China family buries luxury car as offering, prompting government reprimand, public apology
A family in Liaoning province, China, buried a Mercedes-Benz S450L, valued at $161,000, as a funerary offering for a deceased relative on April 9th. The act, filmed and shared online, sparked public criticism due to concerns about environmental damage, legal violations regarding land use and vehicle scrapping procedures, and flaunting wealth.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA family in Liaoning province, China, buried a Mercedes-Benz S450L, valued at $161,000, as a funerary offering for a deceased relative on April 9th. The act, filmed and shared online, sparked public criticism due to concerns about environmental damage, legal violations regarding land use and vehicle scrapping procedures, and flaunting wealth. The family, surnamed Jin, claimed the deceased loved luxury cars and they wanted to ensure his soul's peaceful passage. Local authorities reprimanded the family for promoting feudal superstition and illegally burying the car. The Jin family issued a public apology and may face fines.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe story caused a buzz on mainland social media, with related posts garnering over 30 million views.
The family, surnamed Jin, had been reprimanded for illegally burying the car due to feudal superstition.
A Mercedes-Benz S450L valued at around 1.1 million yuan (US$161,000) was buried as a funerary offering.
Failing to complete proper scrapping procedures could invite administrative penalties.
Burying an untreated car could seriously contaminate soil and groundwater.