Murder With My Husband - 200. The Golden Daughter
Episode Date: January 22, 2024In this episode Payton tells Garrett about the Jennifer Pan case – a student who crafted a deceptive life that ultimately took a fatal turn. More social links and AD DISCOUNT CODES: https://linktr....ee/murderwithmyhusband Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murderwithmyhusband/ Listen on apple: https://apple.co/3sMXYum Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6GaodpBsSpBuUMhmEXhjK2?si=67c9faf80cbf4fed “A Daughter’s Deadly Deception: The Jennifer Pan Story” by Jeremy Grimaldi The Washington Post - https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/07/27/tragedy-of-golden-daughters-murder-plot-against-parents-resonates-with-asian-immigrant-children/ Ranker.com - https://www.ranker.com/list/jennifer-pan-parents-facts/inigo-gonzalez CBC News - https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/jennifer-pan-new-trial-1.6849590 CrimeTraveller.org - https://www.crimetraveller.org/2016/12/jennifer-pan-daughters-deadly-deception/ The Toronto Star - https://www.thestar.com/news/jennifer-pan/ CTV News Toronto - https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/ontario-court-orders-new-murder-trial-for-jennifer-pan-convicted-in-plot-to-kill-parents-1.6406386 YorkRegion.com - https://www.yorkregion.com/news/crime/its-a-fine-line-crown-seeks-supreme-court-appeal-in-jennifer-pan-case/article_276d18c7-fee8-52c6-a8ff-9dbc60834cf2.html TorontoLife.com - https://torontolife.com/city/jennifer-pan-revenge/ AllThatsInteresting.com - https://allthatsinteresting.com/jennifer-pan Medium.com - https://crimesandcuriosities.medium.com/jennifer-pan-the-girl-who-hired-hitmen-to-kill-her-parents-97dafbc231f6 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You're listening to an Ono Media podcast.
Hey everybody, welcome back to our podcast.
This is Murder with My Husband.
I'm Peyton Morland.
And I'm Garrett Morland.
And he's the husband.
I'm the husband.
Your drink spilled.
Do you know what today is?
Today's Monday.
No.
Today is the 200th episode of Murder with My Husband.
That is, that is a lot.
200 fricking episodes.
Who would have thought that I'd still be here
hating true crime after 200 episodes?
You guys have not convinced me at all.
Do you feel like maybe when you started this,
you weren't quite sure what you were getting into?
Like do you feel like your life is just consumed
with true crime?
Truly a subject that you are not fascinated by
and that you don't enjoy?
I feel like we do a good job at,
or I do a good job at putting it in different boxes.
Compartmentalizing?
Yeah, like, oh, this is here, this is here,
this is here, and moving on.
I just can't believe that I remember us
just sitting around the table going,
murder with my husband?
Is that the name?
Yeah.
And now, here we are.
Like from sitting on the floor recording to crying because I didn't know
if I could do another episode to here we are 200 episodes later
with this beast, this machine. It's crazy. Well, with that
being said, do you have your I mean, it's not technically 210 seconds.
It's not.
I don't think it's even close because I don't think we started 10 seconds until, I don't
know.
This is naturally progress.
Probably a while in, right?
All right.
Well, are you ready for your 156th, 10 seconds?
Well, Peyton and I started a new show.
We are two episodes in.
I don't even know how many episodes are.
I think we're like three.
We watched quite a few.
And, oh yeah, we might be three.
And it's called a full me once on Netflix.
I don't know how many more there are.
Maybe there's only three.
I thought it said limited series.
So we started that.
We'll see how it goes.
I think it's pretty good so far.
Peyton doesn't really like it, um, but she doesn't like a ton of TV shows.
So I'm trying to get her into it.
I also started working out again,
back in action, healthy, might be running,
might be lifting weights,
gonna keep it a mystery for now.
Yeah, that's kind of all I got this week for 10 seconds.
So let's hop into this week's episode.
A reminder, before we get into today's episode,
we are streaming every Thursday at
5.30 PST on Twitch. We're dissecting true crime footage, reacting to body cam footage,
just kind of talking about anything true crime, hanging out. It's usually for about two hours,
5.30 to 7.30, an hour and a half or so. So come and join us. There are links all over
in our social media, the podcast, everywhere, and we'd love for
you to join.
Payton's actually been really liking it.
Oh yeah, Streaming has been so fun.
Again, we are doing that on Thursdays at 5.30 p.m.
Our Twitch name is TheMWMH.
