John E Heymer
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John E Heymer is a former police officer and author, who has written extensively on the field of spontaneous human combustion (also known as SHC).
Heymer was born in Bow, East London, in 1934 and went to South Wales at the age of 16 to become a coal miner. He returned to London two years later for National Service and spent three years in the Royal Fusiliers. After National Service he returned to work as a miner but left after being injured during a roof fall. He joined the Monmouthshire Constabulary and spent a few years as a training instructor, then a few years in the photography department. He then became a scene of crime officer and crime prevention officer.
Heymer describes himself as an autodidact, with a lifelong passion for knowledge, and has written that he is not afraid to pursue this into areas where other people might fear ridicule or contempt. Coupled with his investigative training, this puts him in a strong position to argue the facts—although (as he often stresses in his writing) no reader should believe he is infallible.
He was a gradual convert to belief in SHC, mainly as a result of his attendance as scene of crime officer at the apparent death by SHC of an elderly man in Ebbw Vale (Henry Thomas, discussed elsewhere).
Heymer believes that SHC is not a supernatural phenomenon, but a rare natural phenomenon that has not yet been examined sufficiently (mainly due to the difficulty presented by the results of SHC).
He has published articles about SHC in New Scientist magazine and Fortean Times magazine, and has appeared on BBC television programmes Newsnight and QED ("The Burning Question").
In 1995, he published a book entitled The Entrancing Flame, which was about his personal experience of dealing with the results of SHC, and attempted to analyse the phenomenon.