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9

This date gathers figures whose notoriety spans institutional authority and criminal violence across three centuries and two continents. André Obrecht carried out the state's most final sentence as chief executioner of France for a quarter century, operating within the law yet presiding over death as a profession. On the criminal side, both Dallen Bounds and Sergey Kashintsev were serial killers — Bounds active in rural South Carolina in the late 1990s, Kashintsev in the Soviet Union before his death in 1992. The contrast between sanctioned and unsanctioned killing, embodied in figures born on the same calendar date across different eras, gives this group an quietly unsettling coherence.

August 9, 1971 - Dallen Bounds

Over six months in 1999, Bounds killed four people across two South Carolina towns — some during robberies, others apparently out of personal grievance — before a manhunt ended with a hostage situation and his own suicide. The case resists easy categorization: no single motive was ever established, leaving a pattern of violence that investigators and observers could not fully explain. That combination of varied targets, compressed timeline, and unresolved intent places him in a particularly unsettling corner of American criminal history.

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August 9, 1899 - André Obrecht

Obrecht inherited his role through family lineage — his uncle was Anatole Deibler, the legendary chief executioner — and went on to oversee the guillotine for a quarter century as the state's appointed instrument of judicial death. His tenure spanned some of the most fraught periods of French legal history, including the postwar purges and the Algerian War era executions of the early 1960s. His decision to quit during the Vichy occupation, rather than participate in executions carried out without trial for political offenses, distinguishes his record from that of his predecessor.

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August 9, 1722 - Jacques-Louis de Pourtalès

His commercial empire stretched across Europe, India, Africa, and the Americas — built on textile trading, banking, and colonial plantation ownership, including the labor of roughly 350 enslaved people on his Grenada holdings. The wealth he accumulated through that integrated system of trade and forced labor made him one of the most influential merchant figures in eighteenth-century Neuchâtel, and he died leaving a fortune of approximately thirty million Swiss francs. His philanthropic donations and civic honors have long sat alongside the architecture of exploitation that underwrote them.

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August 9, 1940 - Sergey Kashintsev

His case illustrates a recurring failure in Soviet criminal justice: an early conviction that went insufficiently investigated, followed by release and the resumption of violence across multiple regions. The confirmed toll reached at least eight killings spanning roughly fifteen years, with the full scope of his crimes remaining uncertain. He was ultimately sentenced to death in 1990 and executed in 1992.

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