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Mystery surrounds identity of man who died at home but fingerprints not in national database

When a man named Abdul Rahman Majid died at home from coronary artery disease in August 2022, the police took his fingerprints to confirm his identity.

Strangely, they did not match those of anyone listed in Singapore’s national database.

At the coroner’s inquiry into the man’s death on Tuesday, investigation officer Ng Yun Ning told State Coroner Adam Nakhoda the man’s sons were shocked when told their father’s name was not Abdul Rahman Majid.

In fact, the State Courts’ computer system listed the deceased as “unknown”. It was not stated how old he was.

To add another twist to this case, the real Abdul Rahman Majid is alive and staying at a welfare home in Buangkok.

So, who was the man who died?

IO Ng said on Aug 5, 2022, the police received a call from one of the man’s sons who found his father had stopped breathing in the living room of their Geylang Bahru flat.

He was pronounced dead. There were no signs of a struggle and he did not have any injuries.

The police first identified him as Mr Abdul Rahman Majid, which was the name stated in the man’s youngest son’s birth certificate.

But red flags appeared.

There was no passport or NRIC belonging to the deceased found in the flat.

The man’s photo with the name “Abdul Rahman Majid” was found only on an old construction site pass and a UOB Plaza pass.

His fingerprints also did not match those of anyone in the databases of Singapore, Malaysia or Indonesia.

The real Abdul Rahman Majid is a 69-year-old man who has been staying in a welfare home since 1994, suffering from chronic schizophrenia.

When IO Ng showed him the photo of the dead man, he shook his head, indicating he did not recognise him.

When the unknown man’s fourth son and the son’s wife turned up in court on Tuesday, they were shown a photo of the real Abdul Rahman Majid. Both said they had never seen him before.

A police check into the deceased’s medical history showed that an Abdul Rahman Majid had received treatment at the Institute of Mental Health and Tan Tock Seng Hospital.

But it was the real Abdul Rahman Majid who had gone to these hospitals, which meant there were no clear medical reports tagged to the deceased.

There is, however, no doubt he is the biological father of his four sons as blood tests had proven.

He had another son, the eldest, who was given away at birth. His wife and youngest son are schizophrenic.

To gather information about his identity, IO Ng said she spoke to a cleaner in charge of the block the deceased lived in for over 20 years. The cleaner recalled the man telling him to call him “Kassim”.

One of the deceased’s sons told the IO that when the family used to live in a rental flat in Hougang, a man who visited them had addressed their father as “Kassim”.

She told the court she also tried speaking to the deceased’s wife, but as the woman suffers from schizophrenia, she could only respond by nodding or shaking her head.

State Coroner Nakhoda told IO Ng to conduct further investigations into the case.

She must contact the relatives of the deceased’s wife to get more information.

She is also to check with the Housing Board on the registered tenants in the rental flats in Hougang and Geylang Bahru that the deceased and his family lived in.

State Coroner Nakhoda told IO Ng to check with the Registry of Muslim Marriages and the Registry of Marriages for his marriage records.

Addressing the man’s son in court, State Coroner Nakhoda said he understood the family wants to know their father’s real name.

But he said this may not come to light, as previous investigations have yet to yield any clues to his identity.

Findings will be given at a later date.

CORONER'S INQUESTCOURT & CRIMEmistaken identity