Re: The Car Door
Call me crazy, but I can't help wondering if he had a boat.
Discussion About the Zodiac killer
http://www.zodiackillersite.com/
BillRobison wrote:Okay. It MIGHT have been the same person who wrote the letters, and then again, it might NOT have been. Right? Is that the consensus answer? We all agree there are possible excuses for Zodiac not getting his own act right, but on the other hand, a copycat COULD have simply copied what he saw in the papers. Right? Did I miss something?
Unless I missed something, the next question is, if the known footprints lead from the VW down to the crime scene and back, then just where did Zodiac park his car? According to Deputy Snooks report, the footprints lead straight from the car door to the steps over the fence, and back.
So, where did he park? It's about 30 minutes from the crime scene to the phone booth in Napa. It took Zodiac 70 minutes give or take to place the call. Where was he for 40 minutes? Taking a shower? Did he live in Napa? Did he park 20 or 30 minutes by foot away from the crime scene? That would be about where the root beer stand is, right? He had to walk from the car door back to his own car. Where was it? It would make sense for him to use the dirt road between the highway and the beach. But there are no footprints mentioned being found along that dirt road, except going across the road from the crime scene to the car door and back.
Where did he go AFTER the car door?
Tahoe27 wrote:smithy---I have my doubts it was Zodiac who committed the attacks at LB, so I have my doubts it was him who wrote on the car door. I don't think it was the same guy who wrote the previous letters.
Norse wrote:
Oh, I don't know. All things said and done the simplest explanation remains the one I land on most of the time: It was Z. The obvious discrepancies are to be explained by...well, you got me there.
BillRobison wrote:3. The finger and palm prints from the phone booth in Napa do not match the finger and palm prints from Stine's cab. I don't see how we can conclude that the "most likely" explanation is that the person who called Napa police was the same person who left a blood tinged set of DIFFERENT prints on Stine's cab. Hamlet noticed a match between those Stine prints and one on the little list letter, but that still leaves the Napa phone booth out in the cold.
Norse wrote:Hm.
Clear and undeniable link? The writing on the car door.
Similarities?
* The phone call (done before in much the same way).
* Victims (another young couple in a lover's lane type location).
* General approach (vague, I know, but what I mean is that he targeted someone in an isolated location and attacked with little or no risk of the victims putting up a struggle).
Differences?
* Method (knife, rope, talking to his victims at length).
* Ritualistic aspect (executioner's garb, possibly also manner of attack, the stabbing is something quite different from shooting someone execution style).
* Sexual aspect (see stabbing - possibly something there, with the other crimes there is nothing at all as far as we know, he just plain shot the victims and left).
* Subsequent behavior (no mention of the incident, no letter in which he takes credit and/or brags, taunts, etc.).
Copycat serial killer? As in - someone who killed CS and BH for no good reason, dressing up in that costume, doing his best to be recognized as a different, already known serial killer? No - I don't buy that for one second.
Copycat killer with a specific motive for attacking CS and BH (or one of them), who did all of the above to effectively pin the murder on an already known serial killer? Possible. But it raises all sorts of questions. Why deviate from the most obvious part of Z's approach? Why attack them in ritualistic, spectacular fashion?
Oh, I don't know. All things said and done the simplest explanation remains the one I land on most of the time: It was Z. The obvious discrepancies are to be explained by...well, you got me there.