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May

May produced an unusually wide cross-section of historical notoriety — revolutionaries, autocrats, ideologues, criminals, and cult leaders spanning five centuries and every inhabited continent. The range of categories represented here is striking: architects of state terror sit alongside serial killers, mafia figures alongside assassins, war criminals alongside pirates and poisoners. Some of these individuals reshaped the political landscape of their eras; others operated in obscurity until a single act or a pattern of violence brought them to public attention. What the month's roster shares is not a common motive or method but a density of consequence — lives that ended, altered, or damaged many others.

Among the most historically significant figures born this month are Maximilien Robespierre, the lawyer who became the central engine of the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution; Pol Pot, whose agrarian ideology drove the deaths of an estimated two million Cambodians between 1975 and 1979; and Nikolai Yezhov, who administered the Soviet Great Purge at its most lethal peak as head of the NKVD. At a different scale, John Wilkes Booth — born May 5, 1838 — carried out the first successful assassination of a sitting American president. Jeffrey Dahmer, Jim Jones, and Peter Kürten represent distinct chapters in the criminal record, each acquiring a kind of grim canonical status in their respective countries and eras. Taken together, the figures cataloged here illustrate how radically different the pathways to historical infamy can be.

May 15, 1928 - Saizo Kishimoto

His career traces the internal architecture of the Yamaguchi-gumi across its most expansive decades — a progression through successive leadership structures that placed him among the organization's central decision-makers. Rising from a postwar municipal job to the rank of sō-honbuchō, he spent roughly four decades navigating the shifting hierarchies of Japan's largest organized crime syndicate as it consolidated power nationwide.

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May 15, 1954 - Enrico De Pedis

A leading figure in one of Rome's most powerful postwar criminal networks, De Pedis operated at the intersection of organized crime, political violence, and Vatican-adjacent intrigue. His organization, the Banda della Magliana, cultivated ties that reached well beyond street-level crime — into Italy's intelligence services, the far right, and, by some accounts, the financial scandals surrounding the Holy See. The unresolved disappearance of teenager Emanuela Orlandi in 1983, and the decades of suspicion connecting it to De Pedis, ensured that his name remained in circulation long after his death.

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May 15, 1934 - Campo Elías Delgado

A Vietnam War veteran who turned the methodical discipline of military training toward mass violence, Delgado moved through three locations over seven hours with deliberate precision — beginning with his own household and ending in a crowded restaurant. The scale of the attack, 29 dead in a single evening, remains without parallel in Colombian history as the work of a single gunman. What distinguishes the case is less the brutality than the planning: the staged fire alarm, the sequencing of targets, the prolonged duration before police intervention.

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May 16, 2004 - Salvador Ramos

The Uvalde school shooting stands among the deadliest attacks on an American school in recorded history, distinguished not only by the scale of the violence but by the extended window in which it unfolded — 77 minutes during which law enforcement remained in the hallways while the shooting continued inside a single classroom. The institutional failure that followed the act itself drew federal and state investigations and became a secondary crisis in its own right, raising lasting questions about command, protocol, and accountability.

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May 16, 1968 - Cuauhtémoc Gutiérrez de la Torre

His tenure as president of the PRI in Mexico City ended abruptly when evidence emerged that he had organized a prostitution ring operating out of the party's offices, using public funds to pay women recruited through intermediaries for his personal use. A labor court settlement with three women dismissed for refusing his sexual demands provided documented confirmation of at least part of the conduct. The case languished for years due to what prosecutors would later characterize as grave omissions by earlier investigators, and was only reopened in 2020.

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May 16, 1861 - H. H. Holmes

Operating in Chicago during the 1893 World's Fair, Holmes constructed a hotel specifically designed to trap and kill victims — a building fitted with gas lines, sealed rooms, and a basement crematorium. His case is notable for the industrial quality of the enterprise: the fraud, the manipulation of accomplices, and the systematic disposal of evidence. The precise number of his victims remains unknown, in part because his own confessions were contradictory and self-serving.

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May 17, 1965 - Richard Baumhammers

His attack unfolded across multiple Pittsburgh-area communities in a single afternoon, targeting victims selected by race and religion. What the record shows is a long arc of documented psychiatric deterioration running alongside an increasingly organized ideological fixation — neither wholly separable from the other. The combination, and the failure of any intervention to interrupt it, is what makes his case instructive for understanding how violence of this kind moves from obsession to act.