You can check us out and we'll see you Thursday.
So our sources for this episode are Daughters's deadly deception, the Jennifer Pan story by
Jeremy Grimaldi, TheWashingtonPostRanker.com, CBS News, CrimeTraveler.org, The Toronto
Star, CTV News, Toronto, YorkRegion.com, TorontoLife.com, all that's interesting.com and Medium.com.
Trigger warning, this episode features discussions of suicidal ideation, so please listen with
care. I told you last week that I picked this episode
specifically for our 200th episode,
and it was because when I first learned about this story,
it really, really stuck with me, one that I remember,
and so I'm really excited for you to listen to it.
So most of us have had those moments as teenagers,
times when we felt like we didn't have the
freedom we deserved.
When we got in trouble for doing something we really wanted to do or were simply told
that a sleepover, a concert, or a party was off limits.
And what can end up happening in those situations?
Kids sometimes come up with lies, right?
They concoct elaborate stories to manipulate
their parents into getting their way, regardless. Now typically those lies are harmless, usually
debunked by clever parents who tried similar stunts back in their day. But in the matter
of today's case, one young woman's lies spiraled a bit out of control. She crafted a long con for her freedom,
one that didn't stop once she left high school,
but continued for the next several years,
resulting in an ending so dark, so lethal,
that even the most elaborate lies couldn't change her fate.
So for today's case, we're jumping back to 2010
to a white-collar area of Ontario, Canada,
in the city of Markham, to be exact. There, in a large two-story home on a quiet residential street,
live Huay Han Pan and his wife, Bic Pan. The pans had worked hard to get to this point in their
lives, to a place where they could both be socially and financially secure. And for them, it was a huge matter of pride. Haan, born and raised in
Vietnam, moved to Canada as a political refugee in 1979 following the Vietnam War. When he disembarked
the long and excruciating boat ride from Southeast Asia, the 26-year-old
Han, hardly spoke any English, and had close to $0 in his pocket.
Still, he used his degree in diesel mechanics to find work in the Canadian automotive industry,
and from there he began to build a new life for himself in Ontario.
It was during this time that he reconnected with an old
acquaintance from Vietnam, a young woman named Bicca Luong. Before long, the two fell in
love, got married and decided to continue life's journey together. They spent years working
alongside each other on assembly lines of car park manufacturers, dreaming of the day when
they could finally start their own
little family. And with their hard work and dedication, that day finally came in 1986.
The couple welcomed their first child together on June 17th, a little girl they named Jennifer.
Three years later, she was followed by a little boy named Felix. Okay. Now, over time, Han climbed the ladder at work,
enough that his salary allowed BIC to take on the role of a stay-at-home mom.
In fact, by 2010, Han was doing so well for himself,
the family had upgraded their vehicles, now driving a Lexus and a Mercedes.
They'd paid off the mortgage on their home and had banked several hundred thousand
dollars on top of that. So it's safe to say the family was doing well for themselves in Canada.
For all intents and purposes, they were an immigrant success story. But while they left
their old country behind, there were still many Vietnamese traditions practiced within their four walls. Growing up, the family continued to speak Vietnamese
or Cantonese when they were home.
Han took on the role of the disciplinarian
while Bik would be the calming peacemaker of the house.
They also had extremely high expectations
for both of their children.
This was something that their daughter, Jennifer,
desperately tried to keep up with over the years.
By age four, Jennifer was enrolled
in rigorous piano lessons.
And when she wasn't practicing piano,
she was on the ice engaging in competitive figure skating.
By elementary school, she had acquired a case
full of trophies with her sights set
on competing at nationals, maybe even the Olympics one day.
Some nights Jennifer wouldn't come home from practice until 10pm, only to do her
homework until midnight.
Then she'd wake up early to start the same routine over again.
The pressure was a lot for little Jennifer and tell she tore one of the
ligaments in her knee and was forced off the ice for good.
It was a huge let down for Jennifer who for the last decade had placed a lot of herself
worth in the Olympic sport.
But even worse was the disappointment she felt from her parents once they learned that those
dreams were over.
As a result, Jennifer spent her high school years trying to
overcompensate, looking to impress Bik and Han at every turn. In the Pan House, mediocrity would not be accepted. Luckily for Jennifer, she graduated high school with high
honors and had been admitted to the University of Toronto to study pharmacology. Bik and Han were
more than proud of their little girl
who they always hoped would go on to work in the medical field.
