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June 12, 1849 - Albert Pel

The Watchmaker of Montreuil operated across decades in late nineteenth-century Paris, leaving behind a pattern of suspicious deaths, sudden disappearances, and vanishing women whose fates were never fully accounted for in court. His case drew enough structural resemblance to that of Henri Landru — the serial targeting of women, the financial motives, the careful concealment — that prosecutors invoked his name during Landru's own trial as a point of comparison. What distinguished Pel was the persistent insufficiency of evidence: investigations were opened and closed, bodies were absent or unidentified, and the legal record remained incomplete even as suspicion accumulated. He was tried but never conclusively convicted of murder, leaving his full toll a matter of historical inference rather than established fact.

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June 12, 1939 - Bobby Jack Fowler

Fowler operated across two countries over more than two decades, evading serious consequences until a 1995 attack in Oregon led to his first conviction — by which point investigators suspected him of far more. The gap between his lone confirmed sentence and the breadth of activity attributed to him is what places him squarely in the record here.

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