After having his office completely trashed, Hong Kong pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho has now seen his parents’ graves desecrated, responding to the shameful act by making death threats at a pro-democracy politician.

Ho has been at the center of controversy this week after he was seen shaking hands with several men in white shirts who carried out a thugish attack on commuters inside a metro station in Hong Kong’s Yuen Long area on Sunday evening, the savage beating was aimed at anti-extradition protesters returning home from a rally.

This video circulating is of Junius Ho, the former president to of the HK law society and a lawmaker shaking hands with the people waving China flags in Yuen Long pic.twitter.com/Q2kXeg03y1 — Pak Yiu (@pakwayne) July 21, 2019

The clip caused some to wonder if Ho was behind the attack, an accusation that he denied the following day at a press conference while also praising the attackers as “heroes” who were “protecting their community.”

Within hours of the presser, a group of protesters broke through the glass walls of Ho’s office in Tsuen Wan and totally trashed the place.

Hong Kong legislator Junius Ho's office in Tsuen Wan has been trashed. Glass smashed, egg thrown at. Ho was seen in a video shaking hands with white-clad men who attacked people in Yuen Long last night. pic.twitter.com/3VXnHuYYym — Aria Hangyu Chen 陳航宇 (@ariahychen) July 22, 2019

On Tuesday, photos circulated showing that the graves of Ho’s parents had met with the same fate with his mother’s gravestone shifted and graffiti sprayed on the graves, blacking out the names of Ho’s parents. A message left on the wall behind says, “collusion between police and gangsters.”

Now two photos to corroborate that this really happened: someone apparently vandalised Junius Ho’s mother’s grave site at Castle Peak Christian Cemetery in Tuen Mun https://t.co/1AsUF694xg pic.twitter.com/cg3WLp3K0F — Aaron Mc Nicholas (@aaronMCN) July 23, 2019

It’s not yet clear who committed the act of vandalism though unsubstantiated rumors have spread online that it was done by triad members who Ho failed to pay off following Sunday’s Yuen Long attack.

Meanwhile, the pro-Beijing camp has blamed anti-extradition protesters as the obvious culprits.

Ho made a visit to his parents’ graves later on Tuesday and urged those responsible to turn themselves in to police immediately.

“Broken things can be fixed, but an evil heart won’t do you any good,” he said. “My parents and I will forgive you if you step forward.”

Ho then went on to post a chilling video onto Facebook in which he accused pro-democracy lawmaker Eddie Chu as inciting the ransacking of his parents’ graves, demanding that Chu provide the names of those responsible… or else.

“You have two paths before you. One is being alive. One is not being alive. Make up your mind quick,” Ho threatens.

Earlier that day, the two had appeared together on an RTHK televised forum where Ho predictably lost his cool, physically shaking Chu and calling him “scum” before storming out of the program, in a somewhat awkward manner.

When one walk out of a live show, trying to look cool, and realise all the mics attached. #juniusho #rthk pic.twitter.com/469MHFXk0A — Alvin Lum (@alvinllum) July 23, 2019