A true story of a bank robber and a chilling car chase worthy of an
Elmore Leonard novel or a Brian De Palma movie.
Like many new arrivals to Canada, Hermann Beier came to this country
with big dreams - visions of a wide-open country where hard work and
entrepreneurial flair would make him rich. A charismatic handyman,
martial arts teacher, and small business owner, he charmed women and
earned the respect of men. He was loved in his community of Alliston,
Ontario, and had a plan to make a million bucks. But when those dreams
soured, Beier turned to crime to pay the bills.
Faced with bankruptcy in 1991, Beier hatched a plan to rob a string of
banks in a single day. But it was all too much, too fast. After leading
authorities from Guelph to Caledon on what was then the longest police
chase in Canadian history, Beier was gunned down alongside a farmer's
fence, his body pierced by a hail of police bullets.
But he survived, and the end of his crime spree marked a new beginning.
After spending almost a decade in various Ontario prisons, searching for
a way to get his life back on track, Beier was finally paroled. He now
lives a quiet life, dividing his time between Canada and Austria.