The Tamám Shud case mystery
The Tamám Shud case, also known as the Mystery of the Somerton Man.
After the body of the Somerton Man was found on an Australian beach in December 1948, police found a mysterious scrap of paper reading "Tamám Shud" in his pocket.
Mortuary photograph of the Somerton Man, the victim at the heart of the Tamám Shud case, taken on December of 1948. |
On Dec. But several theories have emerged in the past few decades, suggesting that the mysterious figure could have been anything from a spy to a spurned lover.
After 70 years, however, some investigators have new reasons to hope that the Somerton Man might finally be identified and that the Tamám Shud case might be solved once and for all.
Not only did the man’s possessions offer few clues, but investigators also found a slip of paper in the man’s pocket which read “Tamám Shud,” Persian for, “it is finished.”
To date, the Somerton Man has never been identified. Well-dressed, and with no signs of trauma, his identity and cause of death eluded local police. Soon, investigators dubbed him the “Somerton Man.”
As their investigation deepened, so did the mystery. 1, 1948, beachgoers came across a dead man on Australia’s Somerton beach.
The Disturbing Discovery Of The Somerton Man.
The attending pathologist, John Matthew Dwyer, determined that the body had not been moved after death.
Dwyer also noted a couple of irregularities. One couple remembers him raising his arm as if drunkenly trying to light a cigarette. The Somerton Man also had blood in his stomach, which suggested to Dwyer the presence of “some irritant poison.”
The man was carrying no identifying materials and all of the tags in his clothes had been carefully removed leaving investigators utterly perplexed. |
But subsequent tests found no poison in the man’s blood. 30, 1948, a number of people noticed a man propped up against a concrete seawall on Somerton beach in Adelaide. It contained the exact same unusual orange thread sewn into the Somerton Man’s pants, and some clothing labeled “T. A renewed search of the Somerton Man’s possessions revealed a small pocket sewn into the waistband of his pants. And investigators found no money, wallet, or identification on his person.
At the Royal Adelaide Hospital, Dr. The clean-shaven man had not been stabbed, shot, or, it seemed, injured at all.
They each believed that the man had had too much to drink. The man’s pupils seemed small and unusually shaped. His legs were outstretched and his feet were serenely crossed.
He struck many as odd. This has led some investigators to believe that the man either digested digitalis and strophanthin, two lethal poisons that don’t leave a trace.
Further attempts to identify the man failed. A pair of amateur jockeys on horseback came across his body the next day and alerted the police.
An initial inspection of the Somerton Man — as he came to be known — revealed no obvious cause of death. One of his pants pockets was repaired with an unusual type of orange thread.
In his pockets, investigators found a railway ticket to Henley Beach, a bus ticket to North Glenelg, an American metal comb, a packet of Juicy Fruit chewing gum, a packet of Army Club cigarettes containing a different brand of cigarettes, a handkerchief, and a packet of Bryant & May matches.
The man had athletic legs and seemed to be in his 40s or 50s. Kean.” This, however, yielded no leads.
The most baffling clue of all, however, came several months later. Keane” or “T. John Barkley Bennet estimated that time of death was to be no earlier than 2 a.m. For one, he wore a full suit and polished shoes — bizarre beach attire for a warm evening. And although coroners determined that the Somerton Man had died of heart failure, they couldn’t come up with a cause of death.
Police did manage to find the man’s abandoned suitcase at the Adelaide Railway Station. His forearms were tanned. There, investigators found a folded piece of paper that read “Tamám Shud” — Persian for “it’s finished” or “it’s ended.”
The words were written in a distinctive script and were found to have been torn from a rare New Zealand edition of The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, the 12th-century work of poetry.
His toes were oddly mangled as though they had been shoved into tight shoes, suggesting, perhaps, that he’d been a dancer.
Strangely, the tags and labels of the Somerton Man’s clothes had been cut off. His shoes were polished. In fact, he was dying. Neither the FBI nor Scotland Yard had the fingerprints on file
The Enduring Mystery Behind “Tamám Shud”
The police found the dead man suitcase at the Adelaide Railway Station on Nov 30.1949. |
New Hope For Solving The Tamám Shud Case And Finally Identifying The Somerton Man.
This grave site is Salvation Army Captain Em Webb,leading the prayers, attended by reporter's and police. |
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