December 1, 1948 is Australia as a hot season, and many people will choose to come to the beach for vacation and enjoy the wonderful time.
But at 6 o'clock in the morning, a couple was playing by the beach, found a very mysterious male corpse.
says this because the male corpse is dressed very cleanly and decently, and even the leather shoes on his feet are polished shiny.
What is even more strange is that there is no other clue to on this male corpse except for a mysterious code.
The US police have been tracing him for many years, but he has not found his true identity.
It was not until 73 years later that the identity of this male corpse was completely found out.
So, what is the real identity of this male corpse? Why did he show up on the beach? What does that mysterious code on him represent?
Someton Beach Male Corpse
1948 On November 30, 1948, the sun's light shone straight on the southern hemisphere, and the hot temperature was simply unbearable.
Jewelry businessman Chris and his wife Laura looked at the sun outside the house and decided to come to Somerton Beach, Australia for vacation.
At 7 pm that night, Chris and Laura walked hand in hand on the beach. They looked at the endless sea and felt very comfortable.
At this moment, Laura found a man lying on the beach in front of her. The man stretched his legs straight and his arms crossed.
Laura and Chris stood there, saw the man's right arm suddenly lifted, and then quickly put it down.
Originally, Laura wanted to go over and ask the man if he needed help. But she was stopped by her husband Chris.
Chris told Laura that the man might be a drunken drunk or lying there to rest, and he didn't have to go there.
After Chris' persuasion, Laura decided to give up on the past to check the situation.
However, before they left, Laura looked back at the man and found a fly lying on his face.
Seeing this scene, Laura also thought that the person was just a drunk, so she left with her husband with confidence.
At around 6 o'clock the next day, the Chris and his wife returned after the end of the morning and found the drunk man last night again.
But this time, many people surrounded the drunkard.
Out of curiosity, Laura took her husband forward to check the situation. found a man lying on the ground with his legs crossed and his head against the beach.
And the location of this man happens to be where Laura and Chris met the drunkard last night.
It was just last night that they did not see the drunk man clearly, so they could not determine whether the man in front of them was a drunk man. After talking to the people around him, Chris learned that the man in was dead and his body became very cold.
on his right collar, and there is a half-smoked cigarette.
Seeing this cigarette, Laura remembered that when they met the drunk man last night, the other party raised his right hand.
Immediately, Laura and her husband called the police and told the police about the specific situation.
After receiving the call, the police quickly came to the beach and saw the man.
Pathologist John Cryland also followed the police to the crime scene and inspected the man.
After examination, he found that the man had the characteristics of a British man, about 180 cm tall and about 40 to 45 years old.
The clothes worn by men are very high-end, but at the same time it also makes people feel very strange.
The weather is very hot in the local area, and many people are wearing cool bikini or short-sleeved shorts, but the man is wearing a brand new brown pullover and a fashionable double-row button jacket.
The tie on the neck is also brand new, even the leather shoes on the feet are polished and the beard on the face is shaved very clean.
But he didn't wear a hat. In Australia at that time, almost everyone would wear a hat when they went out.
After the examination of the body, John found that there were signs of heavy bleeding in his body, and was obviously not a natural death.
In response to this, John speculated that the man was likely to die of poisoning.
, but soon, he found the pie that the man ate within 3 to 4 hours before his death. After testing, the pie consumed by men was not poisonous.
Just as John was examining the man's body, the police also learned about some of the situation last night from the Chris and his wife and another couple.
At 7 pm last night, the man raised his right hand, and the man at this time was likely still alive.
But at 7:45, when another couple walked and met the man, they did not notice that he raised his hand, but lay motionless on the beach.
Therefore, the police speculated that the time of the man's death was most likely around 2 am on December 1.
But what surprised the police was that the man did not carry any identity certificate and all the tags on his clothes were cut off.
At this moment, the police found a buried car ticket under the beach where the man's body was found.
This bus ticket is from Adelaide to San Leonardo Station, only about 1,100 meters away from the place where the body was found.