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May 17, 1955 - Pasquale Galasso

A senior figure within the Camorra's Galasso clan, he operated at a level of the Neapolitan underworld where violence and political corruption intersected — before his 1992 decision to turn state's witness reshaped the terms of what prosecutors could pursue. His collaboration produced testimony that reached beyond organized crime's internal hierarchies and implicated figures in Italy's broader political establishment. Few pentiti of his era carried comparable weight in the cases that followed.

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May 17, 1956 - Terry D. Clark

The case drew significant attention not only for the brutal killing of a child but for Clark's place in New Mexico's modern penal history — his execution in 2001 was the first carried out by the state in over four decades. His crime involved the abduction and murder of nine-year-old Dena Lynn Gore, and the case moved through the courts over a period of years before the sentence was finally carried out.

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May 17, 1900 - Herberts Cukurs

Before the war, Cukurs had been a celebrated aviator — a national hero in Latvia — which makes his wartime role all the more striking as a case study in how prewar reputation offered no insulation against collaboration. As deputy commander of the Arajs Kommando, he was directly implicated in the mass killings of Latvian Jews, atrocities carried out not by an occupying army but by locally recruited perpetrators operating under German direction. He lived openly in Brazil for years before being identified by a survivor, and was ultimately tracked and killed by Mossad operatives in 1965 — one of the rare instances in which a Holocaust collaborator, rather than a senior Nazi official, became the target of a covert assassination.

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May 17, 1980 - David Lefèvre

His trajectory followed a pattern familiar in cold case files — repeated incarceration, repeated release, escalating offenses — until it culminated in two killings near the marshes that gave him his epithet. What distinguishes Lefèvre's case is less the scale than the context: the victims were people he knew, the crimes occurred years apart, and the criminal record that preceded them offered little indication of what was coming.

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May 17, 1959 - Sergey Shipilov

His nickname — drawn from the most notorious Soviet serial killer — reflects both the nature of his crimes and the regional alarm they caused over years of violence in a small northern town. Operating largely within the tight geography of Velsk, he was convicted of fourteen murders and nine rapes, a toll that placed him among the more prolific offenders in post-Soviet Russian criminal history.

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May 17, 1682 - Bartholomew Roberts

In the roughly three years he operated before his death in battle, Roberts amassed a record of captured vessels that no other pirate of his era could match — a measure of both his tactical aggression and his ability to hold together a crew across the Atlantic and Caribbean. His career unfolded during a period when colonial trade routes were at their most vulnerable, and he exploited that vulnerability with unusual consistency and range.

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May 17, 1931 - Marshall Applewhite

Applewhite built a following over two decades by positioning himself as a divine messenger tasked with guiding believers to a higher existence — a framework that ultimately led 39 people, himself included, to take their own lives in a coordinated act in 1997. What distinguishes his case is the gradual, methodical nature of the belief system he constructed alongside Bonnie Nettles, which drew on Christianity, science fiction, and UFO mythology to create a cosmology that made death appear as transformation. The Heaven's Gate mass suicide remains one of the most studied examples of how charismatic authority, isolation, and doctrinal totalism can converge with fatal consequences.

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May 18, 1927 - Harvey Carignan

His criminal history stretched across decades, beginning with a conviction for rape and murder while serving in the military — a sentence he ultimately escaped before reoffending. What makes Carignan a recurring subject in forensic and criminal history literature is less the final tally of confirmed victims than the pattern: a long institutional record that failed, at multiple points, to interrupt his capacity for violence.

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May 18, 1946 - William Richard Bradford

Bradford's case carries an unsettling dimension beyond his two confirmed murders: the discovery of photographs depicting 54 unidentified women, released by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department in 2006, raised the possibility that his victims numbered far higher than the record reflects. He used the pretense of photography to gain access to women, a methodical approach that investigators believe may have concealed a much longer history of violence. The full scope of his crimes has never been established.

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May 18, 1979 - Yegor Khabarov

Operating in Yekaterinburg during the late 2000s, Khabarov became known for a distinctly methodical form of killing that earned him his alias — the use of electrocution as a murder weapon. Convicted in connection with at least two deaths but suspected in seven, his case attracted lasting scrutiny less for the crimes themselves than for what followed: a verdict of insanity, a psychiatric internment of only twelve years, and persistent allegations that his release was secured through bribery enabled by his family's wealth.

