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The figures born on this date span imperial ambition, ideological violence, and predatory crime across nearly a century of history. Cecil Rhodes, the architect of British expansion across southern Africa, built a personal and political empire through dispossession and extraction, lending his name to a territory and a scholarship fund alike. Ruth Neudeck served as an SS camp supervisor during the final months of the Second World War, one of many women who participated directly in the administration of Nazi terror. The others here operated on a smaller but no less deliberate scale. What connects them is not a single era or cause but a recurring pattern: the willingness to treat other human lives as disposable.

July 5, 1920 - Ruth Neudeck

Her trajectory through the SS concentration camp system was brief but distinguished by a pattern of personal cruelty that drew the attention of her superiors from the start. At Ravensbrück and then at the Uckermark subcamp, she moved from trainee guard to overseer, accumulating a record of direct violence against prisoners and a role in selections that contributed to thousands of deaths. She admitted to the charges against her at trial, and the British military court's verdict was carried out within months of her conviction.

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July 5, 1957 - Donald Leroy Evans

Evans's confirmed killings spanned several years and crossed multiple states, with victims targeted at parks and roadside rest areas — locations chosen, in part, for the transience and vulnerability of those who used them. His eventual confession to more than seventy killings was treated with skepticism, though investigators were able to verify at least some of his claims against unsolved cases. The murder for which he received the death penalty involved the prolonged assault of a ten-year-old girl, and testimony at trial made plain the full extent of her suffering. He was executed not by the state but by a fellow inmate before the sentence could be carried out.

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July 5, 1961 - Viktor Malyuk

Malyuk's crimes unfolded against a backdrop of frustrated ambition — a would-be musician who moved to Moscow seeking recognition and found none. His method of luring victims through classified advertisements gave him the nickname by which investigators came to know him, and the pattern across his four killings suggested a man as motivated by the act itself as by any material gain. The case drew particular attention at trial for being the first in Moscow, under the newly introduced jury system, in which every juror unanimously agreed with the prosecution's account.

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July 5, 1853 - Cecil Rhodes

Rhodes built one of the most consequential private empires of the nineteenth century, controlling not only the majority of the world's diamond supply but also the political and territorial machinery of a vast stretch of southern Africa. His British South Africa Company administered lands seized through treaties and force, displacing African populations and laying groundwork for systems of racial segregation that would outlast him by generations. The scale of his ambition — territorial, commercial, and ideological — made him a central architect of British imperial expansion at its most aggressive phase.

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