FBI offers reward tied to Chinatown Massacre, one of Boston’s deadliest crimes

It is one of the deadliest crimes in Boston history.

Inside a social club in Chinatown, a group of people had gathered to play cards in the early morning hours of January 12, 1991.

Three armed men walked into the basement of the Tyler Street property and shot six people in the head. The execution-style murders left five people dead.

Now, 35 years later, the FBI is offering a $30,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of one of the suspected gunmen, Hung Tien Pham.



FBI

FBI

The global manhunt—and the lasting impact of the violence on the tightly-knit neighborhood of Chinatown—was the focus of a 30-minute documentary produced by the NBC10 Investigators in 2021.

The lone survivor of the massacre helped police identify the three suspects, who fled the country in the aftermath of the murders.

Two of the men, Siny Van Tran and Nam The Tham, were eventually captured in China and extradited back to the United States. They were convicted of the murders in Suffolk County and are serving life sentences inside a Massachusetts prison.

In the documentary, NBC10 spoke with community members who reflected on the infamous crime and provided insight on the historic neighborhood’s dynamic in the 1990s.

NBC10 also interviewed investigators from the FBI and Boston Police Department about possible motives behind the massacre and the ongoing search for closure to the case.

Pham, the fugitive still eluding authorities, would be 65 years old today.

You can watch the documentary on NBC10’s YouTube channel.

Ryan Kath

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