At the same time, the forensic doctor also found a small piece of rolled paper from the deceased's pocket, with the words "Taman, Shude" written on it.
According to the identification of library experts, these two words come from the last page of the long poem " Rubai Collection " written by ancient Persian poet , which means "end".
The theme of "Rubai Collection" is to say that a person should live to the end of his life and should have no regrets when he dies.
These two sheets of paper are along the edges of the two words, and are cut in a regular manner, with blank space on the back.
Based on these clues, police speculate that the truth of a man's death is likely to be in the "Rubai Collection".
So, they searched for clues to this book "Rubais Collection" in Australia and made the paper photos public, hoping that citizens could provide clues to the police.
may have been released, the police did not receive any news about this book "Rubai Collection". What made them even more troubled is that the real identity of the deceased has not been confirmed yet. Local media reported the case the day after the case occurred. claimed that the deceased was a 45-year-old man named Johnson in the local area.
After the "secret" hidden in "Rubais Collection" was released, Johnson himself came to the police station with his identity certificate, and many media magazines said that he was not dead.
After the police posted photos of the deceased, many people who claimed to know the man or had met him came to the police station.
After the police checked, they found that what they said did not match the facts. The case has reached this point and seems to have entered a dead end.
Just when the police were feeling a headache, the case had a new turn.
In January 1949, staff at Adelaide Railway Station discovered a brown suitcase deposited at 11 noon on November 30, 1948. The tag on the box
has been taken away, and some tools such as clothes and knives are placed in the box intact.
After the box was sent to the police station, the police found that after inspection, the recognizable signs on the clothes were basically torn off.
They found "T Keane" or "Keane" on a tie, a laundry bag and a shirt, and there are three dry cleaning marks: 1171/7, 4393/7 and 3053/7.
In response to this, police suspected that someone deliberately left the label with the word "Keane". But they don't know what the reason is.
Then, the police found a roll of orange wax thread in the box.
According to the investigation, this roll of wax thread has not been sold in Australia, but coincidentally, one of the straps of the deceased was sewn with this thread.
This means that the box is indeed the male corpse on Somerton Beach.
But the police did not find a missing man named "T. Keane". At the same time, they had no results in investigating those three dry cleaning numbers.
In this suitcase, there is only one coat made in the United States that is the most valuable clue. When making a jacket like
, it needs to be tried on by the customizer. Therefore, the police speculated that the deceased was likely to have been in the United States.
Immediately, the police investigated the train records of the day and found that the deceased came to Adelaide by taking an overnight train from Melbourne .
After arriving in Adelaide, the deceased took a shower in the bathroom near the train station, shaved his beard, and then returned to the train station to purchase a ticket to Henry Beach around 10:30 in the morning.
But for some reason, he missed the car and put his suitcase into the station's storage, and then took the car to Somerton Beach instead.
Why did the deceased do this? After some investigation, the police had no clue.
At this moment, a doctor came to the police station and provided an important clue to the police.
It turned out that not long ago, while he was flipping through the newspaper, suddenly thought that on the evening of November 30, 1948, a book called "Rubais" appeared in the back seat of his car.
At that time, the doctor got out of the car and went to buy coffee. The door was not locked and parked on the beach. He didn't find it until he got back to the car.
The doctor picked up the book, looked around casually, and found that the last page of the book had been torn off the word "end".
The doctor did not pay attention to this, but instead put the book "Rubai Collection" casually in the trunk of the car.
It was not until he saw the news in the newspaper that he suddenly thought of the book that appeared inexplicably in his car.
After the police took the book from the doctor, they immediately conducted microscopic comparisons.
Finally, they confirmed that the small piece of paper in the deceased's pants pocket was cut from this book.
In addition, the police also found in this book "Rubai Collection" that someone wrote down letters with very vague elements in a pencil.
After observation, the police suspected that this might be some kind of password.
So, they invited a password expert to decipher, but in the end they did not succeed.
