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13

Two figures mark this date, separated by nearly three decades but united by acts of premeditated violence against strangers. James Holmes, whose 2012 attack on a Colorado movie theater killed twelve people and wounded dozens more, became a defining case in American debates over mass violence, mental illness, and the justice system. Yvan Keller, known in France as the Pillow Killer, operated in a quieter register — a serial killer whose crimes came to light only after years of concealment. Together they represent distinct but recurring patterns in the modern catalog of homicidal violence: the catastrophic public event and the hidden, methodical predator.

December 13, 1987 - James Holmes

The Aurora theater shooting stands as one of the deadliest mass casualty events in modern American history, carried out by a doctoral student with no prior criminal record against a crowd gathered for a midnight film premiere. Holmes wounded or killed 82 people in a matter of minutes, a scale of harm that shaped subsequent national debates about public safety, mental health, and the insanity defense. His trial — and the single juror's vote that kept him off death row — became a focal point for those questions.

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December 13, 1960 - Yvan Keller

Operating across three countries over nearly two decades, this French serial killer targeted victims with a consistency that allowed him to evade detection for years. The gap between confirmed killings and his own stated count — 23 documented versus roughly 150 claimed — reflects both the difficulty investigators faced in tracing his movements and the uncertainty that still surrounds the true scale of his crimes.

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