Re: Zodiac did speak to Donald Fouke
UKSpycatcher wrote:"The above is essentially what Fouke “reasoned”. Is there anything glaringly wrong with it?"
We will agree to disagree Norse, but what Fouke reasoned is not what I am saying. In the scratch it clearly states "a suspect fitting the description of the Zodiac Killer was observed by officer Fouke walking in an easterly direction on Jackson Street and then turn north on Maple Street" . In the 2007 documentary he says "he turned into an entrance way of a house, by entrance way I mean stairs that are concrete leading up to a path, that leads to a front door, never saw him get to the top of the stairs, you want the address of that residence, 3712 Jackson Street."
He never saw Zodiac reach the top of the stairs because he was driving past him and he went out of sight, but 3712 is before the intersection where he claims in the scratch he saw Zodiac last heading north into Maple and into the Presidio. His last sighting of Zodiac therefore puts him in two places.
Zodiac may have entered a stairwell of a house, then proceeded onward to the intersection of Maple and Jackson, but Fouke never saw him reach the top of the stairs, so how can he subsequently observe Zodiac entering Maple.
Michael Butterfield is an extremely intelligent researcher and find his work on the case well thought out, but on this occasion I disagree with him. I am not constructing a timeline on statements alone, the critical part is that both Pelissetti and Fouke received the dispatch at an identical point in time and unless Donald Fouke had stopped at a restaurant or driven at 10 mph there is 100% no way heading directly to Cherry he can meet Armond Pelissetti, if he is on his outward bound journey away from the crime scene.
Either Zodiac is last seen entering a stairwell or entering Maple, what Fouke may or may not reason is superfluous. All I want is the facts.
Thank you for your intelligent response. I like debating back and forth with you, because you know how to debate.
I hear what you say. And I too find it impossible to make Fouke's various statements tally - I even find it hard to make his particular, isolated statements (never mind the discrepancy between his multiple statements) make sense. They don't. Nor do Pelissetti's. Something's missing from the whole picture.
But I think you're reading too much into the discrepancies and inaccuracies. Butterfield is right on the money - for my money - as far as this is concerned. Look at Pelissetti's statements. Look at what actually lies behind these statements. They don't remember very well what happened on the night.
Fouke's scratch? My guess: He was told to write that thing. Because of Z. He wrote down what he remembered. He didn't specify that Z pretended to enter 3712 because it didn't matter - to him, Fouke. What he - Z- really did was to wait until the coast was clear, and then make for the park. That's what Fouke means by what he says - and he elaborates on this in later interviews. That's my take on it.
Consider this:
Let's suppose that Fouke was lying. He did stop Z that night – and talked to him. What are the implications of this?
Fouke is, or at least was, capable of providing the investigators with a significantly better description of Z than any other witness in the case. He observed him from a few yards away for a considerable (in this context) amount of time. Did he keep this to himself? If so, his negligence is not only criminal - but historically criminal, one could say. That doesn't mean he didn't lie - but it has to be mentioned, no - it has to be highlighted in this context. Fouke was by all accounts and all records a good cop.
Or did he tell someone (eventually)? Is the story first told by Graysmith (and subsequently perpetuated by numerous others) actually true? Toschi found out that Fouke had talked to Z? Fouke gave him a tearful confession? But Toschi, benignly, kept a lid on Fouke's faux-pas? Think about that for a second. An officer actually stops and talks to the Zodiac killer – but fails to report this to his superiors. But the latter are kind enough to let him get away with it.
Finally, take this into consideration: Fouke didn't tell anyone - and nobody found out. Zelms, meanwhile, went around with the composite in his pocket and told his wife he had talked to the Zodiac. Nobody important picked up on this, it would seem. He knew that Fouke was (that has to be the implication here) hiding the truth about the encounter...but he, Zelms, apparently was not hiding much...and nobody picked up on this.
Huge case. National news. SFPD mocked by Zodiac. But nobody picked up on this.
I like Butterfield's part about Armstrong myself. That part - pardon if I sound...partial to logic - rings true to me. Unless Butterfield himself is shamelessly lying. Which I don't think he is.
Now, I've ranted on enough. There is absolutely no doubt that if we look at what we know, based on what the principal players themselves have told us, about the events that night - we have to ask questions. Many questions. And I commend you for doing so. But I ask you to keep in mind that...thing...again, namely the factor that faulty memory, ego, the need for recognition...and so forth (what Butterfield sums up very well)...plays here.
Look at Fouke and compare him to some of the other players in this little play. Compare his statements to those of Pelissetti - and Toschi. Ask Rodelli, who interviewed both Pelissetti and Fouke, what impression he got from the pair of them.
I'm sorry if my initial response was a bit sour - I didn't mean it that way. Again, I respect you very much as a Z researcher. In fact, these days your theories and proposals are just about the only ones I bother to actually debate - because they're worth debating.