicted him of:
The court described his crimes as:
In February 2004, Yang Xinhai was sentenced to death.
He was executed shortly afterward by gunshot, which was a common execution method in China at the time.
The case of Yang Xinhai became one of the darkest criminal stories in Chinese history because:
Massive Number of Victims
At least 65 confirmed murders made him one of China’s deadliest serial killers.
Entire Families Were Destroyed
Unlike many killers who target individuals, Yang often wiped out whole households.
Years Without Capture
He evaded police for several years while moving across provinces.
Psychological Terror
Rural communities lived in constant fear of nighttime attacks.
Experts later suggested several factors may have contributed to Yang’s violence:
However, no explanation fully accounts for the extreme brutality of his crimes.
The Yang Xinhai case pushed Chinese authorities to improve:
Today, his name remains one of the most feared in Chinese criminal history.
For many people in China, the story of Yang Xinhai represents the nightmare of random violence — a killer who could appear anywhere, at any time, without warning.