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May 18, 1938 - Ian Brady

Brady and his accomplice Myra Hindley carried out a series of child murders in northern England across two and a half years, crimes that became known as the Moors murders and permanently altered public understanding of how such offenses could be committed in partnership. The victims ranged in age from ten to seventeen, and the cases left lasting scars — not least because the location of Keith Bennett's remains was never conclusively established despite Brady's later involvement in search efforts. Brady died in 2017 still subject to a whole life order, having never fully cooperated with authorities in a way that brought closure to all the families concerned.

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May 19, 1938 - Anthony Spilotro

His assignment in Las Vegas was ostensibly managerial — overseeing the flow of skimmed casino profits back to Chicago — but he became known for conducting a parallel operation of robbery, extortion, and violence that eventually embarrassed the very organization that had sent him. The combination of financial misconduct and uncontrolled brutality made him a liability to the Outfit, which resolved the problem in its customary manner. His career has since become one of the more thoroughly documented windows into how organized crime functioned inside the legitimate casino industry during that era.

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May 19, 1955 - Francisca Cortés Picazo

As the matriarch of a family-based drug operation, she built and sustained a heroin and cocaine distribution network centered in Son Banya, a Romani neighborhood in Majorca, for years before her arrest. The clan structure she led made the organization both resilient and deeply embedded in the community. Operation Kabul, which resulted in her arrest alongside nineteen others in 2008, reflected the scale of coordinated effort required to dismantle it.

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May 19, 1974 - Nikolay Soltys

The murders Soltys carried out in August 2001 targeted members of his own family across the Sacramento area, making his case notable for both its intimate brutality and the extended manhunt that followed. He fled the United States after the killings, triggering federal charges for unlawful flight before ultimately being apprehended. "Nikolay Alekseyevich Soltys (May 19, 1974 – February 13, 2002) was a Ukrainian fugitive charged by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California in a Federal Bureau of Investigation arrest warrant. The federal charges were for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution and there were California arrest warrants for six murders of his family members in and around the Sacramento area in August 2001."

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May 19, 1910 - Nathuram Godse

The assassination of Mahatma Gandhi on January 30, 1948, stands as one of the most consequential political killings of the twentieth century, and Godse carried it out at close range during a prayer meeting — an act of violence against a figure internationally synonymous with nonviolence. His motivation was rooted in Hindutva ideology, and he framed the killing as a political act against what he saw as Gandhi's accommodation of Muslim interests during Partition. The act did not go unwitnessed or unchallenged: an American diplomat in the crowd physically restrained him before police arrived.

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May 19, 1946 - Sérgio Paranhos Fleury

As chief of DOPS during Brazil's military dictatorship, Fleury became one of the most feared figures in the country's apparatus of political repression — overseeing interrogations, disappearances, and extrajudicial killings targeting dissidents and leftists. His effectiveness lay in operating at the intersection of state authority and sanctioned lawlessness, where institutional cover made accountability nearly impossible. The scale of harm attributed to him and the unit he led left a long shadow over Brazil's reckoning with that era.

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May 19, 1870 - Albert Fish

Fish operated for years without detection, preying on children across multiple states during the 1920s and early 1930s — a period when law enforcement had few tools to track crimes across jurisdictions. What made his case particularly unsettling to investigators and the public alike was the combination of prolonged activity, the vulnerability of his victims, and the nature of the offenses, which extended beyond killing. He was ultimately caught not through investigative breakthrough but through his own correspondence — a letter he sent to a victim's family years after the crime.

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May 19, 1925 - Pol Pot

As leader of the Khmer Rouge, he oversaw a radical agrarian revolution that emptied Cambodia's cities by force, abolished currency and formal education, and subjected the population to mass executions, forced labor, and famine. In under four years, an estimated 1.5 to 2 million people — a quarter of Cambodia's population — perished under his government's policies. What distinguishes his rule historically is the ideological totality of the project: the systematic dismantling of an entire society in pursuit of a agrarian utopia designated "Year Zero."

