A century-old mugshot of a Dunedin man has become an internet sensation, capturing the imagination of nearly 500,000 admirers around the world.
Daniel Joseph Tohill was arrested and photographed more than a century ago, but it is his arresting photo which has attracted hundreds of thousands of hits and generated positive comments over the internet.
A site which included his photo under the heading "Ridiculously photogenic 19th century NZ criminal", received almost half a million hits since it was posted a month ago.
Comments include "They said he was a model inmate", "Looks like he was ... one smooth criminal", and "if looking handsome is a crime ... then guilty".
Tohill was born in Ravensbourne, Dunedin, in 1881.
Lemuel Lyes, footage researcher with NHNZ in Dunedin and keen historian, researched the man's history after the mugshot went viral, discovering Tohill was incorrectly named "Lohill" on his mugshot.
"History should be shared. I love how in the 21st century technology has changed that a minor petty criminal from a century ago can all of a sudden have international interest in his story."
According to newspaper clippings, a Daniel Tohill was charged with stealing two ferrets in Christchurch on June 16, 1906, and also for a theft from a Nelson railway station shed in September, 1907.
On March 2, 1908, the labourer and railway porter were charged - and the now infamous mugshot taken - for allegedly stealing a bicycle and a fur necklet in Napier. He was later acquitted on the charge of stealing a bicycle, but sentenced to four months at Napier Prison on the charge of stealing the necklet.
Tohill's criminal record ended there, and he later moved with his wife and young children to Auckland, where he died in 1950, aged 68.
His Dunedin-based grand-nephew, Dylan Tohill (43), said he knew little about the family other than they grew up very poor, but was delighted to learn his distant relative had achieved online fame more than six decades after his death.
Daniel Tohill's mugshot appears in the New Zealand Police Museum's "Suspicious Looking" gallery.
Museum manager Rowan Carroll said Tohill's viral mugshot had "increased our workload somewhat".