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July 24, 1877 - Calogero Vizzini

Don Calò occupied a singular position in twentieth-century Sicilian organized crime — not through sustained brutality but through the careful cultivation of legitimacy, operating as a power broker whose authority bridged criminal networks, rural social structures, and political institutions. His role in facilitating Allied cooperation during the 1943 invasion of Sicily placed him at the intersection of warfare and organized crime in ways that shaped postwar Italy's relationship with Cosa Nostra. He embodied an older model of Mafia leadership — paternalistic, locally rooted, publicly visible — that would give way to more covert and violent successors in the decades after his death.

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July 24, 1967 - Cleophus Prince Jr.

Prince operated in San Diego County during the early 1990s, targeting women in their homes in a series of burglary-homicides that generated sustained fear across the region before his arrest. His convictions on six counts of first-degree murder, along with rape, resulted in a death sentence in 1993 — a case that became a significant chapter in California's history of serial crime investigations.

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July 24, 1991 - Elliot Rodger

His significance on a site like this extends beyond the attack itself: the manifesto he left behind, and the killings it accompanied, became foundational texts and reference points for a broader online subculture built around misogyny and ideations of retributive violence. The 2014 Isla Vista attack claimed six lives and wounded fourteen others, but its aftershocks shaped online radicalization patterns that researchers and law enforcement continue to track years later.

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July 24, 1857 - Juan Vicente Gómez

Venezuela's longest-serving strongman of the twentieth century, Gómez held power for nearly three decades through a combination of military force, puppet governments, and the systematic suppression of political opposition. His rule coincided with the rise of Venezuela's oil industry, which he used to consolidate both national debt repayment and personal wealth while keeping civil liberties tightly restricted. The infrastructure projects of his era — highways, airports, bridges — were real, but they were built within a political order that tolerated no dissent and operated without electoral accountability.

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July 24, 1982 - Luka Magnotta

The case drew international attention less for its violence alone than for how deliberately Magnotta staged and broadcast it — filming the act, distributing the footage, and mailing human remains to institutions chosen for their visibility. His flight across Europe while the manhunt unfolded, and his prior history of documented animal killings, suggested a prolonged pattern rather than a single rupture. The murder of Jun Lin sits in the record as a case where premeditation, spectacle, and escalation converged with unusual clarity.

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July 24, 1909 - John Haigh

His method was methodical rather than frenzied — killing for financial gain, then using sulphuric acid to dissolve the evidence before forging signatures and liquidating his victims' assets. The combination of murder, fraud, and near-total destruction of physical evidence made him one of the more forensically calculated killers of postwar Britain, and the case became a landmark in the history of forensic investigation.

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