Throughout her studies,
Jennifer mostly still lived at home,
always staying close to her family
as was common in a Vietnamese household.
Even if she wanted to go live on campus
or at college housing, she would not have been allowed to.
So they wanted her to live at home?
Yes. Or be close to home. Yes. But on November 8th, 2010, things would forever change for the 24-year-old
Jennifer and the entire Pan family. That day started like any other. Jennifer spent most of
the afternoon practicing piano while her father worked and her mother ran errands. Felix by this point was living
about 45 minutes away from home where he was studying at McMaster University. So when dinner
time rolled around, only Jennifer and Bick shared a meal together. Han took his food
and retired to his study, as he often did, to unwind and read the Vietnamese news. After
cleaning up, Bick went to her weekly line
dancing class at a nearby church while Jennifer had a friend over to watch some television.
Jennifer called it a night at around 8.30pm and went upstairs where Han was also sleeping.
Then Vic returned home around an hour later at 9.30pm. Vic put on her pajamas and retired
in front of the television, soaking her feet in a bath
as she often did after her dancing class.
But a short while later, Jennifer heard something strange going on downstairs.
Big sounded like she was rummaging through drawers and she was yelling at her husband
to get downstairs.
The thing that struck Jennifer most
was that her mother was speaking English,
something she never did in the confines of their own home.
Moments later, Han himself was woken up,
not by the sounds of Bic yelling,
but instead by a masked man hovering over his bed
with a gun pointed at his face.
The intruder was screaming at him,
asking where they hid their money.
Still half asleep, the man then grabbed
the 57 year old Han by the back of the neck
and led him downstairs,
where another masked intruder was pointing a gun at his wife.
Jesus man.
Han assumed these men were just there to rob them,
so he was willing to cooperate with their demands.
The problem was, this wasn't the first time
the Pans had been in this situation.
They'd been robbed years ago in an old house,
and ever since, the couple refused to keep
large sums of cash inside their home.
So Han told the robbers that he had $60 in his pants
upstairs, but that was really it.
Unfortunately, this response was met with a punch in the head
as one of the robbers insisted Han was lying.
And that's when Bix started begging, saying,
please, you can hurt us, just don't hurt our daughter.
And seemingly agreeing to those demands,
the couple was then led by gunpoint
to the basement of the home.
What they didn't know was that Jennifer was still upstairs, being held captive by a third
intruder.
Oh, there's three of them.
After she was forced to comb the house for money, she herself was tied up and kept separate
from her parents.
And that's when Jennifer heard a gunshot come from the basement, then another and another.
Downstairs, one bullet had struck Han in the shoulder.
The other went through his face, just missing his eye.
Bick, on the other hand, was shot three times,
once through her neck, another through her right shoulder,
and a final fatal blow through her skull.
I don't understand.
They just, yeah, OK.
With both Han and Bick unconscious, the intruders
booked it out of the house.
But seconds later, Han regained consciousness.
Is life?
Yes.
That's when he realized his wife of 30 years wouldn't be as lucky.
She was now sitting in a pool of her own blood, the life already draining from her body.
Yeah.
Han managed to get himself to his feet.
He then made his way upstairs and passed his daughter who was already dialing 911.
His cries were so desperate, so heart-wrenching, that they could be heard by the operator
in the background.
In fact, here's a small clip from Jennifer's call. This is all your fault. I don't have a left hand. I am calm down. What about people broke into our house?
They just showed us all his money.
I can't do it with him.
You only have this piece.
That's him.
Where are you?
What?
Avenue.
Avenue Road.
Yes.
Is something in the decision you please?
Dad?
Dad!
Dad!
Dad!
I don't want to hear anymore.
Dad!
Hello? Dad! Hello? Dad! I don't want to hear anymore.
And Han, who still isn't perfectly fluent in English, tries to explain through the tears
that someone robbed the home and that his wife and daughter are still inside.
When they discover Jennifer, she's lying on her side, her hands
are still bound together and affixed to the banister. Her ankles are also cinched together
with a boot lace. And what they find odd is, the house doesn't look ransacked. Everything
looks to be in place, which is very unusual for a robbery, particularly one as violent
as this. Moments later, paramedics rush in and try to revive Bick.
Her silk, Winnie the Pooh pajamas are completely stained with her blood.
I think it's so weird that they actually left the daughter alone and then killed the parents.
She's tied up.
Yeah, but didn't kill her.
Yeah.
It seems so strange.
