| Transcript |
| 0:08 | I had no idea about the Somerton Man case. |
| 0:10 | I'd never heard of it. |
| 0:12 | It hadn't entered my life in any way, I was just living my life. |
| 0:15 | I had no idea that I held some kind of secret to solving this case or could aid in the effort |
| 0:22 | to try and trace this back to a person. |
| 0:28 | I knew that they would get the name one day, I knew that technology would catch up, but |
| 0:32 | I did know that even though you've got a name, you're not going to really understand |
| 0:38 | who the man was. |
| 0:41 | It's fantastic to see that this man, an unknown man on a beach, now has a name, he |
| 0:50 | now has a family. |
| 0:52 | He now has a place. |
| 0:53 | We'd love to find out, you know, what was he doing there. |
| 0:58 | How did he die and why did he die? |
| 1:02 | Was it natural? |
| 1:03 | Was it suicide? |
| 1:05 | Anything was possible, and in this case, I think that the most unexpected ending has |
| 1:12 | happened and that is in itself another twist. |
| 1:18 | I think there are some questions there that may never be solved, and the mystery will |
| 1:25 | live on. |
| 1:28 | MY NAME IS CHARLES On the first of December in 1948 the body |
| 1:43 | was found by two trainee jockeys early in the morning that were out on the beach exercising |
| 1:48 | horses. |
| 1:49 | We went over to see if he was alright. |
| 1:53 | And we got fairly close to him and couldn't see him breathing and he was dead. |
| 2:01 | A number of people did come and view the body but were unable to identify him. |
| 2:11 | One of the intriguing things about the case is that all the clothes the man was wearing |
| 2:16 | had the labels removed off them. |
| 2:18 | So, this is what made some people think, 'Oh maybe this guy is a spy.'. |
| 2:25 | We are seeing that there was a tie with the name 'T Keane' on it. |
| 2:30 | It was strange that nobody came forward to identify the body, which led to suggestions |
| 2:35 | that he was from overseas, possibly from Europe, possibly from America. |
| 2:39 | The doctor who carried out the post-mortem examination said the stomach was deeply congested |
| 2:43 | with blood and in his opinion, death had been caused by heart failure due to poisoning. |
| 2:50 | The Somerton Man had a really unique body. |
| 2:52 | He was very well built, he was athletic, but he had these calf muscles that were really |
| 2:57 | distinct, kind of like he was a ballet dancer. |
| 3:01 | I think the biggest technical problem was the fact that he was thawing out, because |
| 3:05 | he was, apart from being embalmed, he was deep frozen. |
| 3:09 | The police knew that they wouldn't be able to keep his body forever and that it would |
| 3:13 | soon start to deteriorate. |
| 3:15 | So they called in a taxidermist who made a plaster cast of his face. |
| 3:20 | A group of locals paid for his headstone and his plot. |
| 3:24 | And his headstone reads, "Here lies the unknown man". |
| 3:29 | A couple of months later they found a tiny scrolled up piece of paper in the man's |
| 3:34 | fob pocket. |
| 3:36 | When they unrolled it, it said "Tamam Shud." |
| 3:39 | It was a mystery as to what this actually meant. |
| 3:43 | It was a newspaper reporter who was well-read, and said it came from the ending of a book |
| 3:51 | called The Rubaiyat written by Omar Khayyam. |
| 3:55 | And it meant :the end", or "the finish". |
| 3:59 | And this brought forward the theory that perhaps he had committed suicide. |
| 4:07 | A man came forward to say that he had found a copy of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam and |
| 4:14 | it did have the last page torn out. |
| 4:18 | He handed it into police, he said it had been thrown into the back seat of his car six months |
| 4:23 | earlier. |
| 4:25 | So, on the back of the book were some strange letters that the police couldn't make any |
| 4:30 | sense of, and a phone number belonging to a young 27-year-old woman, who happened to |
| 4:36 | live only five minutes' walk away from where the man was found dead. |
| 4:43 | The police paid the young nurse a visit, but she was very reluctant to talk to them. |
| 4:51 | After that incident, basically they were stumped, there were no other leads. |
| 4:56 | And it basically hit a brick wall, the whole case. |
| 5:01 | Everyone working on the case or had an interest in the case always thought that something |
| 5:06 | would come up tomorrow, but tomorrow never came. |
| 5:11 | Podcast excerpt: Hello and welcome to the Somerton Man and today I wanted to look at |
