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The figures born on this date occupy opposite sides of a stark institutional divide: one who ordered mass atrocities at the scale of a war, another who carried out state-sanctioned executions one at a time across three decades. Radovan Karadžić, wartime leader of the Republika Srpska, was convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia for genocide, persecution, and extermination during the 1990s Bosnian War — among the gravest such convictions in European history since Nuremberg. Rich Owens, by contrast, worked within the machinery of American criminal justice as Oklahoma's official executioner for nearly thirty years, a figure less of policy than of procedure. Together they illustrate the wide range of roles through which individuals become entangled in organized killing.

June 19, 1880 - Rich Owens

For nearly three decades, Owens served as the official executioner at Oklahoma State Penitentiary, carrying out 65 state-sanctioned executions — a tenure that places him among the most prolific figures of his kind in American penal history. His inclusion here stems not from any single act but from the accumulated weight of that role, compounded by ten additional killings outside his official capacity.

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June 19, 1945 - Radovan Karadžić

A trained psychiatrist who became the political architect of ethnic cleansing campaigns during the Bosnian War, he directed policies resulting in the massacre at Srebrenica and the prolonged siege of Sarajevo — among the most consequential atrocities on European soil since World War II. His conviction by the ICTY on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity marked one of the most significant war crimes verdicts of the post-Cold War era. The twelve years he spent evading capture, working quietly under an assumed identity in Belgrade, underscore how extensively he was sheltered after the war's end.

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