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Fame Burst

Breaking Bad's Bryan Cranston Was A Real-Life Murder Suspect Years Before Becoming Walter White

Author

Emma Payne

Updated on March 08, 2026

In an interview on "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon," Bryan Cranston described the time he was a suspect in a real-life murder. In the 1970s, he was taking a cross-country journey with his brother, during which they stopped and worked at odd jobs in various locations. One place where Bryan Cranston worked was a restaurant in Daytona Beach, Florida, with a chef named Peter Wong. Cranston said, "[Wong] was a miserable human being, just a despicable man. He hated everyone and everyone hated him." Apparently, the rest of the employees hated Wong so much that they would sit around and joke about different ways to murder him. Cranston participated in this game and suggested they chop up Wong's body and fry him in a wok. 

This joke got Cranston into trouble when Peter Wong actually did get murdered, and it happened at the same time when the Cranston brothers were leaving town and moving on to the next place. Because of this strange timing, the police considered both brothers to be active suspects in the murder case and put out all-points bulletins (APBs) on them since they had already left the state. 

The Cranston brothers were ultimately found innocent. What actually happened is that a sex worker picked up Wong at a park and brought him home, where a man was waiting for him and clubbed him on the head before stuffing him into the trunk of a car. It does not appear that any of the restaurant employees who used to joke about murdering Wong were involved in his actual murder.