Germany NORTH SEA JOHN DOE: WM, 45-50, found in sea in Heligoland, Germany, - 11 Jul 1994 - The Gentleman case

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April 28 2022
M&S tie and metal shoe lasts: new clues in cold case of ‘the Gentleman’ | Germany | The Guardian
''The man sported a stripy Marks & Spencer tie, expensively made but possibly secondhand shoes – and 6 kg of cast-iron weights tied around his body, designed to drag him to the bottom of the North Sea.

Almost three decades after finding the body of what appeared to be a murder victim in the waters off the island of Heligoland, German police have released new information and a first photofit in order to establish the identity of the man who was dubbed “the Gentleman” for his smart attire.''

''The body was recovered from the sea by a border guard boat on 11 July 1994, 20 km off Heligoland, but police believe it is possible that the body had travelled in the water for some distance.

“He could have drifted from a ship or even as far as [from] Great Britain, that’s certainly possible,” said Karsten Bettels, of the Lower Saxony Police Academy.

An autopsy at the time showed signs of exposure to blunt violence on the almost 2 metre-tall (6ft 5in) man’s head and upper body, which he had suffered while still alive.

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Each of the cast-iron shoe lasts weighed 3 kg, police said. Photograph: Police Inspectorate Wilhelmshaven
A further telling sign of a criminal act were the two cast-iron shoe lasts, each weighing 3 kg, which had been fixed to the man’s body to weigh him down, as police have revealed for the first time.''
''Made in the 1920s or 30s, the two female shoe lasts were embossed with the initials AJK, the trademark of Bristol-based company AJ Jackson.

Police have also for the first time released the make of the man’s tie, saying it was produced by Marks & Spencer for the English- and French-language market, which at the time of the man’s disappearance stretched all the way to Canada.

''After exhuming the man’s body last December, they have managed to isolate the complete DNA profile of the 45- to 50-year-old male and are currently checking it against international DNA databases, police in Wilhelmshaven in northern Germany announced on Thursday.

An ongoing isotope analysis could eventually confirm whether the man had lived on the British Isles before his body was dumped in the North Sea, as investigators suspect.''

Links

 
1406.jpg

April 28 2022
M&S tie and metal shoe lasts: new clues in cold case of ‘the Gentleman’ | Germany | The Guardian
''The man sported a stripy Marks & Spencer tie, expensively made but possibly secondhand shoes – and 6 kg of cast-iron weights tied around his body, designed to drag him to the bottom of the North Sea.

Almost three decades after finding the body of what appeared to be a murder victim in the waters off the island of Heligoland, German police have released new information and a first photofit in order to establish the identity of the man who was dubbed “the Gentleman” for his smart attire.''

''The body was recovered from the sea by a border guard boat on 11 July 1994, 20 km off Heligoland, but police believe it is possible that the body had travelled in the water for some distance.

“He could have drifted from a ship or even as far as [from] Great Britain, that’s certainly possible,” said Karsten Bettels, of the Lower Saxony Police Academy.

An autopsy at the time showed signs of exposure to blunt violence on the almost 2 metre-tall (6ft 5in) man’s head and upper body, which he had suffered while still alive.

2445.jpg
View attachment 15927View attachment 15928

Each of the cast-iron shoe lasts weighed 3 kg, police said. Photograph: Police Inspectorate Wilhelmshaven
A further telling sign of a criminal act were the two cast-iron shoe lasts, each weighing 3 kg, which had been fixed to the man’s body to weigh him down, as police have revealed for the first time.''
''Made in the 1920s or 30s, the two female shoe lasts were embossed with the initials AJK, the trademark of Bristol-based company AJ Jackson.

Police have also for the first time released the make of the man’s tie, saying it was produced by Marks & Spencer for the English- and French-language market, which at the time of the man’s disappearance stretched all the way to Canada.

''After exhuming the man’s body last December, they have managed to isolate the complete DNA profile of the 45- to 50-year-old male and are currently checking it against international DNA databases, police in Wilhelmshaven in northern Germany announced on Thursday.

An ongoing isotope analysis could eventually confirm whether the man had lived on the British Isles before his body was dumped in the North Sea, as investigators suspect.''

Links


Wow, I never heard of that case, thank you for posting it🌺!
 

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