Has evidence been found that the Zodiac Killer was on the Stanford University campus in 1969 and 1971 ? Or is it just "One F of a Coincidence?" Are there reasonable explanations for discoveries in issues of the Stanford Daily and Stanford Chaparral? Or is the entire Zodiac case about to be upended? Could these revelations shed light on the remaining cold case murders at Stanford, and change our conceptions of other cases and mysterious deaths of that era? And will a single out-of-character moment of anger 30 years ago be the one mistake that leads to solving the Zodiac case? These are questions asked by author James Bigtwin in his book The Only Time Richard Got Angry At Me, an account of his multi-year odyssey that began when he learned his past acquaintance, Richard Gaikowski, had been accused of being the Zodiac Killer. Even though his memories gave him pause, he initially believed he had nothing to add that could help solve the cold case. But years later, while researching for the 125th anniversary of the Chaparral, Zodiac research found him. A crazy hunch led to an incredible discovery--with the Missing Link, secretly hidden in the pages of the Chappie anniversary book! The Only Time Richard Got Angry At Me is a firsthand account of the goings-on at Stanford, of pranking, raving, and the counterculture, art and computer scenes from the 1960s to the 80s, 90s and today. Ronald Reagan. Joan Quigley. Hippie protestors. Nineties ravers. And a secret society with a deathly name. This book guarantees one Bay Area cold case solved, the 1986 disappearance of UC Berkeley's stuffed bear, and may solve more. Is it all just a coincidence? Or is it indeed the key that finally cracks the case of the greatest murder mystery of the 20th Century, The Zodiac.
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