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11

The figures born on this date share little beyond the act of violence itself — an Austrian SS officer who administered mass murder with bureaucratic efficiency at Płaszów, a Spanish serial killer whose crimes spanned years before his own violent end, an American shoemaker whose rampage through New Jersey homes with his teenage son left three dead, and a French teenager who killed his family before opening fire on his village. Amon Göth, whose tenure as commandant was later depicted in Schindler's List, operated on an entirely different scale than the others, yet all four left behind cases that drew sustained attention from historians, criminologists, and courts alike. Taken together, they represent a broad spectrum of perpetrators — ideological, predatory, and seemingly spontaneous.

December 11, 1935 - Joseph Kallinger

What distinguishes Kallinger's case is not only the violence itself but the deliberate enlistment of his young son as an accomplice across a six-week crime spree targeting families in their homes. The domestic history preceding those crimes — years of abuse, institutional cycling, and the suspicious death of another child — reveals a pattern that authorities had encountered and failed to contain long before the worst offenses occurred. His case entered legal history again through a Son of Sam lawsuit that ultimately left the author who documented him in significant personal debt.

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December 11, 1945 - Dámaso Rodríguez Martín

Operating in the rugged terrain of Tenerife's Anaga mountains after escaping prison, he carried out a series of killings that drew national law enforcement attention and extensive media coverage. The murder of a German couple in particular elevated the manhunt to an international dimension, making him Spain's most wanted fugitive at the time. His crimes left a lasting mark on the Canary Islands, where he remains the most notorious figure of his kind in the region's recorded history.

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December 11, 1978 - Éric Borel

Over the course of two days in September 1995, a sixteen-year-old carried out one of the deadliest mass killings in modern French history, moving from a family home to a village street and leaving fifteen people dead. The attack unfolded in rural Provence with a speed and scale that had no close precedent in the country, prompting serious examination of how such violence could emerge so suddenly and with so little warning.

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December 11, 1908 - Amon Göth

His conviction for homicide at a war crimes trial — a first — reflected a record that went beyond administrative culpability: Göth was found to have personally killed, maimed, and tortured an unidentified but substantial number of prisoners under his command. As commandant of Kraków-Płaszów, he oversaw the camp through its most lethal period, with authority exercised through direct violence as much as through institutional machinery. The personal scale of that violence, documented at trial, is what distinguishes his case within the broader history of Nazi camp administration.

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