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The figures born on this date span more than two centuries and resist easy categorization. Werner von Blomberg rose to become Nazi Germany's first Minister of War, his career a study in institutional complicity at the highest levels of a criminal regime. Robert Zarinsky and Zhao Zhihong — the latter known in China as the Smiling Killer — represent a grimmer and more intimate scale of violence, both convicted of the murders of multiple young women. The group also includes Joseph Francel, who occupied the unusual position of state-sanctioned executioner, and Benjamin Smith, a white supremacist whose 1999 shooting spree across Illinois and Indiana left two dead and nine wounded before he turned the gun on himself. Perpetrators, enablers, and instruments of violence alike — this date produced them all.

September 2, 1895 - Joseph Francel

New York's official executioner for nearly fifteen years, Francel carried out his work methodically and without public profile — a figure defined less by ideology than by the institutional role he filled. His tenure at Sing Sing's electric chair spanned some of the most charged cases in mid-century American history, including the espionage convictions of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. The scale of his work, extending across multiple states, reflects how execution in this era was treated as a transferable technical function. That he ultimately quit over pay disputes and death threats offers a quietly unsettling coda to a career built on state-sanctioned finality.

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September 2, 1717 - Benjamin Smith

A member of the neo-Nazi World Church of the Creator, Smith carried out a methodical campaign of racially motivated violence over a holiday weekend, targeting victims across two states based on their ethnicity and religion. The attack left two people dead and nine wounded before Smith took his own life, and it remains one of the more striking examples of organized white supremacist ideology translating directly into coordinated mass violence.

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September 2, 1940 - Robert Zarinsky

Zarinsky operated in suburban New Jersey over the course of several years, targeting teenage girls whose cases went unsolved or unresolved for extended periods. The gap between his crimes and his eventual conviction — along with the number of deaths he remained suspected of but never held legally accountable for — illustrates how long such cases can remain open. He was ultimately convicted of only one of the murders attributed to him, leaving the full scope of his actions a matter of legal ambiguity.

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September 2, 1972 - Zhao Zhihong

His case carried consequences beyond his own crimes: the investigation into his killings helped establish that Huugjiltu, a man executed in 1996 for one of the same murders, had been wrongfully put to death — one of the most significant wrongful execution cases in Chinese legal history. Operating across Inner Mongolia over nearly a decade, he carried out a sustained pattern of sexual violence and homicide that went undetected long enough to claim multiple victims.

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September 2, 1878 - Werner von Blomberg

As the first Minister of War under the Nazi regime, von Blomberg was instrumental in transforming Germany's military from a constrained postwar force into the apparatus that would wage the Second World War. His willingness to align the armed forces with the new government — purging dissenters and overseeing large-scale rearmament — helped consolidate Hitler's grip on the military in its critical early years. He was ultimately undone not by conscience but by rivals within the regime itself, and spent the war years in the obscurity his removal had forced upon him.

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