Calgary Herald

HAMILTON

Incredible story of how an ex-cop went bad

- BRIAN HUTCHINSON

John Hanmer was a cop, a skilled undercover operator.

He came from a family of police officers. His father Murray was an inspector with the Hamilton Wentworth Regional Police Force. His older brother Michael was a decorated sergeant who busted drug trafficker­s. His sister Cathy patrolled next door in suburban Halton.

But Hanmer was forced to resign from his force. It was political, Michael says.

And then he did the unthinkabl­e: Hanmer joined a biker gang, the notorious Satan’s Choice, one of Ontario’s toughest at the time. He became an enforcer, and he excelled. “He turned out to be one of the heavyweigh­t members, well respected,” his younger brother Paul recalls in a revelatory new documentar­y film that premieres Saturday at the Vancouver Internatio­nal Film Festival.

The only problem, Paul tells Toronto-based filmmaker Chelsea McMullan, is that his brother “had a habit of taking other peoples’ money.” When a cocaine deal went sideways, Hanmer double-crossed an associate, taking $30,000.

He then fled to Thailand in 1988. leaving behind his wife and two children — Michael and Shannon. They rarely heard from him. They rarely spoke of him. They never saw him again.

Meanwhile, Hanmer made enemies in Southeast Asia. He allegedly joined the Mad Dogs, a Thai motorcycle gang. In 1998, his local “business partner” was reportedly stabbed to death with an ice pick. Two years later, while motorcycli­ng around the Philippine­s with an 18-year-old girlfriend, Hanmer was ambushed and shot to death, apparently by underworld rivals toting M-16 assault rifles.

The chilling execution made headlines back in Canada. “An exHamilton cop murdered in the Philippine­s had twice been warned Thai business rivals were out to kill him,” the Hamilton Spectator reported.

No arrests were ever made. Hanmer’s unsolved murder is one of the enduring mysteries that surround him. But it’s not the story that preoccupie­d filmmaker McMullan. She discovered another family secret.

Before his death, Hanmer had married a Thai woman, and with her raised — and then abandoned — two more children. Like their Canadian half-siblings, their names are Michael and Shannon.

Two separate places and cultures, two families, four children with the same two names. Fathered by a Canadian cop gone bad, and then murdered. The Canadian offspring knew almost nothing of their Thai relatives. They didn’t know they had identical names.

Encouraged by her mother, “Thai Shannon” finally contacted “Canadian Shannon” on Facebook.

When she heard from her halfsister, and learned fragments of the Hanmer family story in Thailand, “Canadian Shannon” was incredulou­s. “He actually named them Michael and Shannon,” she says in the film. “That took awhile to sink in. How was (Hanmer) presenting this informatio­n to other people? … Maybe the whole thing was just a joke (to him), like when people name their dogs ‘F--- You.’”

But she and her brother Michael were curious. Last year, all four Hanmer offspring gathered in Thailand. McMullan and her film crew were there to record that first encounter. It was an extraordin­ary, difficult meeting, like “an exorcism of a father’s ghost,” McMullan says. “It was a surreal experience. They’re from totally different worlds. How do they begin to have a relationsh­ip?”

Her documentar­y Michael Shannon Michael Shannon John raises more questions than it answers. McMullan says she was “attracted by the idea of taking a seemingly pulpy, sensationa­l Hollywood-esque story and peeling back the layers one at a time, until I reached its centre. And at the centre of this film was a family drama about communicat­ion and unresolved familial relationsh­ips.”

Each of Hanmer’s four children have reacted differentl­y to their strange circumstan­ces, and to one another, and to their late father, the wandering ex-cop criminal.

Not surprising­ly, there is some bitterness.

“He had absolutely no impact on my life,” says “Thai Michael,” speaking into McMullan’s camera. “None whatsoever. … Even now, I still feel like we were abandoned.”

“Canadian Michael” is more reticent; he was less inclined to look into his father’s past, and decided not to accompany his sister to the Philippine­s, to the very spot where their father was murdered.

“Canadian Shannon” was determined to make the trip, and to try and discover just what had happened. “I needed to know,” she said in an interview this week. “I don’t let things go that easily.”

She wanted to speak with people who knew her father, people who were aware of what he’d been doing. But in the Philippine­s, she was told to back off. “In a very kind way, by someone who knew him, I was told to stop asking questions about my dad,” Shannon says. Too dangerous.

No one has been held accountabl­e for her father’s murder. But Shannon says she feels satisfied, knowing more of her half-sister and halfbrothe­r.

They all keep in touch, despite a language barrier. In Thailand, Shannon Hanmer attends university. Michael Hanmer is training to be a police officer. It’s the family business; policing is in his blood.

 ?? MSMSJ PRODUCTION­S ?? Former Hamilton Wentworth Regional Police officer John Hanmer with his Thai children, Michael and Shannon, who were born after he fled to Thailand from Canada in 1988 after double-crossing a cocaine dealer. His life of crime continued in Southeast Asia...
MSMSJ PRODUCTION­S Former Hamilton Wentworth Regional Police officer John Hanmer with his Thai children, Michael and Shannon, who were born after he fled to Thailand from Canada in 1988 after double-crossing a cocaine dealer. His life of crime continued in Southeast Asia...
 ??  ?? John Hanmer, from a family of police officers in Hamilton, Ont., shown in the 1980s with his Canadian children, Shannon and Michael. He abandoned them when he fled to Thailand, where he started another family, also with children named Michael and...
John Hanmer, from a family of police officers in Hamilton, Ont., shown in the 1980s with his Canadian children, Shannon and Michael. He abandoned them when he fled to Thailand, where he started another family, also with children named Michael and...

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