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May 20, 2000 - Anderson Lee Aldrich

The attack on Club Q in Colorado Springs lasted only minutes before patrons subdued the gunman, but it left five dead and dozens injured in one of the deadliest anti-LGBTQ violent incidents in recent American history. The shooting drew national attention both for its targeting of a community space and for the legal proceedings that followed, including questions around the perpetrator's prior criminal record and how firearms were obtained. The case became a reference point in ongoing debates about hate crime legislation, gun access, and the safety of LGBTQ gathering spaces.

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May 20, 1930 - Yiya Murano

Operating within her own social circle in Buenos Aires, Murano used poisoned cream puffs to kill acquaintances whose life insurance policies she had forged in her favor — a method that combined domestic familiarity with calculated financial fraud. The crimes went undetected long enough for a pattern to establish itself, and her case became one of Argentina's more closely studied examples of intimate-circle serial killing. She served sixteen years before her age and condition moved her sentence to a care facility.

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May 20, 1937 - Lakireddy Bali Reddy

His wealth and standing in Berkeley — built through real estate and visible community philanthropy — served as effective cover for a pattern of exploitation that relied on caste hierarchies and immigration vulnerability to traffic women and girls from India for sexual purposes. The investigation that eventually exposed him involved five separate federal and local agencies, reflecting both the scope of the crimes and the difficulty of penetrating the social respectability he had cultivated over decades.

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May 20, 1902 - Émile Buisson

A career criminal whose trajectory moved steadily from petty theft toward organized violence, Buisson rose through the Parisian underworld to become France's most wanted man at mid-century. His designation as public enemy No. 1 reflected not a single act but a sustained pattern of crime and murder spanning decades.

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May 21, 1954 - Francisco García Escalero

Operating over seven years in Madrid, Escalero targeted some of society's most vulnerable people — sex workers and homeless individuals whose disappearances drew little immediate attention. His crimes involved extreme mutilation, necrophilia, and cannibalism, placing him among the most disturbing cases in modern Spanish criminal history. Diagnosed with schizophrenia and never standing trial in the conventional sense, he was ultimately committed to psychiatric care rather than imprisoned, a legal outcome that drew significant public attention to questions of criminal responsibility and mental illness in Spain.

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May 21, 1910 - Angelo Bruno

His two-decade tenure as boss of the Philadelphia crime family was defined less by brutality than by a calculated preference for negotiation and stability — qualities that distinguished him sharply from the men who followed him. The chaos and bloodshed that erupted after his 1980 assassination offered a retrospective measure of just how much order his particular style of leadership had imposed on an inherently volatile organization.

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May 21, 1939 - Roger Kibbe

Operating along California's interstate corridor in the late 1980s, Kibbe preyed on vulnerable women he encountered on or near freeways, a pattern that gave investigators both a geographic thread to follow and a reflection of how transient infrastructure could be exploited. His method of victim selection — targeting those stranded or traveling alone on major highways — made the case a notable study in the intersection of opportunistic violence and suburban geography. He was convicted of multiple murders and died in prison.

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May 21, 1941 - Giuseppe Giacomo Gambino

A senior figure within the Corleonesi faction during one of the Sicilian Mafia's most violent periods, he operated as a trusted deputy to Totò Riina through the internal purges of the Second Mafia War and into the targeted killings that defined the early 1990s. His involvement extended to the assassinations of anti-Mafia magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino — among the most consequential political killings in postwar Italian history — as well as the murder of businessman Libero Grassi, who had publicly refused to pay extortion. The breadth of those targets, from judiciary to civic life, reflects the scope of Corleonesi strategy during his tenure.

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May 21, 1930 - Richard Snell

Snell's two killings in Arkansas were driven by explicit racial and antisemitic targeting — one victim murdered under the false belief that he was Jewish, the other killed because of his race. His case intersects with a broader network of violent white supremacist activity in 1980s America, and his execution date — April 19, 1995 — coincided with the Oklahoma City bombing, a connection that later drew scrutiny given his ties to extremist circles.

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May 21, 1937 - Mengistu Haile Mariam

His tenure over Ethiopia was defined by a convergence of ideological ruthlessness and political survival instinct — purging rivals within the Derg, then turning state violence outward against the civilian population during the Red Terror campaign of 1977–1978. The estimated death toll from that period alone ranges from 30,000 to 750,000, a span that itself reflects how systematically records were obscured. He remained in power for nearly fourteen years, during which famine, internal insurgency, and military conflict compounded the human cost of his governance.

