I didn't - but I would have, too!
Just replaying a bit - I got a mention eh? Saying something stupid or wrong, it seems. One moment!
Say! "Riverside police consider that case closed..."... They do?!
Ah! "My" bit; people think I claim Hal Snook wrote on the door........? Well!
I think I would and could reasonably claim that the person who wrote at least the first few letters (and yes, later ones too) wrote on that door.
If we could prove that Hal Snook wrote it (or the letters), great.
Mr Horan - as he says - thinks the assailant wrote it. That's very odd. For me, that means the assailant was NOT a "copycat". Or that the guy who wrote the letters probably committed one murder at least - at Berryessa.
That nice round (circular) colon on the door is a lovely characteristic which appeared in a letter NOT published at the time - so unless the letter writer copied the door.......
The other thing I like, is that the "round dot" thing is something written about in all the textbooks of the time.
Mr Horan's now on his Ray Land / Dennis Land jag - but he says "EVERYTHING else a copycat would need" was available for Berryessa - but that's not so. That's not the case. NO circular colon or period had been printed.... I'm pretty darn sure that's right. We've discussed it before..... In a thread Mr Horan appeared in..... On this board.....
The August 4th 1969 letter to the San Francisco Examiner contains that same style of colon. Beyond just being able to reproduce the handwriting, a copycat would need to have seen that unpublished letter, realised it was a feature the letter writer uniquely used and would later use again, and to have chosen to reproduce it on the door.
* Sorry, I'm editing this multiple times trying to make it sound even remotely sensible... I'm not sure it does....