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Cold case team says it's ID'd Zodiac Killer

Case Breakers calls for police to conduct a DNA test to verify their findings; Fox News' Eric Shawn has the details.

A team of specialists who investigate cold cases and claims to have identified the Zodiac Killer earlier this year released a statement that a trove of evidence has been discovered linked to the deceased suspect, Gary Francis Poste.

"When The Case Breakers approached officials about a new Zodiac suspect last spring, five police and state agencies would not cooperate," the specialists said in a statement Saturday. "But last week, the man who runs the 10-year cold case team, Thomas J. Colbert, received a tip from his long-time sources in the remote town of deceased Gary Francis Poste: They had verified the existence of an evidentiary goldmine."

San Francisco police circulated this composite of the Bay Area's "Zodiac" killer. The FBI said the case remains open after an independent group said it has identified the killer. (Getty Images)

The group says that prior to his death, Poste had given away weapons and bullets that could provide key evidence in the case.

"Old associates of the housepainter/alleged serial killer claim that, a few years prior to Poste’s 2018 death at 80, he had quietly given away his weapons, pistol parts, gunpowder, bullets and shell casings – more than a thousand, involving 25 different calibers – to his favorite locals," The Case Breakers said. "And most of these peculiar ‘gifts’ have remained in basements and closets, untouched, ever since."

Cheri Jo Bates. A group of cold case investigators claim the Bates murder is linked to the Zodiac Killer deaths. (Riverside Police Department)

The Case Breakers added that it took Thomas J. Colbert, the head of the cold case team investigating the killings, "several hours to cautiously box up the historic haul and forward it to the team members, standing by at private forensic labs in three states."

In October, The Case Breakers announced they identified Poste, who passed away in 2018, as the Zodiac Killer believed responsible for at least five murders that occurred in 1968 and 1969 in the San Francisco area. Unlike most serial killers, the Zodiac taunted authorities with complex ciphers in letters sent to newspapers and law enforcement. The slayings have spawned books, movies and documentaries in the years since, and amateur and professional sleuths have pored over the case in an effort to unmask the killer.

Across years of digging, the team uncovered new forensic evidence and photos from Poste's darkroom. One image features scars on the forehead of Poste that match scars on a sketch of the Zodiac, the team said.

Zodiac Killer victims David Faraday and Darlene Ferrin. The killer terrorized California, and the nation, in the late 1960s and early '70s. (Getty)

The day after the Case Breakers revealed the information, the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced that the case is still open.

"The FBI's investigation into the Zodiac Killer remains open and unsolved," the FBI told Fox News. "Due to the ongoing nature of the investigation, and out of respect for the victims and their families, we will not be providing further comment at this time."

Fox News’ Louis Casisano contributed to this report