San Francisco police are doubling the reward money being offered to solve one of the city's most infamous cold cases that involved the killings of gay men.
It was announced January 27 that $200,000 is being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the "Doodler," who is suspected of killing six gay men in San Francisco between January 1974 and September 1975.
Only five deaths had been attributed to the Doodler until Thursday, when it was announced that "as a result of a new investigation," it is now believed that the serial killer is implicated in the death of Warren Andrews, a 52-year-old lawyer.
Andrews was found unconscious after an assault at Lands End on April 27, 1975. He never regained consciousness and died several weeks later.