By 1978, Australian Ministry of Defense personnel analyzed the string of numbers and concluded that the symbols of are likely to constitute complex alternative passwords.
In addition to these vague letters, the police also found a very sloppy phone number on the back of the book.
After investigation, the phone number belongs to a woman living in the Greer area.
This woman worked as a nurse during World War I, and her home is only 800 meters away from the crime scene.
Through the description of this woman, she worked in a hospital in Sydney in 1945. At that time, she gave a copy of "Rubais" to Lieutenant Berksa who served in the Australian Naval Transport Department.
The war ended, and the woman moved to Melbourne and got married.
After marriage, the woman had received a letter from Berksa, which made her very happy, but in the reply, she told Lieutenant Berksa that she was married.
After the letter was sent out, the other party did not reply.
Until the end of 1948, the woman heard from her neighbor that a mysterious man had inquired about her whereabouts.
In this regard, the police believe that the woman must have something to do with this case.
But when they made a half-body plaster model of the deceased through the corpse and asked the woman to identify it, she first showed a very surprised expression, but then she said that this person was not Berksa and she did not know this person.
Afterwards, according to the police investigation, it was found that Berksa was not only alive, but also had a complete book of "Rubais", and the word "end" on the last page was also intact.
Just as the police were about to leave, the woman found them, hoping that the police would not announce her name to the public.
The police expressed their understanding of this and did what the woman said.
However, their approach lost a very important clue to the subsequent investigation.
There are all kinds of rumors about this case.
Among them, the most widely circulated is the theory of spy.
Because the place where the deceased died is very close to Wumera, who is also a top-secret missile launch site.
Therefore, there are many people in speculating that the deceased on Somerton Beach was a poisoned Soviet spy.
As time goes by, clues about the deceased on Somerton Beach have not appeared, and even some more bizarre statements have begun to appear.
Identity of the Dead
Time is in 1995, and it has been almost half a century since the discovery of the deceased on Somerton Beach.
Decree, who is studying at the University of Adelaide, Australia, accidentally discovered this case in a magazine and immediately became very interested in it.
Subsequently, Deckery set up a special research team, and conducted more than ten years of tracking and investigating the case.
During the investigation, Deckery cooperated with Colleen, a famous forensic doctor in the American criminal investigation industry, and used the most advanced technology. used the DNA of the deceased on Somerton Beach to establish a very complete genealogy system.
From this nearly 4,000 blood relationships, Deckery and Colleen narrowed the genealogy step by step after a long period of hard work, and finally locked onto a man named Carl Weber.
According to the survey, Carl Weber is the youngest child in the family. He was born in the suburbs of Melbourne in 1905. He became a couple with Rothy Robertson as an adult.
The reason why Webber went from Melbourne to Adelaide is likely to be looking for his wife who had been separated for many years. Rothy
In 2021, in order to solve the case, Deckery was preparing to apply for excavation of the body of the deceased on Somerton Beach again to further verify the identity of the deceased.
To determine the identity of the deceased on Somerton Beach, Deckery spent a lot of time and energy. Some people think he is making a big deal, but Deckery thinks that everything he has done is worth it.
In his opinion, if the deceased in Somerton Beach was a foreign spy who was carefully planned and poisoned, then his work would be very meaningful.
Even if the deceased is just an ordinary tourist who died suddenly, his identity is still very important.
confirms the identity of the deceased in order to bring peace to the living, this is Decker's belief.
After the examination of the body, John found that there were signs of heavy bleeding in his body, and was obviously not a natural death.
In response to this, John speculated that the man was likely to die of poisoning.
, but soon, he found the pie that the man ate within 3 to 4 hours before his death. After testing, the pie consumed by men was not poisonous.
Just as John was examining the man's body, the police also learned about some of the situation last night from the Chris and his wife and another couple.
At 7 pm last night, the man raised his right hand, and the man at this time was likely still alive.
But at 7:45, when another couple walked and met the man, they did not notice that he raised his hand, but lay motionless on the beach.
