Hong Kong Man Loses HK$70,000 Gold Necklace During Mong Kok Massage Robbery
A 56-year-old man lost a HK$70,000 gold necklace and ¥4,000 cash in a Mong Kok massage-room robbery, with police naming a female suspect.

A 56-year-old man walked into a unit at Sun Hing Building on Nathan Road in Mong Kok last Saturday and left without his gold necklace, a piece valued at approximately HK$70,000. Also taken was around ¥4,000 in Chinese renminbi. Hong Kong police are investigating the theft as a robbery connected to the massage premises, and have named a suspect woman in the case. Two additional men are believed to be involved.
The necklace's value offers a telling detail about what was at stake. At HK$70,000, the piece sits firmly in the range of a substantial solid gold chain, the kind of jewelry that carries real weight, both physically and financially. Hong Kong's gold culture has long placed high-karat necklaces among the most personally significant items a man might wear daily. Unlike a watch, which can be removed discreetly, a heavy gold necklace is both visible and, in the wrong circumstances, vulnerable.
Nathan Road runs through one of Hong Kong's densest commercial corridors, and Sun Hing Building sits within that maze of storefronts, upper-floor businesses, and transient foot traffic that makes Mong Kok simultaneously magnetic and unpredictable. The combination of a private room, a distracted or reclined victim, and multiple alleged perpetrators points to a coordinated effort rather than an opportunistic snatch.

Police have not released the names of those believed responsible, but the investigation is active. The case is a sharp reminder that high-value gold jewelry worn openly, particularly pieces in the HK$50,000-and-above range, represents a target that requires the same security consciousness as carrying an equivalent sum in cash.
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