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Three figures born on this date pursued violence through very different channels — a serial killer who preyed on young women across the American Southeast, a cartel lieutenant who rose to command significant narco-trafficking operations along the U.S.-Mexico border, and a German neo-Nazi whose decade-long terrorist campaign claimed the lives of ten people before ending in his own death. Uwe Mundlos and Edgar Valdez Villarreal both operated within organized structures of ideological and criminal violence; Paul Durousseau acted alone. What unites them is a scale of harm that extended well beyond single incidents, leaving multiple victims and, in each case, years of impunity before justice intervened.

August 11, 1973 - Uwe Mundlos

One of three core members of the National Socialist Underground, Mundlos operated underground for over a decade as part of a cell that carried out racially motivated killings and bombings largely without detection by German authorities. The group's ability to evade law enforcement for so long — and the institutional failures that allowed it — made the NSU case one of the most significant domestic terrorism scandals in postwar German history.

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August 11, 1970 - Paul Durousseau

His confirmed victims — seven young women killed across the southeastern United States over roughly six years — represent only what investigators could prove, as German authorities have long suspected additional killings dating back to his Army posting abroad in the early 1990s. The possibility that his crimes began overseas and continued undetected for over a decade underscores how geography and institutional context can obscure a pattern of violence until it reaches a threshold investigators cannot ignore.

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August 11, 1973 - Edgar Valdez Villarreal

A U.S.-born figure who rose through Mexico's cartel underworld to become one of its more operationally brutal commanders, Valdez is notable both for his unlikely background and for the methods he used to wage an internal power struggle that left over 150 dead following the 2009 collapse of the Beltrán Leyva leadership. His use of videotaped torture and decapitation was calculated as much for psychological effect as for physical elimination of rivals. The gang infrastructure he built dissolved within a year of his arrest.

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