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The figures born on this date span continents and centuries, but share a common thread of violence turned inward — against family, against community, against strangers. Janie Lou Gibbs, a Georgia woman who poisoned five of her own relatives including three sons and a grandson, represents perhaps the most intimate form of that harm. At the other end of the spectrum, Joseph Scalise spent decades embedded in the Chicago Outfit, an organization whose reach extended across industries and institutions. Between them stand a Warsaw executioner who made death his profession and a Tallinn serial killer whose crimes shook a small European capital.

December 25, 1937 - Joseph Scalise

A senior figure in the Chicago Outfit, Scalise built a career that spanned both organized crime and audacious international theft — most notably the 1980 heist in which he stole the Marlborough diamond in London. His trajectory from street-level mob work to a high-profile transatlantic jewel robbery illustrates the reach that established crime organizations could extend during that era. He was ultimately convicted on racketeering charges and sentenced to over eight years in federal prison.

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December 25, 1980 - Aleksandr Rubel

Rubel committed six murders in Tallinn while still young enough to be sentenced under juvenile statutes, meaning the legal system's constraints on punishment shaped the outcome as much as the crimes themselves. The gap between the gravity of the offenses and the eight-year maximum available to the court made his case a reference point in Estonian discussions about juvenile justice. He was released in 2006 after serving that sentence in full.

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December 25, 1933 - Janie Lou Gibbs

Her crimes unfolded over roughly two years within a single household, each death attributed by physicians to illness rather than foul play — a pattern that allowed her to collect life insurance proceeds five times before suspicion finally arose. The trust she had built as a churchgoing caregiver and daycare operator formed the social cover that made her actions so difficult to detect. It was the cluster of deaths in early 1967 — an infant and a young father in quick succession — that prompted a family physician to refer the case to the state crime lab, ending what had otherwise passed as a streak of family misfortune.

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December 25, 1741 - Stefan Böhm

His path to the gallows was an unlikely one — medical student, confederation soldier, bridge supervisor — before circumstance and social pressure landed him in one of the most singular roles Warsaw had to offer. As the city's official executioner for two decades spanning the final partitions of Poland, Böhm carried out the state's most consequential sentences during a period of profound political upheaval. His notoriety ran deep enough that his first name became embedded in local idiom as a synonym for hanging.

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