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May 21, 1960 - Jeffrey Dahmer

Over thirteen years, Dahmer carried out a series of crimes that combined sexual violence, murder, and the deliberate destruction and preservation of his victims' remains — a combination that set his case apart from most serial killer investigations and made it one of the more extensively documented in American criminal history. His ability to evade detection for so long, including several encounters with law enforcement that did not result in his arrest, drew significant scrutiny to police failures during and after the investigation. His case has since been examined widely in criminology, psychology, and popular media.

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May 22, 1955 - Lam Kor-wan

Working as a night-shift taxi driver, he used his occupation to isolate victims in the hours before dawn, targeting women traveling alone after late shifts or social engagements. The case drew particular attention from investigators and the public because of the methodical documentation he created — photographs and self-recorded video — and the preserved remains discovered at his home, which gave rise to the English press designation "The Jars Murderer." He killed four women in Hong Kong across 1982 before his arrest, and the evidence recovered from his residence shaped how the case was understood and prosecuted.

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May 22, 1951 - Kenneth Bianchi

Operating alongside his cousin Angelo Buono Jr., Bianchi was part of a killing partnership that preyed on women and girls across the Los Angeles hillsides in the late 1970s, a case that drew sustained national attention. His conduct after arrest — including an attempt to feign multiple personality disorder to avoid conviction — became nearly as studied as the crimes themselves, offering investigators and psychologists an early case study in calculated criminal deception.

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May 22, 1930 - Daniel Camargo Barbosa

Operating across two countries over roughly two decades, Camargo Barbosa targeted young girls with a methodical persistence that allowed him to evade capture for years. His confirmed victim count places him among the most prolific killers documented in Latin American criminal history. He was ultimately killed in prison by a relative of one of his victims.

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May 23, 1950 - Richard Chase

Over the span of roughly a month in the Sacramento winter of 1977–78, Chase carried out a series of killings defined less by victim selection — there was none — than by what followed death. His crimes were driven by a delusional belief system that shaped the nature of each attack, and investigators who worked the cases described the scenes as among the most disturbing they had encountered in long careers. The legal proceedings ultimately affirmed that he understood the nature of his actions, a determination that complicated the popular narrative around his mental state. He remains a subject of study in forensic psychology for what his case revealed about the relationship between untreated psychosis, institutional failure, and violence.

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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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May 26, 1954 - Danny Rolling

Rolling's August 1990 attacks unfolded across a single weekend in a college town, targeting students at the start of a new academic year — a combination of timing, setting, and method that produced an atmosphere of acute public fear across Florida. The Gainesville murders were preceded by an earlier triple homicide in Louisiana and an attack on his own father, establishing a pattern of escalating violence that predated his more widely known crimes. He was executed in 2006, twelve years after his sentencing.

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May 26, 1886 - Giuseppe Sasia

Operating in rural Provence over a brief but lethal span, Sasia targeted shepherds and isolated laborers — men unlikely to be quickly missed — killing at least four in the Draguignan region for what amounted to petty theft. The choice of victims and setting reflected a calculated opportunism rather than frenzy, which is part of what made the case notable in interwar France. He was tried and guillotined within two years of the killings.

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May 26, 1904 - Vincent Alo

His longevity in organized crime — spanning Prohibition speakeasies through Cold War–era Cuban casinos — made him one of the more durable figures in twentieth-century American mob history. What distinguished Alo was less overt violence than institutional patience: the systematic cultivation of political and law enforcement relationships that allowed his Florida gambling operations to run for nearly two decades without meaningful opposition. Federal prosecutors eventually ranked him among the most significant organized crime figures in the country, a designation that reflected the breadth of his financial reach rather than any single dramatic act.

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May 26, 1789 - Isaac Franklin

Franklin built what was likely the largest slave trading enterprise in antebellum America, systematically scaling the domestic trade through coastwise shipping, aggressive credit arrangements, and the absorption or elimination of competitors. His operation moved enslaved people from the Upper South to the labor-hungry markets of the Deep South in volumes that reflected a deliberate corporate logic rather than incidental commerce. The wealth he accumulated placed him among the planter elite, and the infrastructure his firm developed helped entrench the internal slave trade as an economic institution in its own right.

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