
About This Episode
On December 20, 1968, seventeen-year-old David Arthur Farraday and sixteen-year-old Betty Lou Jensen were shot and killed on Lake Herman Road in Vallejo, California. Their deaths marked the beginning of a reign of terror that would captivate America and define the Bay Area's darkest chapter.
Three months later, the killer struck again. On March 13, 1969, twenty-two-year-old Darlene Elizabeth Ferrin was murdered, and her companion Michael Mageau was shot and wounded. Mageau became one of only two known survivors of the Zodiac's attacks.
The pattern continued through the summer of 1969. In September, the killer targeted Cecelia Ann Shepard, twenty-two, and Bryan Hartnell at a lakeside location in unincorporated Napa County. Shepard was killed; Hartnell survived. The final confirmed victim was Paul Lee Stine, a twenty-nine-year-old taxi driver murdered in San Francisco in October 1969.
What set the Zodiac apart from other serial killers was his obsession with publicity. Rather than fade into anonymity, he actively communicated with authorities and the press. He phoned police to report his crimes and claim responsibility. Between 1969 and 1974, he sent a series of taunting letters to Bay Area newspapers, signing each message with a distinctive symbol—a circle bisected by a cross, resembling gun crosshairs. His signature phrase echoed throughout his correspondence: "this is the Zodiac speaking."
The killer's intellectual games extended beyond words. He enclosed four cryptograms with his letters, challenging the public to decode them. The Z408 cipher—a 408-symbol puzzle—was cracked in 1969, revealing a rambling message about killing people and collecting souls. The 340 Cipher, however, remained one of America's most famous unsolved codes for fifty-one years, until cryptographers finally decrypted it in 2020. Two additional cryptograms from the Zodiac remain to this day.