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The figures born on this date span more than nineteen centuries and represent strikingly different modes of infamy. The most consequential is almost certainly Nero, the Roman emperor whose reign became a byword for autocratic excess, political murder, and the persecution of early Christians before his forced suicide in 68 AD. Centuries later, Boston merchant Thomas Handasyd Perkins built one of America's great fortunes with slave-traded goods and opium, embodying the respectable face of trafficking in human misery. The list also includes Renato Beluche, the Louisiana-born privateer who operated in legal and illegal registers alike along the Gulf Coast, and Arnoldo Rueda Medina, a senior figure in the violent Mexican cartel La Familia Michoacana.

December 15, 1969 - Arnoldo Rueda Medina

A senior operational figure within La Familia Michoacana, he worked beneath two of Mexico's most wanted cartel leaders during a period when the organization was responsible for widespread violence, drug trafficking, and territorial control across Michoacán. His role in managing day-to-day operations placed him at the functional core of an organization that became one of the more ruthless and ideologically distinctive cartels of its era.

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December 15, 1764 - Thomas Handasyd Perkins

Perkins built one of early America's great mercantile fortunes through the opium trade, supplying Turkish opium to China at a scale that helped establish patterns of addiction and exploitation that would define the era's commerce. His Boston-based firm operated across the Pacific and Atlantic, intertwining legitimate trade with narcotics trafficking in ways that were legal at the time but carried consequences measured in human suffering across continents. The respectability he later cultivated through philanthropy in Boston made him a study in how the origins of great wealth can be absorbed into civic legend.

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December 15, 1780 - Renato Beluche

Beluche's career defies easy categorization — pirate, privateer, revolutionary, rebel, and loyalist at different turns, depending on which cause suited the moment. Operating across the Gulf Coast and Caribbean during an era of colonial upheaval, he fought alongside Jean Lafitte against the British at New Orleans and spent years in service to the Latin American independence movements, yet later turned against the very government he had helped establish. His is a biography shaped less by fixed allegiance than by the fluid loyalties of a turbulent age.

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December 15, 37 - Nero

His reign began with the promise of capable advisors and relative stability, but the pattern that defined it emerged quickly: the systematic elimination of anyone who represented a constraint on his authority, including his own mother. The murders of Agrippina, Britannicus, and Claudia Octavia illustrate how personal consolidation of power operated at the highest levels of Roman imperial rule. As the last of the Julio-Claudian line, his reign marks both the endpoint of a dynasty and a case study in how unchecked authority could turn inward on family, rivals, and eventually the emperor himself.

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