Therefore, the police speculated that the time of the man's death was most likely around 2 am on December 1.
But what surprised the police was that the man did not carry any identity certificate and all the tags on his clothes were cut off.
At this moment, the police found a buried car ticket under the beach where the man's body was found.
This bus ticket is from Adelaide to San Leonardo Station, only about 1,100 meters away from the place where the body was found.
At the same time, the forensic doctor also found a small piece of rolled paper from the deceased's pocket, with the words "Taman, Shude" written on it.
According to the identification of library experts, these two words come from the last page of the long poem " Rubai Collection " written by ancient Persian poet , which means "end".
The theme of "Rubai Collection" is to say that a person should live to the end of his life and should have no regrets when he dies.
These two sheets of paper are along the edges of the two words, and are cut in a regular manner, with blank space on the back.
Based on these clues, police speculate that the truth of a man's death is likely to be in the "Rubai Collection".
So, they searched for clues to this book "Rubais Collection" in Australia and made the paper photos public, hoping that citizens could provide clues to the police.
may have been released, the police did not receive any news about this book "Rubai Collection". What made them even more troubled is that the real identity of the deceased has not been confirmed yet. Local media reported the case the day after the case occurred. claimed that the deceased was a 45-year-old man named Johnson in the local area.
After the "secret" hidden in "Rubais Collection" was released, Johnson himself came to the police station with his identity certificate, and many media magazines said that he was not dead.
After the police posted photos of the deceased, many people who claimed to know the man or had met him came to the police station.
After the police checked, they found that what they said did not match the facts. The case has reached this point and seems to have entered a dead end.
Just when the police were feeling a headache, the case had a new turn.
In January 1949, staff at Adelaide Railway Station discovered a brown suitcase deposited at 11 noon on November 30, 1948. The tag on the box
has been taken away, and some tools such as clothes and knives are placed in the box intact.
After the box was sent to the police station, the police found that after inspection, the recognizable signs on the clothes were basically torn off.
They found "T Keane" or "Keane" on a tie, a laundry bag and a shirt, and there are three dry cleaning marks: 1171/7, 4393/7 and 3053/7.
In response to this, police suspected that someone deliberately left the label with the word "Keane". But they don't know what the reason is. December 1, 1948 is Australia as a hot season, and many people will choose to come to the beach for vacation and enjoy the wonderful time. But at 6 o'clock in the morning, a couple was playing by the beach, found a very mysterious male corpse. says this because the male corpse is dressed very cleanly and decently, and even the leather shoes on his feet are polished shiny.
What is even more strange is that there is no other clue to on this male corpse except for a mysterious code.
The US police have been tracing him for many years, but he has not found his true identity.
It was not until 73 years later that the identity of this male corpse was completely found out.
So, what is the real identity of this male corpse? Why did he show up on the beach? What does that mysterious code on him represent?
Someton Beach Male Corpse
1948 On November 30, 1948, the sun's light shone straight on the southern hemisphere, and the hot temperature was simply unbearable.
Jewelry businessman Chris and his wife Laura looked at the sun outside the house and decided to come to Somerton Beach, Australia for vacation.
At 7 pm that night, Chris and Laura walked hand in hand on the beach. They looked at the endless sea and felt very comfortable.
At this moment, Laura found a man lying on the beach in front of her. The man stretched his legs straight and his arms crossed.
Laura and Chris stood there, saw the man's right arm suddenly lifted, and then quickly put it down.
Originally, Laura wanted to go over and ask the man if he needed help. But she was stopped by her husband Chris.
Chris told Laura that the man might be a drunken drunk or lying there to rest, and he didn't have to go there.
After Chris' persuasion, Laura decided to give up on the past to check the situation.
However, before they left, Laura looked back at the man and found a fly lying on his face.
Seeing this scene, Laura also thought that the person was just a drunk, so she left with her husband with confidence.
At around 6 o'clock the next day, the Chris and his wife returned after the end of the morning and found the drunk man last night again.
