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14

Three Americans and one Frenchman share this date, their paths ranging from the streets of Los Angeles to a string of unsolved disappearances along the Rhine. Raymond Washington, who founded the Crips in late-1960s South Central at roughly sixteen years old, set in motion one of the most consequential gang networks in American history before his own murder at twenty-five. Ronald Gray, a U.S. Army soldier stationed at Fort Bragg, accumulated convictions for four murders and a series of rapes committed both on and off base — crimes that placed him on military death row for decades. Together this group spans organized street violence, predatory crime, and suspected serial killing across two continents.

August 14, 1973 - Jacques Plumain

Operating across the Franco-German border in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Plumain was convicted of two killings but has long been considered a suspect in additional deaths that were never fully resolved in court. The cross-border nature of his crimes complicated both investigation and prosecution, and the gap between convictions and suspected victims remains a defining feature of his case. His eligibility for parole since 2021 has kept the matter a subject of ongoing public attention.

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August 14, 1953 - Raymond Washington

What Washington set in motion as a teenager in South Los Angeles grew far beyond anything a local street gang typically becomes. The organization he founded in the late 1960s expanded dramatically after his death, eventually spreading across the United States and becoming one of the most recognizable gang structures in American criminal history — a trajectory he did not live to see, having been killed at twenty-five.

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August 14, 1965 - Ronald Gray

Gray's case carries particular institutional weight because his crimes occurred within the U.S. military itself, committed against both civilian and military victims while he was an active-duty soldier at Fort Bragg. The dual civilian and military prosecutions resulted in compounding sentences — eight consecutive life terms from one court, a death sentence from another — leaving his legal fate contested across decades of appeals. His scheduled 2008 execution would have been the first carried out by the U.S. military in nearly half a century, a threshold that federal courts have so far prevented from being crossed.

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