Zodiac Killer Mania
When I was about 10, the Zodiac killer shot cabbie Paul Stine outside
the house of my mother's best friend.
I remember how shocked I was. The bullet that pierced Stine's skull
shattered the serenity and complacency of the lives of everyone in
that tony Presidio Heights neighborhood. This was an area of large
mansions, wide sidewalks, leafy trees - the whole bit. Schoolgirls in
uniforms walked to school everyday, mothers pushed children in their
strollers, and kids played in nearby Julius Kahn playground. Until the
killing, the neighborhood had seemed a safe place.
I remember my mother saying that her friend's son might have to
testifiy at a trial because he saw something that night.
The 1970s were a scary time in the Bay Area. The Zebra killings came
after the Zodiac killings. Patty Hearst was kidnapped from Berkeley
and the nation watched in horror as a firefight erupted between the
Los Angeles police department and the SLA. Jim Jones ordered the
deaths of 800 people and Dan White killed San Francisco Mayor George
Moscone and Supervisor Harry Milk.
As the San Francisco Chronicle's pink section suggests, the Bay Area
is due for a little reflection this week as the new movie, Zodiac,
opens. It tells the story of the elusive, and ultimately unsuccessful,
hunt for the Zodiac through the eyes of a Chronicle cartoonist.
The pink section has lots of interesting stuff on the time, including
some pieces by former cop reporter Duffy Jennings, who worked on the
case. San Francisco Magazine also has an interesting article by
Charles Russo, accompanied by chilling period photographs.
I wonder if the movie will resurrect any of the long-simmering angst
those of us who grew up in the Bay Area in the 1960s and 1970s surely
have beneath the surface. It's not the anxiety of wondering whether
the Zodiac will kill again -- he hasn't communicated with the police
or Chronicle since 1978 -- but the feeling that order can quickly
dissolve into chaos. It doesn't take much.
While I am mentioning the Zodiac, I would be remiss not to point out a
provocative article about former San Francisco Chief of Police Earl
Sanders in this week's SF Weekly. The Zodiac movie is creating a lot
of buzz, but the book Sanders wrote on the Zebra Killings has not
generated a lot of talk since its release four months ago.
Writer Ron Russell points out that a lot of people think Sanders
overstated his role in investigating the black-on-white Zebra
killings, as well as pumping himself into a hero for bringing a
landmark racial discrimination suit against the police department.
Russell calls the Zebra book an attempt to restore polish to Sanders
reputation, which was tarnished in the Fajita-gate scandal. Anyway,
it's an interesting read.
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