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Three figures born on this date represent distinct but overlapping registers of historical violence. Carl Clauberg, the German gynecologist who performed coercive sterilization experiments on Jewish and Romani women at Auschwitz, stands among the more documented perpetrators of Nazi medical crimes. Hiranuma Kiichirō, a nationalist jurist and prime minister, helped shape the ideological and institutional framework of wartime imperial Japan. At a different scale entirely, Thomas Bunday carried out a series of murders in the American South between 1979 and 1981 before dying by suicide in 1983, evading formal prosecution. The three share no connection — their crimes differ in scope, context, and kind — but together they illustrate how this date has drawn figures whose actions, across very different arenas, left lasting harm.

September 28, 1948 - Thomas Bunday

His military posting gave him both cover and mobility, allowing him to operate in an isolated northern city while remaining largely above suspicion for years. The victims were young women and girls in and around Fairbanks, and the crimes went unsolved until the investigation closed in on him — at which point he died by suicide before facing trial.

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September 28, 1898 - Carl Clauberg

A trained gynecologist, he turned his medical expertise toward mass sterilization research on concentration camp prisoners, conducting experiments on hundreds of Jewish and Romani women without consent or anesthetic. His work at Auschwitz was part of a broader Nazi program aimed at developing efficient methods of large-scale sterilization. After the war, Soviet imprisonment and a prisoner exchange failed to end his career — he returned to West Germany and resumed medical practice before public pressure from survivors forced his arrest, though he died before facing trial.

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September 28, 1867 - Hiranuma Kiichirō

A judicial career built on nationalist prosecution provided Hiranuma with both the credentials and the network to ascend to Japan's highest political office during one of its most dangerous periods. His tenure as Prime Minister came as Japan deepened its alignment with fascist powers and tightened authoritarian controls domestically, and his earlier role shaping the justice apparatus gave ideological weight to those structures. He was convicted of war crimes at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East and sentenced to life imprisonment.

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