On the morning of 4 July 1991, Chang was shot twice in the head in a failed
extortion attempt. His body was found slumped in the gutter next to his
Mercedes-Benz 500 SL in the Sydney suburb of
Mosman. Two Malaysian men, Chew Seng (Ah Sung) Liew and Choon Tee (Phillip) Lim, picked Chang at random from a magazine featuring Asians who had "made it good" in Australia.
Trial Liew pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 26 years in prison with a
non-parole period of 20 years. Lim, who pleaded not guilty and claimed he did not know Liew had a firearm, received a sentence of 18 to 24 years. Another man, Stanley Ng, abandoned the extortion plan a day before the murder. He had unsuccessfully tried detaining Chang twice to force him to give $3 million. Ng was granted
immunity for his evidence. The prosecution alleged the plan had been to abduct Chang, tie him up with his family at his home in
Clontarf, and threaten to hang them to coerce Chang into withdrawing money from the bank. In his ruling, Supreme Court Judge John Slattery stated, "It was an absurd, improbable plan, always doomed to failure". The
New South Wales Supreme Court ruled that the Parole Authority lacked the power to rescind their previous parole decision. Lim was freed from
Parramatta Correctional Centre on 1 March 2010 into the custody of immigration officers waiting outside. He was to be deported back to
Kuala Lumpur on 2 March, but the flight was canceled for technical reasons. He was flown out of Australia on 3 March. After 21 years in prison, Liew was granted parole. In his parole hearing, he made a broad apology for the crime and stated that he believed that his long term in prison had had a good effect. There was some objection from
NSW Attorney-General Greg Smith, but it was retracted, and Liew was released from prison on 12 October 2012. He was met by immigration officers and sent back to Malaysia the next day.
Memorial Chang was given a state funeral. His manner of death is described in the Dr. Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute website as a "tragic circumstance". In April 2012, Australia Post released a commemorative postcard and postage stamp featuring a portrait of Dr Chang. == Legacy ==