In the late 1960s a serial killer quickly and
clumsily killed his victims as an ante in a game he was
developing. It was Murder and Seek.  He named himself
The ZODIAC,  the master controller. He was both the
hunter and he made himself the hunted. His costumes
ranged from the bland and obsolete to bizarre theatricality. Sadly, he was successful in his game. To this day nobody knows his identity. Over 40 years later, only  amateur sleuths and private detectives hound his trail.
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 The purpose of Q Files Zodiac section is to take advantage of the web’s ability to be a billboard. The crimes scenes are carefully presented and the crimes recreated. The purpose is not to solve but to dispel decades of extraneous and erroneous speculation and to restore the actual facts and circumstances.

     For the result of the author’s own investigation into the Zodiac’s identity, please consult HorrorScope

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Q Files is not spontaneous extemporanea.
 It contains the results of 33 years of the author’s
   personal investigations of the unexplained.

About

More About

Why Q Files?

Year of the Zodiac:

 Lake Herman Rd. 12-20-1968

 Blue Rock Springs 7-4-1969

 The Zodiac Speaks

 Lake Berryessa 9-27-1969

 San Francisco  10-11-1969

Gamester of Death:

 Poison Pen Pal

 The Kathleen Johns Incident

 Cheri Jo Bates

 Zodiac & The “Nightingale Murders”

On the Track of The Zodiac:

 Gaviota Revisited

 Gaviota Crime Scene Investigated

 Cracking the 340 Cipher

 Blue Rock Springs Reconstructed

 Blue Rock Springs: Silencer or Not?

 Benicia: Where the Cross Hairs Meet

 From Folklore to Fact: cases in detail

 The Zodiac Speaks: A Pattern

 Zodiac: profile

The Zodiac and Ray Davis

The Zodiac & San Diego

My Suspect:

 Steve

Flight 19

EAR/ONS

The Witchcraft

Zodiac

Carolyn Coscio

“Gian has a real talent for finding the facts in our folklore. If you’re interested in the truth, his books are a must read.”
                                     —            Matt Jolley                 Edward R. Murrow Award for Journalism.

 “You have opened my eyes for the first really serious look at The Bermuda Triangle. I think that your book is, as you say the first of its kind in 25 years, and I think the best.

                                                           — Whitley Strieber.

  “The danger of Gian J. Quasar’s fascination with mysteries often assigned to ‘paranormal causes’ is that readers will assume his writing is tainted with secret advocacy and bias— like the majority of hacks who litter this field. Readers, rest easy. Quasar is a superb writer and researcher, and stands alone at the top of this unusual field. Through Quasar, the genre is elevated (finally!) to equal, even exceeds, the highest standards of investigative journalism, and he has the rare ability to distill complex data into lucid declarative sentences— I can give no higher praise.

— Randy Wayne Wright
 New York Times bestseller “Doc Ford” series.

“We wondered about the author’s name, Quasar, which in normal parlance means any of a class of celestial objects that resemble stars but whose large red shift and apparent brightness imply extreme distance and huge energy output, and if it might relate to the book and we weren’t disappointed.”

—New Yachting Magazine. 

“During a recent trip to New Mexico, I finally tackled Quasar's book and found it to be the best book I've ever read on this important subject. Quasar is a serious-minded researcher who, rather than sensationalizing or speculating in an irresponsible manner, reports the cold, hard facts.

— Andrew Griffin, the Town Talk, New Orleans.

“He’s bloody eccentric, an historian with no qualifications who sticks his nose into affairs and gets results.”

— an unnamed and undisclosed British TV producer.

 

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