

#Zodiac killer victims pictures serial#
On some occasions, Zodiac displayed traits of both serial and spree killer, as well as both organized and disorganized offender, which classifies him as a mixed type of killer.Īll attacks occurred on weekends, dusk or after dark, usually around holidays. The Zodiac Killer had not stuck to one certain pattern he changed and perfected his modus operandi, obviously showing that killing was a sport for him. According to Pagaling-Hagan, by signing his last letter as “a citizen”, Zodiac essentially re-joined society, satisfied with his accomplishments. While making the 2007 blockbuster “Zodiac”, producers consulted with criminal profiler Sharon Pagaling-Hagan, who believed that building the Zodiac persona was more important to the killer than the murders.


The authors concluded that the Zodiac may have suffered from multiple personality disorder. Kelleher and psychologist David Van Nuys offered new insights about the Zodiac in their book “This Is the Zodiac Speaking: Into the Mind of a Serial Killer”. On October 21, 1969, the San Francisco Examiner featured an article “Zodiac’s Graph: Impotent, Shrewd and Paranoid”, in which, based on thirty-five years of experience in handwriting analysis, Baker portrayed the Zodiac as unquestionably paranoid and schizophrenic person. His suicide, if committed, would have been a final expression of what his homicides meant to him.Īnother psychological assessment has been offered by William F. As Freedman said, Zodiac’s behavior indicated that he was most likely insane and suicidal. Freedman, chairman of the Institute of Social and Behavioral Pathology at the University of Chicago, concluded that the Zodiac Killer led a terror-dominated life, insisting on his power due to feeling powerless. (Susan Ehmer/AP)īased on Zodiac’s taunting letters sent to police and newspapers, Dr. The Zodiac killer is blamed for at least five murders in 19 in the San Francisco Bay Area. In this photo from March 29, 1974, San Francisco homicide inspectors David Toschi, left, and William Armstrong go through a murder victim’s clothes at the morgue in the Hall of Justice in San Francisco.