But this time, many people surrounded the drunkard.
Out of curiosity, Laura took her husband forward to check the situation. found a man lying on the ground with his legs crossed and his head against the beach.
And the location of this man happens to be where Laura and Chris met the drunkard last night.
It was just last night that they did not see the drunk man clearly, so they could not determine whether the man in front of them was a drunk man. After talking to the people around him, Chris learned that the man in was dead and his body became very cold.
on his right collar, and there is a half-smoked cigarette.
Seeing this cigarette, Laura remembered that when they met the drunk man last night, the other party raised his right hand.
Immediately, Laura and her husband called the police and told the police about the specific situation.
After receiving the call, the police quickly came to the beach and saw the man.
Pathologist John Cryland also followed the police to the crime scene and inspected the man.
After examination, he found that the man had the characteristics of a British man, about 180 cm tall and about 40 to 45 years old.
The clothes worn by men are very high-end, but at the same time it also makes people feel very strange.
The weather is very hot in the local area, and many people are wearing cool bikini or short-sleeved shorts, but the man is wearing a brand new brown pullover and a fashionable double-row button jacket.
The tie on the neck is also brand new, even the leather shoes on the feet are polished and the beard on the face is shaved very clean.
But he didn't wear a hat. In Australia at that time, almost everyone would wear a hat when they went out.
After the examination of the body, John found that there were signs of heavy bleeding in his body, and was obviously not a natural death.
In response to this, John speculated that the man was likely to die of poisoning.
, but soon, he found the pie that the man ate within 3 to 4 hours before his death. After testing, the pie consumed by men was not poisonous.
Just as John was examining the man's body, the police also learned about some of the situation last night from the Chris and his wife and another couple.
At 7 pm last night, the man raised his right hand, and the man at this time was likely still alive.
But at 7:45, when another couple walked and met the man, they did not notice that he raised his hand, but lay motionless on the beach.
Therefore, the police speculated that the time of the man's death was most likely around 2 am on December 1.
But what surprised the police was that the man did not carry any identity certificate and all the tags on his clothes were cut off.
At this moment, the police found a buried car ticket under the beach where the man's body was found.
This bus ticket is from Adelaide to San Leonardo Station, only about 1,100 meters away from the place where the body was found.
At the same time, the forensic doctor also found a small piece of rolled paper from the deceased's pocket, with the words "Taman, Shude" written on it.
According to the identification of library experts, these two words come from the last page of the long poem " Rubai Collection " written by ancient Persian poet , which means "end".
The theme of "Rubai Collection" is to say that a person should live to the end of his life and should have no regrets when he dies.
These two sheets of paper are along the edges of the two words, and are cut in a regular manner, with blank space on the back.
Based on these clues, police speculate that the truth of a man's death is likely to be in the "Rubai Collection".
So, they searched for clues to this book "Rubais Collection" in Australia and made the paper photos public, hoping that citizens could provide clues to the police.
may have been released, the police did not receive any news about this book "Rubai Collection". What made them even more troubled is that the real identity of the deceased has not been confirmed yet. Local media reported the case the day after the case occurred. claimed that the deceased was a 45-year-old man named Johnson in the local area.
After the "secret" hidden in "Rubais Collection" was released, Johnson himself came to the police station with his identity certificate, and many media magazines said that he was not dead.
After the police posted photos of the deceased, many people who claimed to know the man or had met him came to the police station.
After the police checked, they found that what they said did not match the facts. The case has reached this point and seems to have entered a dead end.
Just when the police were feeling a headache, the case had a new turn.
In January 1949, staff at Adelaide Railway Station discovered a brown suitcase deposited at 11 noon on November 30, 1948. The tag on the box
has been taken away, and some tools such as clothes and knives are placed in the box intact.
After the box was sent to the police station, the police found that after inspection, the recognizable signs on the clothes were basically torn off.
They found "T Keane" or "Keane" on a tie, a laundry bag and a shirt, and there are three dry cleaning marks: 1171/7, 4393/7 and 3053/7.
