doi:10.1007/s12024-023-00655-w...
Springer
Medicine & Public Health
2023
5/24/2023
Ned Kelly, an iconic figure in contemporary Australian mythology, was a bushranger (outlaw) who was executed in 1880 for the murder of a serving police officer, Constable Thomas Lonigan.
Kelly is often commemorated by tattoos which depict his armour and helmet or his alleged last words of “Such is life”.
A study was undertaken from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2020, at Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, South Australia, of all cases with such tattoos.
De-identified case details included the year of death, age, sex and cause and manner of death.
There were 38 cases consisting of 10 natural deaths (26.3%) and 28 unnatural (73.7%).
The latter included 15 cases of suicide (39.5%), 9 accidents (23.7%) and 4 homicides (10.5%).
Of the 19 suicides and homicides, there were 19 males and no females (age range 24–57 years; average 44 years).
The number of suicides in the general South Australian forensic autopsy population in 2020 was 216/1492 (14.5%) which was significantly lower than in the study population in which 39.5% of cases were suicides (2.7 times higher; p < 0.001).
A similar trend occurred for homicides which accounted for 17/1492 in the general forensic autopsy population (1.1%), significantly lower than in the study population which had 10.5% homicides (approximately 9.5 times higher; p < 0.001).
Thus, in the select population referred for medicolegal autopsy, there appears no doubt that Ned Kelly tattoos are associated with suicides and homicides.
While this is not a population-based study, it may provide useful information for forensic practitioners dealing with such cases.
Byard, Roger W.,Maxwell-Stewart, Hamish, 2023, The association of Ned Kelly tattoos with suicide and homicide in a forensic context—a confirmatory prospective study, Springer