Not that it just seems strange, does it not?
Yeah.
I don't know. Well, maybe I mean it's a child. I mean, it's not, it's seems strange, is it not? Yeah. I don't know.
Well, maybe I mean it's a child.
I mean, it's not, it's an adult, but it is their kid.
So maybe they were just, you know, to play devil's advocate.
They're all they're just like, oh yeah, let's have some mercy and just kill the parents.
That's just so strange.
Yes, that's got to be the wings.
Wings.
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So, although they're trying,
there's nothing they can do to bring her back.
As Jennifer is let outside to be examined by paramedics,
she sees her father on a stretcher
getting placed into an ambulance.
Later, she'll learn that he's been placed
in a medically induced coma
and his chances of survival are slim.
After Jennifer is cleared by doctors herself that night,
Markham police ask if she'd be willing to come
to the station for questioning.
It's around 2 a.m. on November 9th,
when Jennifer takes a seat in an interview room
across from two detectives.
And once her mother's death is mentioned,
it seems to all hit Jennifer in that moment.
She starts sobbing uncontrollably,
unable to get a word out,
but one of the detectives picks up on something.
When Jennifer uses a tissue to dab her tears away,
it stays completely dry.
Still, they need to get to the bottom of what happened,
so they ask Jennifer to recount her experience.
There's no way you're going with the story
where I think you are.
Now she believes her parents were being
uncooperative with the robbers
and that's why they were shot and killed.
Jennifer however was approached by one of the assailants
and led them to $2,000 cash
which she had been saving to buy a iPhone.
So she thinks this is why her life was spared because she
actually went along with the robbers. But when police have her recount the events a second
time, there's a lot that changes in her story. For example, the first time she says she never
saw her mother when she came home from line dancing class. But on the second round, she
says, Oh, wait, she did come downstairs to say good night to her. In the second retelling, she also changes the amount of money she handed over from $2,000 to
$2,500. And she claims one of the men tied her so tightly with the shoelace it actually hurt.
Here's the thing, there's no bruising or markings left around Jennifer's wrists or ankles.
There's also the question of how Jennifer called 911 with her hands
bound behind her back. When detectives asked her this, Jennifer seemingly panicked for
a moment. She then told them she'd had her cell phone tucked into the waist of her yoga
pants and managed to wiggle free enough to place the call and put it on speaker at full
volume. And even if Jennifer's phone call did make sense, there were other details that
didn't, like the fact that the keys to Bix Lexis were on a tray right by the
front door. If these men were looking for a payday, wouldn't they have just
stolen the vehicle?
Detectives also knew that random home invasions happened extremely rarely.
Typically homes are selected due to a tip.
Someone has tons of cash, expensive bags, pricey jewelry. Some guarantee that their efforts are
going to pay off. Not to mention, the city of Markham was one of the safest areas in Ontario.
In a city of one million people, they'd only experienced a total of 14 home invasions the year prior.
But here's one of the most baffling details that detectives can't stop thinking about.
Jennifer says her father never came to check on her.
Instead he ran out of the house and onto the front lawn calling for help after the intruders
left.
No matter how injured he was, you would imagine a parent would rush
to check on their child before anything else, right?
Well, if you...
I don't know.
Yes and no.
If I was shot in the face,
I don't know.
Maybe if I'd be thinking that.
Yeah, maybe not.
Maybe running out the front door like somebody helped me.
But he doesn't know at this point
that his daughter is untouched.
True, yeah, that's true. So wouldn't you run up to say, did they hurt my daughter?
I don't know. I don't know. So a few days later, police actually got an answer to this question.
On November 12th, Han came out of his medically induced coma. Oh, freaking way.
He survived the attacks, beat the odds. But it's not good for Jennifer because as soon as he's able to talk, he offers a critical piece of information.
He says that when he was being led downstairs with his wife, you know, during the robbery,
Jennifer was casually talking with one of the robbers. She was not tied up at all. She was walking freely around their house.
It wasn't until the police got there
that our hands and ankles were suddenly bound.
How can you do this to your parents?
We did another case.
I mean, I guess this hasn't been solved yet.
We'll get there, but we did another case
where a kid beat his parents himself.
Do you remember what case that was or what episode?
That was so disturbing.
I can't believe we're going back there again.
Okay.
You don't, well, you're smiling like I'm not smiling at the story.
No, but, um, I see the parallels between the story, but because I know both stories,
they seem so different in my head.
Okay.
Let's keep going.