In response to this, police suspected that someone deliberately left the label with the word "Keane". But they don't know what the reason is.
Then, the police found a roll of orange wax thread in the box.
According to the investigation, this roll of wax thread has not been sold in Australia, but coincidentally, one of the straps of the deceased was sewn with this thread.
This means that the box is indeed the male corpse on Somerton Beach.
But the police did not find a missing man named "T. Keane". At the same time, they had no results in investigating those three dry cleaning numbers.
In this suitcase, there is only one coat made in the United States that is the most valuable clue. When making a jacket like
, it needs to be tried on by the customizer. Therefore, the police speculated that the deceased was likely to have been in the United States.
Immediately, the police investigated the train records of the day and found that the deceased came to Adelaide by taking an overnight train from Melbourne .
After arriving in Adelaide, the deceased took a shower in the bathroom near the train station, shaved his beard, and then returned to the train station to purchase a ticket to Henry Beach around 10:30 in the morning.
But for some reason, he missed the car and put his suitcase into the station's storage, and then took the car to Somerton Beach instead.
Why did the deceased do this? After some investigation, the police had no clue.
At this moment, a doctor came to the police station and provided an important clue to the police.
It turned out that not long ago, while he was flipping through the newspaper, suddenly thought that on the evening of November 30, 1948, a book called "Rubais" appeared in the back seat of his car.
At that time, the doctor got out of the car and went to buy coffee. The door was not locked and parked on the beach. He didn't find it until he got back to the car.
The doctor picked up the book, looked around casually, and found that the last page of the book had been torn off the word "end".
The doctor did not pay attention to this, but instead put the book "Rubai Collection" casually in the trunk of the car.
It was not until he saw the news in the newspaper that he suddenly thought of the book that appeared inexplicably in his car.
After the police took the book from the doctor, they immediately conducted microscopic comparisons.
Finally, they confirmed that the small piece of paper in the deceased's pants pocket was cut from this book.
In addition, the police also found in this book "Rubai Collection" that someone wrote down letters with very vague elements in a pencil.
After observation, the police suspected that this might be some kind of password.
So, they invited a password expert to decipher, but in the end they did not succeed.
By 1978, Australian Ministry of Defense personnel analyzed the string of numbers and concluded that the symbols of are likely to constitute complex alternative passwords.
In addition to these vague letters, the police also found a very sloppy phone number on the back of the book.
After investigation, the phone number belongs to a woman living in the Greer area.
This woman worked as a nurse during World War I, and her home is only 800 meters away from the crime scene.
Through the description of this woman, she worked in a hospital in Sydney in 1945. At that time, she gave a copy of "Rubais" to Lieutenant Berksa who served in the Australian Naval Transport Department.
The war ended, and the woman moved to Melbourne and got married.
After marriage, the woman had received a letter from Berksa, which made her very happy, but in the reply, she told Lieutenant Berksa that she was married.
After the letter was sent out, the other party did not reply.
Until the end of 1948, the woman heard from her neighbor that a mysterious man had inquired about her whereabouts.
In this regard, the police believe that the woman must have something to do with this case.
But when they made a half-body plaster model of the deceased through the corpse and asked the woman to identify it, she first showed a very surprised expression, but then she said that this person was not Berksa and she did not know this person.
Afterwards, according to the police investigation, it was found that Berksa was not only alive, but also had a complete book of "Rubais", and the word "end" on the last page was also intact.
Just as the police were about to leave, the woman found them, hoping that the police would not announce her name to the public.
The police expressed their understanding of this and did what the woman said.
However, their approach lost a very important clue to the subsequent investigation.
There are all kinds of rumors about this case.
Among them, the most widely circulated is the theory of spy.
Because the place where the deceased died is very close to Wumera, who is also a top-secret missile launch site.
Therefore, there are many people in speculating that the deceased on Somerton Beach was a poisoned Soviet spy.
