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March 24, 1938 - Mel Lyman

Lyman's trajectory from respected folk musician to the controlling center of an insular commune illustrates how countercultural spiritual authority could curdle into something far more coercive. The Fort Hill Community, which he founded and led, imposed strict gender hierarchies, restricted members' freedom of movement, and required the surrender of personal finances — all organized around Lyman's self-conception as a messianic figure. Accounts from former members describe an environment in which leaving required escape rather than simply departure.

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March 24, 1960 - Tadeusz Grzesik

A strawberry farmer from rural Poland, Grzesik became the central figure in a sustained campaign of violence targeting currency exchange offices across the country, with killings spanning from the early 1990s into the late 2000s. The gang he led was connected to murders in more than a dozen locations, and the full scope of the crimes was still being established by prosecutors years after his 2007 arrest. What made his case particularly difficult to prosecute was the long gap between initial crimes and conviction — the 1991 murders in Cedzyna went unsolved for nearly two decades before DNA evidence linked him to the scene.

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March 24, 1951 - Maria Licciardi

For nearly a decade, she rose to lead one of Naples' most significant criminal power structures at a time when the Camorra's Secondigliano Alliance operated as a dominant force in the city's underworld. Her authority was not inherited passively — she consolidated and directed the Licciardi clan through a period of intense rivalry and negotiation among competing factions. The multiple nicknames she acquired from within the organization reflect the degree to which she was recognized, and respected, by peers in a world rarely governed by women.

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March 24, 1844 - Ferdinand Cohen-Blind

His attempt on Bismarck's life in May 1866 was not the act of a career criminal or professional conspirator, but of a young student radicalized by exile and driven by the conviction that one man's removal could prevent a war. Firing five shots at close range on a Berlin boulevard before being subdued, he came closer to altering the course of German unification than is often remembered. He died by his own hand within hours of his arrest, leaving investigators no one to interrogate and Bismarck grasping for a conspiracy that the evidence never supported.

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