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The figures born on this date span continents, decades, and forms of violence, yet several share a common thread: targeted, ideological, or predatory harm visited on ordinary people. Shōkō Asahara, who built Aum Shinrikyō into a doomsday cult with thousands of followers, orchestrated the 1995 Tokyo subway sarin attack — one of the most consequential acts of domestic terrorism in postwar history. John Salvi brought lethal anti-abortion violence to the streets of Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1994, killing two clinic workers. Also born on this date are Siert Bruins, a Dutch SS collaborator convicted decades later for wartime executions in the Netherlands, and two Russian serial killers whose crimes terrorized communities in the post-Soviet era.

March 2, 1981 - Vladimir Draganer

The crimes attributed to Draganer unfolded over a single summer in a provincial Russian city, marked by extreme violence against young women and a pattern of trophy-taking that reflected premeditation rather than impulse. His stated motive — revenge rooted in childhood abuse, enacted symbolically on the date of International Women's Day — gave investigators a psychological thread that the eventual forensic examination confirmed was grounded in deliberate intent, not disorder. The case broke not through investigative work but through a chance encounter: a surviving victim spotting a photograph on a detective's desk, connecting a missing person's case to her own attacker.

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March 2, 1955 - Shōkō Asahara

The founder of Aum Shinrikyo built a religious movement that blended apocalyptic prophecy with absolute personal authority, drawing in thousands of followers — including scientists and engineers whose expertise he redirected toward mass violence. The 1995 sarin attack on the Tokyo subway system remains one of the most significant acts of domestic terrorism in Japanese history, and the group's capacity for coordinated chemical warfare distinguished it from most other extremist organizations of its era.

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March 2, 1988 - Dmitry Kopylov

Kopylov committed his series of killings and sexual assaults entirely within a single year, beginning when he was sixteen — a fact that positioned him among the youngest individuals categorized as serial killers in the post-Soviet Russian record. The crimes took place across Chelyabinsk Oblast between 2004 and 2005, and the age at which they were carried out became central to how authorities and the public understood the case.

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March 2, 1921 - Siert Bruins

A Dutch collaborator who turned on his own countrymen, Bruins spent the occupation hunting Resistance members for the German SD in the northeastern Netherlands, leaving behind victims whose fates — including the whereabouts of two murdered brothers — he took largely to his grave. The legal history is itself a document of postwar failure: a death sentence in absentia, decades of refuge behind German citizenship laws, a 1978 conviction that carried only a seven-year term, and a final case dropped in 2014 when the evidence had aged beyond recovery. He lived to ninety-four, outlasting nearly every avenue for accountability.

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March 2, 1972 - John Salvi

On a single day in December 1994, Salvi moved between two Brookline clinics and opened fire, killing two receptionists and wounding five others in attacks that became a landmark moment in the history of anti-abortion violence in the United States. The coordinated nature of the shootings — targeting staff rather than a single spontaneous act — distinguished the case and drew sustained national attention to the threat of extremist violence against reproductive health providers. He died in prison in 1996 while awaiting the outcome of his case.

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