Skip to main content

11

Two figures from the late twentieth century share this date, each representing a distinct strain of criminal history. Eduardo Arellano Félix was a senior member of the Arellano Félix Organization, the Tijuana Cartel, one of Mexico's most powerful and violent drug trafficking dynasties — a family enterprise that shaped the brutal narco wars of the 1980s and 1990s. Craig Price committed a series of murders in Warwick, Rhode Island while still in early adolescence, making him one of the youngest serial killers in American criminal record. The two figures operated in vastly different contexts — one within an institutional criminal network spanning borders, the other in isolated, deeply personal violence — yet both left consequences that extended well beyond themselves.

October 11, 1956 - Eduardo Arellano Félix

The Tijuana Cartel operated for over a decade as one of Mexico's most entrenched trafficking organizations, moving thousands of tons of narcotics across the U.S. border while sustaining its position through widespread violence. Eduardo Arellano Félix rose through a family hierarchy defined by specialization — as brothers fell to arrest or death, he consolidated operational control alongside his sister Enedina. Authorities on both sides of the border regarded him as among the more calculating figures within an organization known for its brutality.

Read more …October 11, 1956 - Eduardo Arellano Félix

  • Last updated on .

October 11, 1974 - Craig Price

What made this case historically significant was less the crimes themselves than the legal void they exposed: a juvenile system that, by its own design, had no mechanism to account for the scale of what had occurred. Having committed four murders before his sixteenth birthday, Price faced a mandatory release at twenty-one regardless of the findings of state psychologists, who assessed him as unlikely to be rehabilitated. His own reported boast about what he would do upon release galvanized public opposition and prompted Rhode Island to reform its laws on juvenile prosecution — though those reforms came too late to apply to him.

Read more …October 11, 1974 - Craig Price

  • Last updated on .