Um, but we'll, yeah, we'll keep going.
So police can't help but wonder, right?
Did Jennifer have some hand in orchestrating
this whole thing?
Like it hit some at this point.
Her interrogation was a little weird.
You know, she kind of froze up when they asked her
about the house she was able to make the phone call.
And then her dad's like, no, no, no.
She was just hanging out with the robbers
while we were being led downstairs
to be shot in the face and killed.
And if so, if she did have a hand in it, what on earth could have driven her to this point?
Like why even orchestrate this?
So as I mentioned before, it was no secret that the pans were pretty hard on Jennifer
for a lot of her life.
Mostly they wanted her to create her own success,
just like Bick and Han had done for themselves.
But those incredibly high standards
weren't something that came easy for Jennifer.
In fact, it started well before Jennifer
had injured her knee and stopped skating.
Jennifer said the first time she really began to struggle
was in eighth grade when she realized
she wasn't going to be made valedictorian.
It was the first time Jennifer wondered what the point of all of her hard work
was, if it wasn't going to reap any rewards.
So when high school came around, Jennifer found herself slacking off a little bit.
If her grades weren't going to be perfect, why bother at all?
Jennifer's average dropped to a C where she knew was not going to be
acceptable to her parents.
So she found a way around it.
She began forging report cards and lying to her parents about her classwork.
But even with these fake grades, Jennifer's parents tightened their reigns and upped their
expectations.
She wasn't allowed to attend sleepovers, parties, any other activity that could distract her
from keeping her grades up. Dating, wearing makeup, even socializing with the opposite sex was absolutely out
of the question. This was a rule. Her parents actually told her they would be
implementing until she finished college, which was a particularly hard role for
Jennifer to follow, especially when she got to junior
year of high school, because that's when she met the love of her life.
A half Chinese, half Filipino boy named Daniel Wong.
The two met in the school's marching band, and not only did Daniel have the allure of
being a year older than Jennifer, his parents gave him a lot more freedom than hers did.
Over time, Jennifer began sneaking around, calling him late to chat or texting
all hours of the night.
Just kind of being a typical high school kid.
Right?
Like it's nothing crazy.
At least in America.
I mean, I know cultures are different around the world, but she'd lie to her
parents and sneak off with him after school, secretly spending time at his
house on the weekends, the kind of stuff a lot of teenagers do.
Meanwhile, Jennifer kept the relationship completely a secret from her parents for as
long as she could because this is against the rules.
She's not even allowed to talk to boys, let alone date one.
She knew they would not approve.
Mainly also because Daniel was kind of caught up with some shady characters around Ontario.
Daniel, looking for new ways to increase his income, began selling weed on the side, hoping
to save up for a new car.
This actually led to a few different arrests over the years, which of course made her even
more wary to tell her parents about her boyfriend.
But Jennifer liked that she was dating a bad boy, someone with an edge.
By her senior year of high school, she'd gotten so good at lying to her parents that
it became second nature.
And frankly, Jennifer never saw a reason to come clean.
She truly believed that everything would work itself out as soon as she graduated high school
and went off to college.
She'd get a fresh start, a chance to press the reset button in less than a year.
She even got an early acceptance to Ryerson University in Toronto.
But a few months shy of graduation.
How did she get all those acceptance letters
if her grades were C's?
Was she forging her transcripts
to get into the college as well maybe?
You're not sure.
Well, hear me out.
We're about to get there.
Okay, okay.
A few months shy of graduation,
Jennifer received some news
that would complicate her life a little
further. She was failing calculus, and she wasn't going to be
able to graduate without the credit. I would have felt
calculus to Jennifer. Jennifer was at a loss. How could she
possibly tell her parents she was failing a class when all of her
report cards that she was bringing home said she was
excelling a plus a plus. And she could forget mentioning that Ryerson had
pulled their acceptance for the fall because of it. So this college says, no, you're actually not
coming. So what does Jennifer do to get around this? She buries herself into more lies. Of course,
when fall rolled around, her parents bought her a new laptop and drove her to her first day on
campus. Oh no. Oh no. Every day she pretended to go to class. Oh no. But instead
she sat in the library for hours, doctoring fake exams, papers, and even scholarship letters.
She, that's a ton of work. She would go to school every day that she wasn't actually going to school.
In the evenings she brought home biology and physics textbooks and pretended to continue her studies.