| 5:16 | the Somerton man – one of the most mysterious cold cases of all time. |
| 5:20 | Over the decades, interest in this case has just continued to grow and grow to the point |
| 5:26 | it's actually considered one of Australia's greatest unsolved mysteries. |
| 5:30 | There are blog sites that have been set up from all over the world with amateur sleuths |
| 5:36 | trying to work out who the guy is, why he was on Somerton beach and exactly how he died. |
| 5:46 | I teach electronic engineering at Adelaide Uni. |
| 5:50 | I just happened to be sitting in a laundrette watching my washing going around, and there |
| 5:55 | was a stack of magazines beside me, and I picked one up and it was an article about |
| 5:59 | the top 10 unsolved mysteries in Australia. |
| 6:03 | And the second one was the Somerton Man case. |
| 6:06 | The great thing about the maths we do is it's not the pie-in-the-sky maths, it's the type |
| 6:11 | of maths that has great practical value… |
| 6:15 | And so I thought, 'Hey this would make a great project for my students'. |
| 6:19 | And so I started building up a lot of history and background on the case. |
| 6:24 | And I think that just sucked me in beccause I just got fascinated by it |
| 6:29 | Professor Abbott has been investigating this case for so many years now and it's completely |
| 6:34 | consumed his whole being. |
| 6:35 | He's become known as one of the world leading experts on the case. |
| 6:40 | So in trying to solve the case, it seemed to me the key was to find the young woman, |
| 6:46 | Jo Thompson, that lived five minutes from where he died, with the hypothesis that she |
| 6:54 | had been in a relationship with the Somerton Man. |
| 6:57 | Unfortunately, she had died two years earlier, so I found out. |
| 7:04 | That was a little frustrating because I was hoping that she would have some information |
| 7:09 | about who this man was, and perhaps after so many years she would be prepared to say |
| 7:15 | who it was, but I ended up contacting her grand-daughter, Rachel. |
| 7:23 | The first time I heard about the Somerton Man was a letter that arrived, and it was |
| 7:29 | sent by Professor Derek Abbott. |
| 7:32 | It said, "I believe that you may have a link to someone involved in this case." |
| 7:39 | I developed a hypothesis that the Somerton Man and Jo Thompson knew each other. |
| 7:46 | They had a child, Robin Thompson, and if this is the case then his daughter Rachel is the |
| 7:53 | granddaughter of the Somerton Man. |
| 7:56 | But his hypothesis seemed to be way too crazy. |
| 7:59 | Too fanciful. |
| 8:01 | It was like something that could have been made up in some fictional novel. |
| 8:14 | So I went to Brisbane to meet Rachel, and we went out to dinner in a French restaurant, |
| 8:20 | and talked about the case. |
| 8:23 | He was also after my DNA. |
| 8:25 | It's probably the first request I've had for a man to do that. |
| 8:29 | By then however, I was captivated by the case, and I wanted answers, so I was a willing victim. |
| 8:39 | So the relationship moved pretty quickly. |
| 8:44 | Yeah, there was some sort of spark there. |
| 8:51 | Something just magically drew us together. |
| 8:53 | By the following day we had decided we were going to get married. |
| 8:58 | It all happened remarkably fast. |
| 9:01 | So Derek and I got married in 2010 and we now have three beautiful children together. |
| 9:15 | People would say that I had married her for her DNA, and we would laugh about it, so that |
| 9:21 | is funny. |
| 9:23 | Derek has essentially spent 24/7 researching the Somerton Man case. |
| 9:30 | He, if it's possible, became even more passionate about the whole case. |
| 9:36 | So in 2015 we started work on extracting DNA from hairs that were found in the plaster |
| 9:45 | cast of the Somerton Man, hoping this would be a way to identify him, even though these |
| 9:52 | hairs are 70 years old. |
| 9:56 | But we were only able to extract 2 per cent of the amount of DNA that we really need to |
| 10:04 | form an identification. |
| 10:05 | There's an imperative to now go ahead and do an exhumation. |
| 10:10 | We need it in much higher concentration levels, which we could do with the Somerton man's |
| 10:16 | teeth or his ear bone, for example. |
| 10:20 | Now the man's body will be exhumed by police with hopes modern DNA technology will be able |
| 10:24 | to solve one of the state's most enduring cold cases. |
