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24

The figures born on this date span more than seven decades of the twentieth century and emerge from markedly different worlds — Chicago street gangs, Scandinavian infanticide, Soviet-era predation, organized crime, and serial murder in Germany and the American Midwest. Hilda Nilsson, a Swedish "baby farmer" convicted of killing infants in her care in the early 1900s, and David Barksdale, the Chicago gang leader who shaped the Black Disciples into a structured criminal organization before his death at twenty-seven, represent the range in both era and context. Lorenzo Gilyard, convicted of strangling twelve women in Kansas City over nearly two decades, stands among the more prolific American serial killers of the late twentieth century. What unites these figures is not method or motive but the simple fact of the date — a cross-section of the ways violence and criminality have taken shape across time and place.

May 24, 1950 - Thomas DeSimone

A career criminal operating within the orbit of the Lucchese family, DeSimone is remembered as much for his volatility as for his role in some of the most significant heists in organized crime history. His alleged participation in the Lufthansa heist of 1978 — one of the largest cash robberies ever carried out on American soil — placed him at the center of a story that would outlast him. The attributed killings spanning nearly a decade reflect a pattern of impulsive violence that eventually made him a liability to those around him, and he disappeared in 1979, widely believed to have been killed by the mob. His life became the primary basis for the character of Tommy DeVito in Goodfellas, ensuring his notoriety extended well beyond the criminal record itself.

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May 24, 1950 - Lorenzo Gilyard

Gilyard operated in Kansas City over a period of roughly two decades, targeting vulnerable women — many of them sex workers — whose deaths went uninvestigated for years. His case illustrates how the demographic profile of victims can delay or derail law enforcement attention, allowing a pattern of killings to continue long past early opportunities for intervention. DNA evidence eventually connected him to twelve murders, and he was convicted in 2007.

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May 24, 1953 - Alexander Komin

The date provided does not match the Wikipedia source, which gives his birth date as July 15, 1953, not May 24 — worth flagging before publication. Setting that aside, Komin's case stands out for the calculated, infrastructural nature of his crimes: the construction of an underground bunker beneath his garage points to deliberate, sustained planning rather than impulsive violence. Over a two-year period in mid-1990s Russia, he held multiple people in captivity simultaneously, placing him among a narrow category of offenders whose crimes involved prolonged domination and deprivation rather than a single act.

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May 24, 1969 - Frank Gust

His crimes in the Rhine-Ruhr region during the 1990s reflected a pattern of escalating violence that investigators traced back to compulsive behavior documented since childhood. The media comparison to Jack the Ripper points less to copycat motivation than to the nature of the attacks themselves and the forensic profile they produced. Over four years, four women were killed — a span during which the case accumulated enough evidence to eventually bring charges, and enough detail to mark Gust as one of the more thoroughly documented sexual sadists in modern German criminal history.

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May 24, 1947 - David Barksdale

His legacy on this site rests not on a single act but on an institutional one: the founding of a street organization that would shape gang dynamics in Chicago for decades, contributing to cycles of violence that outlasted him by generations. Barksdale operated at the intersection of street power and community organizing, a combination that made the Black Disciples both durable and expansive. He died at 27, but the structure he built continued to define and endanger lives long after.

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May 24, 1876 - Hilda Nilsson

Operating in early twentieth-century Sweden, she took in infants — a practice known as baby farming — and killed at least eight children in her care, earning a grim local epithet that masked the scale of what she had done. Her case sits at the intersection of poverty, inadequate child welfare oversight, and the informal economies that left vulnerable infants without legal protection. The sentence handed down was death, though she died by her own hand before it could be carried out, leaving her as a singular footnote in Swedish legal history.

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