Oh my gosh this is so
deep. And she continued the charade at Ryerson for two more years. Then she took it a step further
and pretended to transfer to the University of Toronto. Another lie that was convincing enough
for her parents to believe. It helped that Jennifer didn't spend every night at home. She had asked
her parents if she could spend a few weekends at her friend Topaz's house so the commute wouldn't be as long from home, and her parents had shockingly
obliged.
Over time though, Jennifer began spending those evenings at Daniel's house instead,
only returning to her parents on the weekends.
Another two years passed with her fulling bick and hawn, and eventually it was time for her
to quote, graduate from the University of Toronto.
Holy crap, she went so hard.
But since Jennifer had never even enrolled,
she'd never even gone to one day of college.
It was a bit problematic when her parents asked
about getting tickets for her ceremony.
Of course, Jennifer had a perfectly fabricated plan
for that as well.
She purchased a forged degree off the internet
for $500,
which Daniel helped her with. She told Bick and Han that she had waited too long and the tickets
were already sold out. And then when Han asked to see photos from the ceremony, Jennifer told him
that her friend had accidentally flown back to Hong Kong without giving any of the photos to her.
There's no way- She just lie after lie. There's no way you believe that as a parent though, right?
Well, they kind of do.
The lies don't stop after this fake graduation.
Jennifer told her father that she had gotten a job
at Toronto's Children's Hospital.
And this is where Hans suspicions
started to kind of reach a crescendo.
While he'd certainly been wary of her stories in the past, this job
at the hospital wasn't making a lot of sense. Jennifer wasn't coming home with any scrubs,
uniforms, badges, anything to prove she'd ever even stepped foot in the hospital. And
that was enough for Han to finally take action. He insisted on driving her to work one morning,
and when they got to the
hospital, Jennifer bolted out of the car and into the emergency waiting room, where she
hid for several hours, praying her father wouldn't come inside. He didn't, but back home, her
mother was doing her own due diligence. She'd called her friend Topaz, the one Jennifer
was supposedly living with during the weekdays at school,
but she calls only to find that Jennifer had actually been staying at Daniels and Topaz knew nothing about this job at the hospital. That's when it really came crashing down for Jennifer.
So when she comes home that evening from work, from hiding in the ER, her father demanded she
tell them the truth about everything. And finally Jennifer admitted not only was she not working at the hospital she
never even went to University of Toronto or Ryerson. In fact she'd never even
graduated high school. I don't understand how you can lie for that many years.
That's a long time. I'm not talking about a year. We're talking about five four five six years
She doesn't even graduate high school. How does she goes to college next level? Yeah
So with the truth finally exposed Han and Bick were
Livid then Han gave her two options get out and go live with Daniel and never come back or
Choose us get on the straight and narrow and never see that Daniel boy again. Okay.
What they didn't realize was Daniel wasn't the catalyst for Jennifer's spiral. He was
just a pawn in it. Still, shockingly, Jennifer chose the first option to stay home, suffer
the consequences and turn her life around. At least now that Lies could finally stop and this weight she'd been bearing could be lifted off
her shoulders. After that, Jennifer lost the privileges her parents had awarded
her. There was no cell phone, no computer, no leaving the house without the
company of her mother. By this point though, Jennifer was 23 years old, so they
take her cell phone away. They're like, you can't leave the home without us. And
if you ever friends were wondering,
why on earth did you choose to stay at home
and live with your family if this was their reaction?
Like if they gave you the option to go-
To leave.
Leave, why not just move out, start a life of your own?
But Jennifer admitted she wasn't ready to cut her parents
out of her life forever.
Like truly, even at 23, being told,
choose us or choose them, abandon your family,
never see us again, and go live this life,
or stick with us.
I mean, that is a really hard thing at 23.
She knew that if she left,
that would be the last time she ever spoke to them.
And culturally, it just didn't feel like an option. This wasn't the house that she was brought up in. So over
the next few months of her grounding, Jennifer did start to turn herself around. She enrolled
in a calculus course so she could finally get that last credit and graduate high school.
She continued to teach piano lessons. She even got accepted for real this time to Scarborough
Centennial College for January of 2011.
But all of this was taking a serious toll on her relationship, still secret relationship with Daniel.
Not only was she forbidden from seeing him, her parents were tracking her
communication with him as well.
And by that spring of 2010, Daniel got tired of waiting around.
He told Jennifer that he'd met someone new, that the relationship between the
two of them was over.
And that's when something inside Jennifer snapped.
Not knowing how to handle the rejection from Daniel,
Jennifer reconnected with another old high school flame to fill the void.