| 10:28 | The Somerton Man is not just a curiosity or a mystery to be solved. |
| 10:34 | It's somebody's father, son, perhaps grandfather, uncle, brother. |
| 10:38 | So when the state government announced that the exhumation was going ahead I think for |
| 10:42 | some other people, they would see that as a cue for retirement. |
| 10:46 | But not Derek. |
| 10:47 | I think that increased his motivation to continue at even faster pace. |
| 10:52 | I'm reasonably confident there will be enough DNA come out of this that we'll get an identification. |
| 11:00 | He thought initially that he would be allowed to participate, but that wasn't to be. |
| 11:07 | After the exhumation, everything went silent. |
| 11:10 | The police kept very tight-lipped about their processes and Derek got a little restless |
| 11:15 | and he went back to his three hairs that he'd extracted in 2017 and started working again. |
| 11:21 | He was driven to find out who the man was. |
| 11:26 | The professor definitely wanted to be first over the finishing line of cracking the case. |
| 11:35 | So I'd been communicating with Colleen Fitzpatrick, who is the world expert in forensic genealogy |
| 11:44 | from America and like me, she was totally fascinated by the Somerton Man case I asked |
| 11:50 | her if she would assist. |
| 11:52 | So here's a closeup of the bust and can you see all these little hairs? |
| 11:58 | Yes. |
| 11:59 | That's the Somerton Man's hair. |
| 12:01 | So Colleen's expertise and she's a pioneer in this, is getting DNA, and from that DNA |
| 12:10 | finding distant cousins. |
| 12:12 | There are millions of people today who voluntarily put their DNA on these family tree-type DNA |
| 12:20 | sites. |
| 12:22 | Ever wanted to explore your family tree, learn more about your ancestry or identify your |
| 12:28 | ethnic background. |
| 12:29 | First take a DNA test and download your results as a DNA data file. |
| 12:35 | far as unidentified human remains, violent crimes, in other words, forensic cases, it's |
| 12:40 | really been a game-changer, the first new tool really in about 30 years in human identification. |
| 12:47 | It's very powerful and it's been very successful. |
| 12:53 | Around this time, DNA technology began to improve significantly. |
| 12:58 | Derek joined forces with Colleen, and they began to get some results. |
| 13:02 | Right off the bat, it's sort of like a miracle happened, we passed the first test. |
| 13:06 | We got the good data out of the 75-year-old hair. |
| 13:09 | Great! |
| 13:10 | Two million DNA markers fell out. |
| 13:13 | And it was at that point we knew that was more than enough to identify the Somerton |
| 13:18 | Man. |
| 13:19 | It was in a good shape to upload to those genealogy data bases for the next step, the |
| 13:26 | next genealogy step. |
| 13:29 | So when we first uploaded the Somerton Man's DNA onto a genealogical website, the very |
| 13:36 | top match we got was a gentleman in Victoria by the name of Jack Hargreaves, whose DNA |
| 13:43 | was already there on the system. |
| 13:45 | So, blue shows the area of significant matching, and this is huge here on chromosome 22. |
| 13:52 | And so what we did is we built out Jack Hargreaves family tree. |
| 13:56 | And at one stage we had as many as 4,000 people on the tree, so which one is it? |
| 14:04 | It felt like I was working on a big Sudoku puzzle, moving all these relatives around |
| 14:09 | until I got it. |
| 14:10 | We looked for people with no date of death on that tree. |
| 14:15 | There was one that stood out, because A: he was male, B: had roughly the right age range, |
| 14:24 | and C was very closely connected to the Keane family, and as we know, the Somerton Man had |
| 14:30 | the name Keane on his tie. |
| 14:33 | When I saw the name Keane, that's when my hair caught fire. |
| 14:36 | That's when I really knew we were on the offensive. |
| 14:39 | We were going to get it because that wasn't a coincidence. |
| 14:43 | And so this turned out to be a chap called Charles Webb, who had no date of death details. |
| 14:50 | Yeah, so he was born Carl Webb but he only went by the name Charles Webb. |
| 14:54 | It seemed this chap had just gone off the radar after 1947. |
| 15:00 | This could be our man, but we had no evidence, it was just a guy on a tree with no date of |
| 15:06 | death. |
| 15:07 | And we set out to either prove or eliminate him as being the Somerton Man |
| 15:15 | And to prove it, what we had to do was see who his mother was, then tunnel down the family |