As time goes by, clues about the deceased on Somerton Beach have not appeared, and even some more bizarre statements have begun to appear.
Identity of the Dead
Time is in 1995, and it has been almost half a century since the discovery of the deceased on Somerton Beach.
Decree, who is studying at the University of Adelaide, Australia, accidentally discovered this case in a magazine and immediately became very interested in it.
Subsequently, Deckery set up a special research team, and conducted more than ten years of tracking and investigating the case.
During the investigation, Deckery cooperated with Colleen, a famous forensic doctor in the American criminal investigation industry, and used the most advanced technology. used the DNA of the deceased on Somerton Beach to establish a very complete genealogy system.
From this nearly 4,000 blood relationships, Deckery and Colleen narrowed the genealogy step by step after a long period of hard work, and finally locked onto a man named Carl Weber.
According to the survey, Carl Weber is the youngest child in the family. He was born in the suburbs of Melbourne in 1905. He became a couple with Rothy Robertson as an adult.
The reason why Webber went from Melbourne to Adelaide is likely to be looking for his wife who had been separated for many years. Rothy
In 2021, in order to solve the case, Deckery was preparing to apply for excavation of the body of the deceased on Somerton Beach again to further verify the identity of the deceased.
To determine the identity of the deceased on Somerton Beach, Deckery spent a lot of time and energy. Some people think he is making a big deal, but Deckery thinks that everything he has done is worth it.
In his opinion, if the deceased in Somerton Beach was a foreign spy who was carefully planned and poisoned, then his work would be very meaningful.
Even if the deceased is just an ordinary tourist who died suddenly, his identity is still very important.
confirms the identity of the deceased in order to bring peace to the living, this is Decker's belief.
Afterwards, according to the police investigation, it was found that Berksa was not only alive, but also had a complete book of "Rubais", and the word "end" on the last page was also intact.
Just as the police were about to leave, the woman found them, hoping that the police would not announce her name to the public.
The police expressed their understanding of this and did what the woman said.
However, their approach lost a very important clue to the subsequent investigation.
There are all kinds of rumors about this case.
Among them, the most widely circulated is the theory of spy.
Because the place where the deceased died is very close to Wumera, who is also a top-secret missile launch site.
Therefore, there are many people in speculating that the deceased on Somerton Beach was a poisoned Soviet spy.
As time goes by, clues about the deceased on Somerton Beach have not appeared, and even some more bizarre statements have begun to appear.
Identity of the Dead
Time is in 1995, and it has been almost half a century since the discovery of the deceased on Somerton Beach.
Decree, who is studying at the University of Adelaide, Australia, accidentally discovered this case in a magazine and immediately became very interested in it.
Subsequently, Deckery set up a special research team, and conducted more than ten years of tracking and investigating the case.
During the investigation, Deckery cooperated with Colleen, a famous forensic doctor in the American criminal investigation industry, and used the most advanced technology. used the DNA of the deceased on Somerton Beach to establish a very complete genealogy system.
From this nearly 4,000 blood relationships, Deckery and Colleen narrowed the genealogy step by step after a long period of hard work, and finally locked onto a man named Carl Weber.
According to the survey, Carl Weber is the youngest child in the family. He was born in the suburbs of Melbourne in 1905. He became a couple with Rothy Robertson as an adult.
The reason why Webber went from Melbourne to Adelaide is likely to be looking for his wife who had been separated for many years. Rothy
In 2021, in order to solve the case, Deckery was preparing to apply for excavation of the body of the deceased on Somerton Beach again to further verify the identity of the deceased.
To determine the identity of the deceased on Somerton Beach, Deckery spent a lot of time and energy. Some people think he is making a big deal, but Deckery thinks that everything he has done is worth it.
In his opinion, if the deceased in Somerton Beach was a foreign spy who was carefully planned and poisoned, then his work would be very meaningful.
Even if the deceased is just an ordinary tourist who died suddenly, his identity is still very important.
confirms the identity of the deceased in order to bring peace to the living, this is Decker's belief.