Skip to main content

4

The figures born on this date span centuries and continents, but share a common thread: each left a record defined by violence or the exercise of power in ways that proved catastrophic for those subject to it. King George III presided over the policies that alienated the American colonies and drove them to revolution, while also overseeing a reign marked by the suppression of Irish rebellion and prolonged war with France. At the other extreme of scale, Andrew Urdiales carried out a string of murders across two states over more than a decade before his convictions and subsequent execution. Christopher Dorner, a discharged LAPD officer, conducted a targeted killing campaign in 2013 that left four dead and paralyzed Southern California for nearly two weeks.

June 4, 1964 - Andrew Urdiales

A former U.S. Marine, Urdiales carried out killings across two states over more than a decade, operating in Illinois and California before separate convictions brought the full scope of his crimes into focus. The geographic spread of his actions and the length of time before he faced justice for all eight murders reflect the difficulties that long complicated multi-jurisdictional investigations into serial violence. He died by suicide at San Quentin in 2018 while awaiting execution.

Read more …June 4, 1964 - Andrew Urdiales

  • Last updated on .

June 4, 1979 - Christopher Dorner

His ten-day rampage in early 2013 targeted law enforcement personnel and their families across four Southern California counties, killing four people and wounding three others before ending in a standoff at a Big Bear cabin. Dorner framed the attacks as a response to his dismissal from the LAPD, which he claimed was retribution for reporting a colleague's use of excessive force — grievances he laid out in a lengthy manifesto published online. The case drew wide attention both for the scale of the police response and for the complicated public reaction to a shooter who had embedded his violence within a narrative of institutional wrongdoing.

Read more …June 4, 1979 - Christopher Dorner

  • Last updated on .

June 4, 1738 - King George III

His reign witnessed the American Revolution, the loss of the thirteen colonies, and the protracted wars of the Napoleonic era — making him a figure of significant historical controversy despite his longevity on the throne. To American colonists, his rule represented the embodiment of tyranny, a charge immortalized in the Declaration of Independence, which listed his governance as justification for separation. Whether as architect or symbol of imperial overreach, his name carries particular weight in the history of resistance to concentrated monarchical authority.

Read more …June 4, 1738 - King George III

  • Last updated on .