| 15:20 | tree just on the mother's side only, and find somebody alive today. |
| 15:24 | And see if that DNA matches or not. |
| 15:27 | And that turned out to be somebody in Victoria by the name of Antero. |
| 15:30 | I got a call from Professor Abbott, who wanted to know if I could help do some research and |
| 15:38 | do DNA test. |
| 15:39 | I hadn't even heard of the story before. |
| 15:42 | And it was like, 'Hang on a minute, is this a scam?'. |
| 15:45 | It's not every day you get someone out of the blue calling you up and wanting to help |
| 15:50 | with some unidentified body or wants your DNA. |
| 15:54 | But did some research, made sure he was who he said he was. |
| 15:57 | So I volunteered to do that and did the test, sent it away. |
| 16:02 | I've always been interested in family history, but had no idea that there was a missing person |
| 16:09 | there. |
| 16:10 | So when Antero's DNA came through and it was a match to the Somerton Man, it was at |
| 16:16 | this point we knew that Charles Webb was the Somerton Man and we'd finally cracked it. |
| 16:24 | So there was a great feeling of elation, dampened by being totally exhausted at this stage. |
| 16:34 | I was taken aback but was excited as well. |
| 16:36 | There's a great, great discovery. |
| 16:38 | You know, I'd played my little part in working out that great mystery, it was satisfying. |
| 16:45 | There's Charles there. |
| 16:47 | So, he's my first cousin, three times removed. |
| 16:50 | And his mother, which is Eliza Emelia Morris, her older sister is my great-great grandmother. |
| 16:58 | And there's me down the bottom. |
| 17:00 | So Colleen and I decided right at that point, this was the time to make an announcement |
| 17:09 | people have been hanging on for 70 years to know the answers, I didn't see any reason |
| 17:13 | to delay. |
| 17:14 | I just wanted to get it out there. |
| 17:16 | They were determined, to quote Derek, to beat the cops. |
| 17:20 | And they were a bit concerned of how the news would be received as well. |
| 17:25 | The police gave no deadlines on when we could expect a result. |
| 17:29 | There was just nothing, no news. |
| 17:31 | Now an Adelaide researcher claims to have made a major breakthrough, uncovering the |
| 17:35 | identity of the infamous Somerton Man found on a beach. |
| 17:39 | Now a man who has dedicated his adult life to investigating the case thinks DNA has provided |
| 17:45 | the answer. |
| 17:46 | It's been a marathon working on this, over the last year particularly. |
| 17:50 | It was mind-blowing. |
| 17:52 | It was, 'Wow, we've actually got a name.' |
| 17:54 | And it was a surreal moment. |
| 17:56 | It took a long while to sink in that it's not the Somerton Man's story now, but the |
| 18:01 | Charles Webb story. |
| 18:02 | I'm not sure we'll ever be absolutely certain, because what we would do in a forensic context |
| 18:08 | normally is take a deceased DNA and compare that directly with something we know belong |
| 18:13 | to them a toothbrush, a hairbrush, etcetera, DNA from that item. |
| 18:17 | We haven't got that here. |
| 18:19 | As a secondary measure, we could compare the deceased DNA to a very close family member, |
| 18:23 | you know, parents, children. |
| 18:25 | Again, we don't have that. |
| 18:26 | So my concern is that we may never be able to categorically say that we know this person's |
| 18:32 | identity. |
| 18:33 | I'm not going to say I believe it until such time as the police results and the forensic |
| 18:40 | results that were done at the autopsy come back and actually confirm it, which I think |
| 18:49 | they possibly will. |
| 18:51 | Police who exhumed the Somerton Man's remains last year are cautiously optimistic the finding |
| 18:56 | is in fact a breakthrough. |
| 18:58 | I am 100 per cent convinced that we have the right guy. |
| 19:03 | Charles Webb is the Somerton Man. |
| 19:05 | PROFESSOR DEREK ABBOTT, ADELAIDE UNIVERSITY: It turns out he wasn't a spy, he wasn't |
| 19:10 | a ballet dancer. |
| 19:13 | And all those crazy theories on the internet all came to nothing. |
| 19:19 | So this is Rachel's DNA compared with the Somerton Man. |
| 19:24 | Down at the bottom it says 'no shared DNA segments found.' |
| 19:27 | So, that was a flop. |
| 19:35 | So we're totally able to eliminate that hypothesis that Rachel is the granddaughter |
| 19:42 | of the Somerton Man. |
| 19:44 | The hypothesis turned out to be wrong. |
| 19:49 | So, when Derek said that Mr Somerton wasn't my grandfather, as a joke I said to him, 'How |
