Evo
Tank
- Joined
- May 6, 2005
- Messages
- 6,517
- Reaction score
- 7
Wow, someone tweeted this the other day, it is the tale of a body which washed up on a beach in Australia just after World War II...and nobody has a clue whatsoever about what the **** happened.
http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/history/2011/08/the-body-on-somerton-beach/
Most murders aren’t that difficult to solve. The husband did it. The wife did it. The boyfriend did it, or the ex-boyfriend did. The crimes fit a pattern, the motives are generally clear.
Of course, there are always a handful of cases that don’t fit the template, where the killer is a stranger or the reason for the killing is bizarre. It’s fair to say, however, that nowadays the authorities usually have something to go on. Thanks in part to advances such as DNA technology, the police are seldom baffled anymore.
They certainly were baffled, though, in Adelaide, the capital of South Australia, in December 1948. And the only thing that seems to have changed since then is that a story that began simply—with the discovery of a body on the beach on the first day of that southern summer—has bec0me ever more mysterious. In fact, this case (which remains, theoretically at least, an active investigation) is so opaque that we still do not know the victim’s identity, have no real idea what killed him and cannot even be certain whether his death was murder or suicide.
http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/history/2011/08/the-body-on-somerton-beach/