Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


On June 6, 1990, identical handwritten letters were mailed in New York
City to the New York Post and the production office of the CBS news
program "60 Minutes." The letters read:

         This is the Zodiac the twelve sign
         will die when the belts in the heaven
         are seen
         the first sign is dead on march 8 1990 1:45 AM
         white man with cane shoot on the back in the street
         the second sign is dead on march 29 1990 2:57 AM
         white man with black coat shoot in the side in front of house
         the third sign is dead on May 31 1990 2:04 AM
         white old man with can shoot in front of house
         Faust
         no more games pigs
         all shoot in Brooklyn with .380 RNL or 9mm
         no grooves on bullet

In addition to the chilling message, each letter was decorated with
three pie-shaped wedges, each marked with the astrological signs for
Gemini, Taurus, and Scorpio. The other was a cross and circle, variously
interpreted as an ancient Celtic cross or the cross hairs of a
telescopic gun sight.

Police "studied" the letters for two weeks before going public with the
announcement that their correspondent--"Zodiac" or "Faust"--was wanted
in connection with three unsolved shootings from the dates in question.
There were certain obvious discrepancies, including the fact that one
victim had been shot in Queens and all three were still alive, but the
description of events was otherwise strikingly accurate. Even the
ballistics reference to caliber and "RNL"--for round-nosed lead
projectiles--was precise. A similar note, including mention of the
"Zodiac" and "belts of heaven," had been found beside the third victim,
with a positive handwriting match completing the chain of evidence.

Target number one was 49-year-old Mario Orozco, shot in the back near
the intersection of Atlantic and Sheridan Avenues. Orozco told police
that his assailant, wearing a brown ski mask and gloves, had crossed the
street to intercept him, pressed a gun against his back, and fired one
shot, then stood above his prostrate body for a moment or two, aiming
the pistol at his victim's face before he fled the scene. Number two,
33-year-old Jermaine Montenesdro, was staggering home from a late party
in the Bronx when he was gunned down near a subway station, six blocks
from the scene of the first attack. Shot in the back and seriously
wounded, Montenesdro never got a look at his attacker. The third victim,
78-year-old Joseph Proce, was standing on 87th Road in Woodhaven,
Queens, when a bearded black man approached him and asked for a dollar.
Proce refused and was moving away when a shot from behind knocked him
sprawling.

Initially, the gunman's pattern seemed to consist of close-range attacks
on "elderly" white males (two walking with canes, while Montenesdro's
boozy stagger indicated physical infirmity). The shocker came when a
review of background information on the victims showed that each was
born within the astrological sign noted by their attacker--Gemini,
Taurus, and Scorpio, respectively. None of the wounded men had
recognized his assailant, but the gunman obviously knew them well enough
to pick his targets by their birth signs.

In short, the attacks were not random, but carefully planned in advance.

While the gunman signed his letters "Faust"--a character from German   
literature who sold his soul to Satan--the "Zodiac" reference prompted 
speculation on a possible link to California's unidentified serial
stalker from the 1960s. NYPD's new "Zodiac" task force requisitioned
dusty files from San Francisco, poring over 20-year-old leads in hopes
of finding something, anything, to help them crack the case. Newsmen
were quick to jump on the "Zodiac" bandwagon, noting "similarities"
between the New York letters and some of the earlier California
correspondence. Aside from the opening lines--"This is the
Zodiac"--reporters noted duplication of the original "Zodiac's"
cross-hairs symbol, "similar" handwriting patterns, detailed ballistic
descriptions, and reference to the police as "pigs. On the down side,  
the original "Zodiac's" letters had been widely published since 1969,
and the California killer was known to be a white man. Barring some
unknown personal relationship, New York's case seemed to be the work of
a demented copycat.

Detectives noted that the gunman's three attacks had taken place at 21-
and 63-day intervals, suggesting variations on a compulsive three-week
cycle. Man hunters were ready on June 21, first day of the astrological
month for Cancer, but the gunman outsmarted them, shifting his target
zone miles away to Central Park. This time the victim was a homeless
black man sleeping in the park. He would survive his wound, and police
were mystified that his birth sign--Cancer--matched the note that his
assailant left behind to mark the crime scene.

On June 22, angered by public debate over his link to the original
"Zodiac" killer, New York's gunman sent another letter to the Post.
Marked with the satanic number 666, it read in part: "This is the Zodiac
I have seen the Post and you say the note sent to the Post not similar
to any of the San Francisco Zodiac letters you are wrong the hand
writing look different it is one of the same Zodiac one Zodiac."

The charge became murder on June 24, when Joseph Proce finally died from
his wound. Police continued their alerts at three-week intervals through
August, but there were no more shootings, no more notes from the elusive
gunman. In mid-July, members of the Zodiac task force announced that
they were correlating passages from the killer's last letter with
Aleister Crowley's Book of the Law, including a statement that "Nature's
way is to weed out the weak." It was a tantalizing lead, but ultimately
it proved fruitless, and the task force was disbanded in October 1990.

Almost four years later, in August 1994, NYPD announced a new          
investigation of the case, in response to a letter the Post received,
claiming responsibility for five more shootings since the summer of
1992. Four of those attacks were fatal, and the letter once again
"suggested special knowledge of the shootings by providing details of
cases that had not received wide publicity." At the same time, there
were obvious discrepancies--including a reference to the shooting of one
victim who was actually stabbed--which led investigators to question the
new writer's link to their previous crimes. At this writing, the case
remains unsolved, the gunman--or gunmen--still at large.
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
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