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The figures born on this date span continents, decades, and methods of harm, yet share a quality of deliberate violence exercised over those with little power to resist. Alfredo Stroessner ruled Paraguay for 35 years — longer than almost any other 20th-century dictator in the Western Hemisphere — presiding over a state apparatus that systematically tortured and disappeared political opponents. The others here operated on a smaller scale but with no less calculated intent: a Texas nurse convicted of injecting patients with bleach during dialysis treatments, serial killers from postwar Japan and the American Pacific Northwest, and the perpetrator of the 2018 Toronto van attack, which killed ten pedestrians and injured dozens more.

November 3, 1973 - Kimberly Clark Saenz

The patients at a Texas dialysis clinic were among the most medically vulnerable — dependent on a machine and the staff who operated it to survive each treatment session. Saenz exploited that dependency directly, using bleach injected into dialysis lines in a setting where the resulting cardiac arrests could initially be attributed to the fragile health of the patients themselves. Her conviction required the development of a novel forensic test to detect chlorine exposure in blood, illustrating how the clinical context of the crimes created both the opportunity and the evidentiary difficulty.

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November 3, 1992 - Alek Minassian

The 2018 Toronto van attack drew international attention not only for its death toll but for its ideological framing — Minassian publicly aligned himself with the incel movement and cast the attack as a form of retribution, prompting broader scrutiny of online radicalization and misogynist extremism. The legal proceedings that followed added further complexity, as the court weighed questions of criminal responsibility against a finding of guilt on all counts. Expert testimony suggested notoriety itself may have been a driving motivation, a detail the presiding judge acknowledged while noting the full picture of intent remained elusive.

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November 3, 1926 - Genzo Kurita

His crimes unfolded across a span of roughly four years in postwar Japan, targeting women and, in two instances, the children who witnessed or survived what he had done. The pattern of his killings — eight dead across multiple prefectures, with attacks on victims ranging from young women to elderly — made him a subject of national legal proceedings and, eventually, a reference point in Diet debates over capital punishment. His case was sufficiently disturbing that prosecutors cited him explicitly in formal arguments for retaining the death penalty.

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November 3, 1963 - Scott William Cox

Two convictions formed the official record, but investigators have long suspected the true count extends further — a gap that troubled the case from the beginning. Cox operated in Portland during a period when serial offender cases frequently closed with more questions than answers, and his early release in 2013 renewed scrutiny of both the sentence and what may have gone unresolved.

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November 3, 1912 - Alfredo Stroessner

His thirty-five-year grip on Paraguay stands as one of the longest authoritarian tenures in twentieth-century Latin America, sustained through a combination of electoral fraud, military loyalty, and the systematic suppression of political opposition. The apparatus he constructed — blending the Colorado Party, the army, and a secret police drawn from military ranks — gave his government both institutional cover and coercive reach. Opponents faced not merely exile but active persecution, and civil rights were suspended almost immediately upon his taking office.

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