| 19:56 | long before you serve the divorce papers on me?' |
| 19:58 | Because the media had made a comment some years back Derek only married me for my DNA. |
| 20:04 | So it's probably somewhere around here. |
| 20:09 | We told the children that Mr S as I've always called the Somerton Man was called Charles |
| 20:15 | Webb and that he's not related to us. |
| 20:18 | But the Somerton Man will always form part of our family and our narrative. |
| 20:23 | It's the reason that we met, Derek and I. It brought us together. |
| 20:28 | It's been like a journey for us, together, I guess. |
| 20:31 | Derek: George, I guess the mystery's not over is it? |
| 20:34 | We don't know much abut Charles Webb, why he was here. |
| 20:35 | And then not wanting to just rest there, we also then were able to find other living descendants. |
| 20:43 | So one of the people I contacted was Stuart Webb. |
| 20:47 | I'd never heard of the Somerton Man case I think Derek Abbott found me because I'd |
| 20:53 | done some family tree research of my own, because my grandmother was very into the family |
| 20:58 | tree or genealogy. |
| 21:03 | It certainly seemed very strange to be part of this larger mystery. |
| 21:07 | I'm kind of a regular guy, I go to work. |
| 21:11 | When Derek Abbott asked me to do a DNA test, I wasn't really crazy about the idea. |
| 21:16 | I wanted to think about it a little bit further, so I put it out to my family. |
| 21:19 | If anybody else would be prepared to do the DNA test? |
| 21:22 | And I put my hand up straight away and said, 'yeah, I'll have a crack'… |
| 21:29 | And everything from that point just seems to have steamrolled and rolled on and on and |
| 21:34 | it's getting bigger and bigger as we keep going. |
| 21:37 | So I've got a result for you. |
| 21:39 | Yes. |
| 21:40 | Are you ready for this? |
| 21:44 | Drumroll…So you are a great, great niece of Charles Webb |
| 21:51 | So I got my DNA results and…it was happiness, it was joy. |
| 21:57 | But there was also some sadness about this forgotten family member |
| 22:03 | You are 396 centimorgans, so you're right in the middle of the range, right? |
| 22:11 | Awesome. |
| 22:12 | This was a person, he wasn't just a media hit for a little while and unsolved mystery. |
| 22:19 | He was our family He was born in 1905 in Footscray, Victoria |
| 22:28 | but it seems that he grew up in Springvale, in the family bakery and became an electrical |
| 22:36 | instrument maker. |
| 22:37 | He was one of six siblings. |
| 22:40 | It's reported in the newspapers at the time that he played community football and so this |
| 22:45 | could explain his good calves and good physique generally. |
| 22:49 | And there's so much more we don't know. |
| 22:52 | Here's a family photo album from pa with all the mystery inside. |
| 22:57 | Check it out… |
| 22:58 | I started to look back through the family history and that particular wing I've been |
| 23:03 | able to find the first photo of Charles when he was alive, to my knowledge. |
| 23:09 | Nana's actually written on this photo and named all the people. |
| 23:13 | So you've got grandma, grandpa, Charlie who's the Somerton Man, and Roy. |
| 23:18 | So you can actually see them quite distinctly. |
| 23:20 | It's amazing. |
| 23:23 | Yeah. |
| 23:24 | What a find. |
| 23:27 | There's also a larger family gathering with all of the Webb family as it was back then. |
| 23:33 | A fantastic family day, they're all smiling, Charles in particular is playing some kind |
| 23:39 | of prank on who we think is Gerald Keane. |
| 23:41 | I wonder where that was? |
| 23:43 | I don't know. |
| 23:44 | It looks to be somewhere rural; it looks like they're having fun. |
| 23:48 | So when I first saw that, I thought, wow, this is fantastic. |
| 23:52 | This is a real breakthrough. |
| 23:54 | And this photo is basically taken 20 years before he died. |
| 24:00 | So we're seeing him considerably younger than the autopsy photo we're used to looking |
| 24:06 | at. |
| 24:07 | It's quite incredible when you look at these photos and this guy obviously went missing, |
| 24:13 | and nobody really came forward. |
| 24:16 | The fact that Charles Webb wasn't reported missing, I find that sad in itself. |
| 24:23 | And for no-one to reach out and find out where he was or what had happened, it's quite |
| 24:31 | heartbreaking So Uncle Harry, growing up, was there any |
| 24:35 | discussion? |
| 24:36 | Did you hear anything about one of the relatives going missing? |
