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July 30, 1664 - Giles Shelley

Shelley operated at the intersection of colonial commerce and piracy, running a supply chain that kept Madagascar's pirate settlements stocked with gunpowder and provisions while returning to New York with plundered goods and enslaved people. His backers were respectable New York merchants, and the voyages turned extraordinary profits precisely because legitimate and illegitimate trade were so thoroughly intertwined. His most consequential run ferried dozens of retiring pirates — men who had sailed under Kidd and Culliford — back to the colonies along with their accumulated loot, a transaction that helped disperse both wanted men and stolen wealth across the Atlantic seaboard.

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July 30, 1853 - Frederick Bailey Deeming

Deeming's crimes spanned two continents, encompassing the deaths of an entire family in England and a second wife in Australia, before his arrest in Melbourne brought the case to a swift and internationally watched close. His habit of adopting aliases while simultaneously drawing attention to himself through erratic and conspicuous behavior made him both difficult to track and, ultimately, easy to catch. The speed of his trial and execution — less than three months from discovery to hanging — reflected not only the efficiency of colonial justice but the intense press scrutiny that followed the case across the world. His death mask sits today in three separate institutional collections, a measure of how durably the case lodged itself in the public record.

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July 30, 1956 - Alfredo Stranieri

His method was mundane by design: classified advertisements offering to buy property or used cars, transactions ordinary enough to lower any seller's guard. The victims Stranieri selected were killed and their assets absorbed into a pattern of fraud that extended his reach beyond the killings themselves. The combination of premeditation, financial motive, and the exploitation of routine commerce across multiple victims placed him squarely within the category this site documents.

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July 30, 1943 - Caril Ann Fugate

At fourteen, she became the youngest female in American history sentenced to life in prison, convicted as an accomplice in the 1958 Nebraska killing spree that left eleven people dead. Her exact role alongside Charles Starkweather has remained contested for decades — whether willing participant or coerced captive — making her case one of the more legally and morally unresolved chapters of mid-century American crime.

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