The Denver Post

Officials hope DNA can ID Zodiac Killer as it did in Golden State Killer case

- By Anita Chabria and Ryan Sabalow

SACRAMENTO, CALIF.» DNA sleuthing helped crack a decades-old cold case, leading to the arrest of a man suspected of being the East Area Rapist, also known as the Golden State Killer.

Now, could the same type of detective work on genealogy websites be used to catch another of California’s most infamous and elusive criminals — the Zodiac Killer?

“It is possible,” said Pam Hofsass, a former San Francisco homicide detective who worked on the Zodiac case and now runs the forensic lab for the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office. “It’s totally worth looking at, and I hope with all of the news and revelation­s about the Golden State Killer, that it will kind of be the impetus for the Zodiac.”

The Zodiac Killer roamed northern California from December 1968 through October 1969 but was never caught despite at least one close run-in with police. He is known to have attacked seven victims, killing five — in Benicia, Vallejo, Lake Berryessa and San Francisco.

However, the Zodiac Killer claimed responsibi­lity for many more deaths in letters, often signed with a symbol of a cross over a circle.

Like the East Area Rapist, the Zodiac Killer took on an almost mythologic­al presence in the psyche of California­ns, and the story of his killing spree has been told in multiple books and movies over the decades.

Hofsass said one of the biggest hurdles to using DNA to track the Zodiac Killer is getting a clean genetic sample. She said evidence-collection rules were much looser on crime scenes during the era when the Zodiac was active because DNA forensic science didn’t exist. Often, multiple people would handle evidence without gloves, adding their own genetic material to collected objects.

“Back in the day, that was the protocol,” Hofsass said. “It’s not a clean sample. That’s the problem.”

She gave an example of a blood-soaked glove she found when she first started working on the Zodiac case around 2009. It was stuffed inside an evidence envelope and seemingly forgotten.

“I opened up the coroner’s materials, and there was this envelope that said, ‘Black Bloody Glove,’ ” Hofsass said.

The blood on the outside of the glove was identified as that of the Zodiac’s last known victim, Paul Stine, a San Francisco cab driver shot in the head in the Presidio neighborho­od in 1969, Hofsass said. But the blood and other matter collected from inside the glove was too muddled to be of use — possibly containing traces from anyone who had handled it over the years.

“We got a mixture on the inside,” she said.

Tom Voight, a recreation­al Zodiac expert who runs zodiackill­er.com, said he believes a clean DNA sample could be taken from saliva that might be on envelopes mailed by the Zodiac.

The serial killer was a prolific communicat­or, sending letters, cards and mysterious cyphers to media outlets, law enforcemen­t and others, including former Sacramento Bee reporter Paul Avery while he worked at the San Francisco Chronicle.

“I think Zodiac was definitely licking his own stamps and envelopes,” Voight said. “You just need to get the evidence, get it to the lab. Just copy what was done with the Golden State Killer.”

Hofsass agreed that the envelopes could be useful.

“I think they are worth re-examining,” she said. “That would go for all of the (law enforcemen­t) agencies that received mail (and) taunting cards.”

In 2002, that approach was attempted when ABC’s “Primetime” asked a forensic expert from the San Francisco Police Department to compare a partial DNA sample authoritie­s had from the surface of a stamp of a Zodiac letter with the DNA profiles of three men who were rumored suspects. That DNA analysis eliminated all three as suspects because of significan­t difference­s with the sample. However, what was on the stamp provided only a partial genetic profile, and it wasn’t strong enough to identify the killer, Voight said.

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