Marriage and separation Thatcher met his future wife JoAnn Geiger at the University of Iowa. In 1980, they were divorced and Geiger was awarded custody of two of their three children, as well as $820,000 for her share of the marital property. In January 1981, she married a local businessman, Tony Wilson, and became known as JoAnn Wilson. In late April 1985, two weeks before his appeal, a package postmarked Winnipeg arrived at the
Regina Leader-Post. The package contained an anonymous confession to the murder of Wilson, a homemade hatchet the writer claimed was the murder weapon, and two photographs of a nude woman whom the letter claimed was Wilson. The newspaper turned the package over to the Regina Police. After numerous requests for disclosure of the photos and hatchet, the Crown eventually admitted to Thatcher's lawyer that they had been lost. On November 30, 2006, Thatcher was granted full parole. He subsequently remarried in 2010. Thatcher wrote a 440-page book about his case,
Final Appeal: Anatomy of a Frame. It was released by
ECW Press on September 1, 2009. In reaction to the book’s publication, the Government of Saskatchewan introduced the
Profits of Criminal Notoriety Act and a judge ordered the surrender of any proceeds to the Ministry of Justice. In 2011, funds from the sale of the book in the amount of $13,866.44 were turned over to the Ministry of Justice. The province subsequently donated the funds to two groups assisting victims of domestic violence and survivors of homicide.
In popular culture In 1985, author
Maggie Siggins wrote the book
A Canadian Tragedy: JoAnn and Colin Thatcher: A Story of Love and Hate. A two-part television mini-series based on the book called
Love and Hate: The Story of Colin and JoAnn Thatcher was produced by
CBC Television in 1989, starring
Kenneth Welsh as Colin Thatcher and
Kate Nelligan as JoAnn Thatcher Wilson. ==Biographies==