| 24:39 | No, no, no. |
| 24:41 | There's no recollection of that. |
| 24:43 | Why didn't any of the siblings try and find out where he went? |
| 24:46 | Did they know that he'd gone to Adelaide and never came back? |
| 24:50 | Or did he just go off and no-one knew where, where he was? |
| 24:54 | In the end when we look at the whole situation of the Somerton Man, it does appear to be |
| 25:02 | a sad story. |
| 25:05 | In the period leading up to his death, his father died, his mum died. |
| 25:08 | His brother Roy, who he seems to be close with, died. |
| 25:12 | He split up with his wife as well. |
| 25:15 | Charles was married to Dorothy Robertson in, I think, 1941. |
| 25:20 | They didn't have a very easy marriage… |
| 25:24 | Our information comes from Dorothy's divorce decree filed several years later. |
| 25:31 | Dorothy described Charles as violent, threatening, moody. |
| 25:34 | Not at all a happy person. |
| 25:36 | He didn't have any friends and he would be in bed by 7pm. |
| 25:40 | Turns out that Charles loved to write poetry and his favourite subject that he would write |
| 25:45 | about was death. |
| 25:48 | This is interesting, because we know that just before Charles died, he'd discarded |
| 25:53 | a copy of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, which is poetry about death. |
| 25:59 | It all fits together. |
| 26:02 | One day she came home and the whole house smelled like ether. |
| 26:07 | She found him soaking wet in bed, and he said he had swallowed 50 phenobarbital tablets. |
| 26:13 | This very much sounds like Charles was attempting suicide. |
| 26:17 | This story turns out that it's not some wild spy drama. |
| 26:21 | It's really a sad, tragic domestic situation. |
| 26:28 | Eventually he moved out in April of 1947, and we don't know what happened after that. |
| 26:37 | And we find him dead on a beach in 1948 in Adelaide. |
| 26:43 | So what has he been doing in that intervening year? |
| 26:46 | Who knows. |
| 26:47 | And why Adelaide, why did he pick Adelaide? |
| 26:52 | I think Charles Webb was very broken mentally. |
| 26:55 | Something had happened in his life, and he wanted just to anaesthetise himself. |
| 27:02 | It does seem to me that some form of suicide does seem to be likely, which is what the |
| 27:08 | police always suspected all along, right from the beginning |
| 27:12 | I think there's no doubt that he committed suicide. |
| 27:14 | If he planned it all, he certainly planned it in a way that it would leave a great, confusing |
| 27:22 | issue behind, which would bamboozle people for years. |
| 27:28 | Imagine, this guy has been sitting there for 70 odd years, no-one knew who he was. |
| 27:33 | You're related to one of the great mysteries of Australia and indeed the world. |
| 27:40 | I was a bit excited to find out all I could about the Somerton Man, now that I knew who |
| 27:45 | it was and my small piece in the puzzle. |
| 27:47 | I'm sure that they'll find a few more answers to those missing questions. |
| 27:50 | But maybe eventually down the track, probably be a few unanswered questions that we just |
| 27:56 | have to live with. |
| 27:58 | The person that could supply all these answers that we all would like to know is dead. |
| 28:03 | He's taking it to the grave. |
| 28:05 | In the end, there was no fairytale ending, but it's been really heart-warming to learn |
| 28:13 | that the family that may not have missed him when he went missing and when he died, are |
| 28:19 | now reclaiming him. |
| 28:20 | It's really the start of the mystery, not the end. |
| 28:27 | He died alone. |
| 28:28 | He'd been buried for a long time in a cemetery without a name. |
| 28:33 | Whether he's buried again at Somerton or whether the family has other ideas, it's |
| 28:41 | just really nice that he's got a name. |
| 28:59 | So, in the playroom, we have two portraits. |
| 29:02 | One is my grandmother, Jo Thomson and the other one is what Charles Webb may have looked |
| 29:11 | like. |
| 29:12 | I do find them quite disturbing. |
| 29:14 | And now that I know that I'm not related, I would very much like to move those paintings |
| 29:18 | on and rehome them. |
| 29:20 | I would quite like to donate them to a charity. |
| 29:25 | I would like to get rid of those paintings. |
| 29:26 | South Australia police says further DNA work is required to positively identify the Somerton |
| 29:27 | Man and that the matter "will ultimately be determined by the Coroner". |