A man named Andrew Montmayer.
Jennifer opened up to Andrew about her situation,
primarily how her father had ruined her relationship with the love of her life, Daniel Wong. And that's when Andrew pitched her a solution.
Oh, freaking way, dude.
Why not just kill your dad? That's when something clicked for Jennifer. Maybe she was going about
her issues the wrong way. Maybe her father was the real problem to everything that ever went
wrong in her life.
After that conversation, Jennifer met up with Andrew's roommate,
a kid named Ricardo Duncan, who Andrew said could perform the hit for the right price. During that meeting, Jennifer gave Ricardo $1,500 and he promised he'd
follow up soon with the time in place. Only he never did. Jennifer had been
scammed. But the idea had already been firmly cemented in Jennifer's mind.
She didn't care that she was out $1,500 of her own money.
She wanted to see this plan through.
And that's when she turned to the only other person she believed could possibly help her out of her situation.
Daniel.
Daniel Wong.
Got it.
So over the summer of 2010, Jennifer began slowly seducing Daniel, trying to get him
back into her life.
And it worked.
Once the two were back in constant communication, Jennifer pitched her plan to Daniel.
What if they just got rid of her dad so they could be truly together?
I mean, her dad was the problem, her dad was the reason they couldn't communicate, or
they could get rid of both of her parents, collect on her estate a total of half a million dollars,
and be together wherever and however they desire.
Do you know how they were communicating?
Okay, from the way made, like the sources made it sound,
I'm pretty sure she had a secret phone,
she would sneak off and try to see him.
She was definitely doing it all by secret,
and it might not have even been
a phone. It could have been like an iPod, but she was secretly communicating with him
from her house. Okay. So for Daniel, who'd always been the kind of hustle, the plan sounded
ideal. All he had to do was connect Jennifer to the right people and he could kind of stay
out of it, which wasn't hard to do because by this point Daniel
had been well-rooted in the local drug scene and he was associated with some shady players
including a man named Leonard Crawford who was also known as Homeboy.
So Daniel made a few calls to Homeboy and learned that a contract killing organized
by him would cost about $20,000.
Oh, it's crazy that you can just hire someone.
That's real.
It's a real thing.
You can actually contract hire someone to kill someone.
Well, this was something Jennifer would easily have once she gained access to her deceased
parents' estate, right?
So they made a deal and set the plan in motion.
Homeboy recruited the help of two other men named Eric Cardi and David Milvaganam.
They made a few trips past the Pan's home
that fall to assess the scene.
And on the morning of November 8th, 2010,
Jennifer received a text from Homeboy.
That night, it was go time.
Which is insane because this is all gonna be documented.
The police are gonna start looking at her phone.
It's all just gonna come to fruition.
Like it's all gonna come burning down.
Well, and her father lived.
And her father lived, yes.
She's not getting that estate or that 20K.
She's not getting that estate and her father's alive.
It is gonna know everything.
Well, and saw her in cahoots with the robbers.
Oh, I mean, she deserves it though.
I don't feel bad.
So around 9 35 PM,
Jennifer received a call from David,
one of the hit men to say they were on their way.
She went downstairs, said good night to her mom,
and then discreetly unlocked the front door of the house.
At 10 o'clock, Jennifer switched a light on
in the upstairs window to signal that everyone was in place.
And about 10 minutes later,
the three intruders came barreling
through the front door guns in hand. And well, you, the three intruders came barreling through the front door, guns in hand.
And well, you know how the rest of the story went down.
So now it makes sense why Han saw his daughter
speaking to the intruders like she knew them
because she did.
This was a detail that actually had been confirmed
two days before Han had even woken up from his coma.
This was confirmed by Daniel Wong. On November 10th,
Daniel had been called down to the station and that day he spilled everything.
Oh, he just routed her out. He told police about Jennifer's lies, her plan to kill her parents,
and the fact that he'd helped put her in touch with the gunman. The cards were out on the table.
Now all police needed was for Jennifer to fess up. So on November 22nd, Jennifer was called in
for a third interview.
And instead of emitting to the hit,
she threw the police a bit of a curveball.
She claimed the whole operation had gone terribly wrong
and that the three men were actually hired to kill her.
She told detectives that she had felt like such a failure
by this point in life that suicide appeared to be the best and only option.
The thing was, she couldn't do it herself. Jennifer stuck to this story for the next four hours, but she didn't realize that she'd already implicated herself here.
