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11

The figures born on this date span four centuries and several continents, united less by ideology than by patterns of predation and criminality. Two are serial killers operating in very different eras and contexts: George Joseph Smith, the English bigamist who drowned three wives in what became known as the Brides in the Bath murders, and Péter Kovács, the Hungarian killer whose attacks near Martfű went undetected for years partly due to the constraints of Cold War-era investigation. Alongside them stands a Pakistani crime lord whose operations shaped organized violence in Karachi, and, reaching back to the sixteenth century, a privateer-turned-pirate whose defection to the Barbary corsairs made him a figure of both notoriety and, to some, unlikely legend.

January 11, 1872 - George Joseph Smith

His method was patient and systematic: court a vulnerable woman, marry her under a false name, insure her life, and drown her in a bathtub staged to look like an accident. Smith carried out this scheme at least three times across several years, and it was the pattern itself — identified by a meticulous police inquiry comparing identical circumstances across separate cases — that ultimately brought him to trial and the gallows.

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January 11, 1979 - Uzair Baloch

What began as a personal vendetta over a father's murder evolved into something far larger: control over Lyari, one of Karachi's most volatile urban territories, through extortion, targeted killings of police officers, and gang warfare that claimed casualties in the hundreds. His rise followed a well-documented pattern of political protection, cross-border movement, and institutional failure — arrested and released, wanted and sheltered, for over a decade before a military tribunal finally secured a conviction.

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January 11, 1934 - Péter Kovács

Kovács operated across a rural stretch of Hungary for a decade before investigators connected his crimes — during which time an innocent man, János Kirják, had already been convicted and imprisoned for the first murder. What makes the case historically significant is not only the killings themselves but the institutional failure that preceded the eventual arrest: a flawed early investigation, a coerced confession, and the structural assumptions about family respectability that repeatedly cleared Kovács during subsequent inquiries. His case became a study in how the appearance of ordinary life can shield ongoing violence from scrutiny.

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January 11, 1553 - Jack Ward

Ward's career traced an arc from small-time English privateer to one of the most effective Barbary corsairs of his era, eventually converting to Islam and operating under Ottoman authority from Tunis. His raids on European shipping drew significant diplomatic alarm, and his apparent willingness to train local crews in advanced sailing and gunnery made him a genuinely destabilizing force in Mediterranean commerce.

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