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September 18, 1898 - Louis Amberg

One of Brooklyn's more volatile figures during the interwar gang wars, Amberg operated in a competitive underworld where violent enforcement was the primary currency of market share. His willingness to use extreme brutality — including methods that reportedly unsettled even hardened contemporaries — gave him a reputation that outlasted his actual power. He competed against some of organized crime's most capable operators, which ultimately defined both the ceiling of his influence and the circumstances of his death.

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September 18, 1934 - Jan Caubergh

Caubergh's record spans two distinct episodes of lethal violence separated by more than a decade, marking him as one of Belgium's more notorious postwar criminal cases. His 1979 crimes — the killing of a pregnant neighbor, the strangling of his girlfriend and their infant son, and attacks on police — unfolded in rapid succession and prompted a multi-day manhunt across Antwerp's waterways and industrial sites. The breadth of victims, ranging from a young pregnant woman to a five-month-old child, and the deliberate targeting of law enforcement, set his case apart from more narrowly defined criminal histories.

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September 18, 1927 - Gerlando Alberti

His nickname, "the imperturbable one," captures something essential about his role within the Sicilian Mafia — a steady presence across some of the organization's most consequential acts of violence and criminal enterprise during the 1960s and 70s. From massacres to the suspected disappearance of a journalist investigating sensitive political territory, his involvement spanned both spectacular violence and the quieter logistics of drug trafficking. Few figures from that era appear so consistently across such a range of significant events.

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September 18, 1913 - Georg Bochmann

Bochmann's career traced the full arc of the Waffen-SS's eastern front campaigns, from the encirclement at Demyansk to the grinding retreats through Kharkov, Kursk, and Silesia. His early posting at Dachau and his role in building out the SS Totenkopf Division place him at the organizational core of the SS's wartime machinery, not merely as a field commander but as a structural participant in its formation. The decorations he accumulated — Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords — reflect his effectiveness within a force whose conduct on the eastern front is well documented in the historical record.

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