She'd admitted to being at the center of a conspiracy, intentional or not, one where she hired a hit man and put her parents' lives at risk. But I assume it would be less of a charge
or less time than if she admitted
to hiring people to kill them.
That's...
I'm gonna lie, it's kind of genius.
What she would say...
Quickly the lie.
Yeah, how quickly the lie came up.
But also, it could also make her feel better.
It makes her look better, definitely.
Yeah, for sure.
So she was arrested that afternoon
for conspiracy to commit murder,
attempted murder and first degree murder.
But Jennifer wasn't the only one
who'd be paying the price for this elaborate crime.
On December 26th, 2011, Daniel Wong was arrested
under those same charges.
That spring, David Milvaganam, Eric Cardi and Homeboy,
Leonard, Lenford Crawford, were met with
the same fate.
All five of them were tried together beginning in March of 2014.
A hearing that spanned 10 months until Judgment Day finally arrived on December 13th of that
year.
One detail that was never uncovered was who actually pulled the trigger that ended Bick's
life and nearly took Hans as well. But that didn't matter to the jury when it came time to
deliver a verdict. Jennifer was found guilty of first-degree murder and given
life in prison only eligible for parole after 25 years. She was also given a
life sentence for the attempted murder of her father, Daniel, David, and homeboy
received the same exact sentence. However, Eric Cardi's trial was split off
after his counsel got sick.
And as a result, he ended up with a lighter sentence
of 18 years for conspiracy to commit murder
with the possibility of parole after nine.
Only Eric never got the chance of that parole hearing.
He was stabbed to death in prison in April of 2018.
So as of this recording,
Jennifer is being held at the Grand Valley
Institution for Women about a half hour outside of Toronto. During the hearing, her father,
Han, requested a court order that banned Jennifer from ever speaking to him or any family members
again. I mean, don't blame the guy at all. And those rules still seem to apply to Jennifer
to this day. Since she began serving her time, no one from her family has been there to visit her.
Yeah.
This is despite the fact that she strongly maintains her innocence and is still pushing the suicide plot explanation.
She was however able to write one final love letter to Daniel Wong in which she signed off with a love always.
Although it's unclear if Jennifer Pan ever received a response.
Probably not.
And that is the story of Bic and Han Pan and how their lives were taken set
up by their own daughter.
Could you imagine you have a wife that you love dearly.
You have a kid that you bring into this world order only for them to kill your wife
and then try to kill you.
I don't know, that's horrible.
So it's actually interesting because there is some
conversation around this specific case in true crime.
And it involves, I think I know where you're going, yep.
It involves, we don't actually know the true story of was Jennifer actually in a toxic
relationship with her parents at 23 years old and couldn't see any other way out?
Or was she diabolical and selfish and couldn't see?
I'm going to say diabolical considering she's started lying.
She's 14.
I mean, there are, I mean, it's obvious there was a very high expectation of her pressure say diabolical considering she's started lying since she's 14.
I mean, it's obvious there was a very high expectation of
her own pressure put on her.
I mean, I feel like in a lot of Asian cultures that happens,
that's, I feel like it's pretty prominent, but you don't see them hiring.
People are going to kill their parents every single day, you know?
And I also, you know, he gave her an out.
Yeah, yeah, she could have left.
He said, leave.
Like you don't, you're 23.
You don't have to stay here anymore.
I mean, you're not gonna talk to us,
but is that not what happened anyways?
Just crazy.
I, that's so sad.
And at what point did she decide killing was better
than just leaving
It's cuz she wanted the money with the money which at that point again, that's you're wrong like she's wrong
Whatever she did is she did it for the money
She's evil. I mean killing your parents is wrong
Unless it's self-defense in any way and she did it cuz she wanted the money. It wasn't any self-defense. She said, wow, I want the money to live with Daniel.
She for sure set it up as a killing
because there's no way she could make that 911 call
tied up with her hands behind her back.
And like there's no way to actually get that phone out.
And so she made that 911 call that you heard.
You heard how crazy and scary that call was.
And she made that while probably not even tied up.
While just chilling.
And if they were really there to kill her,
her parents probably wouldn't have been tied up.
All right, you guys, that is our 200th episode.
Tune in this week, we have bonus content coming
for Apple subscribers and patrons alike.
And then don't forget that we are streaming on Twitch
this Thursday, 5.30 p.m. PT.
And we'll see you there.
I love it.
I hate it.
Goodbye.