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14

The figures born on this date span revolutionary politics, state-sanctioned punishment, and criminal violence across three continents and several decades. Che Guevara, the Argentine revolutionary whose campaigns across Cuba, the Congo, and Bolivia left a contested legacy of armed insurrection and summary executions, remains one of the twentieth century's most ideologically charged figures. At a quieter remove, Fernand Meyssonnier carried out guillotine executions on behalf of the French colonial state in Algeria — a bureaucratic participant in a system whose own legitimacy was being violently contested. On the criminal side, Edward Edwards spent decades evading justice after a series of murders, his drifting fugitive life making him one of the more elusive killers in American true-crime records. The remainder of the list is largely composed of violent offenders whose crimes were localized but no less consequential to those they affected.

June 14, 1969 - Elroy Chester

Over a six-month period in the late 1990s, Chester carried out a concentrated campaign of home invasions, sexual assaults, and murders in a single Texas city, leaving five people dead. The geographic and temporal compression of the crimes — all within Port Arthur, all within half a year — reflected a pattern of escalating violence that drew significant law enforcement attention. His case later became a focal point in ongoing legal debates over intellectual disability and capital punishment eligibility following Atkins v. Virginia.

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June 14, 1931 - Fernand Meyssonnier

Meyssonnier carried out over 200 executions by guillotine during the final, volatile years of French colonial Algeria, having entered the role as a teenager when he took over from his father — himself part of a multigenerational line of executioners. His tenure coincided with one of the most contested and brutal periods of French imperial history, lending his work a particular political and historical weight beyond the mechanics of state punishment. The matter-of-fact arc of his life — from inherited executioner to Tahitian businessman to French retiree — has made him an unusual and unsettling lens through which to examine institutional violence and the individuals who administer it.

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June 14, 1965 - Rory Enrique Conde

Operating along a single Miami corridor over just five months, Conde targeted women whose marginalized circumstances likely delayed the investigation and public attention his crimes might otherwise have received. The concentrated geography and victim profile were characteristic of a pattern seen in other cases where serial violence persisted against vulnerable populations. His death sentence, later overturned on constitutional grounds stemming from Hurst v. Florida, left his legal fate unresolved decades after the killings.

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June 14, 1963 - Duane "Keefe D" Davis

Decades passed before an arrest was made in one of American music's most consequential unsolved murders. Davis, a self-described gang figure with ties to the South Side Compton Crips, was indicted in 2023 on charges that he orchestrated the 1996 drive-by shooting that killed rapper Tupac Shakur — an allegation fueled in part by Davis's own public statements over the years.

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June 14, 1933 - Edward Edwards

Edwards spent decades hiding in plain sight — appearing on talk shows, writing a memoir, and living as an apparently ordinary citizen — while investigators remained unaware of the murders he had committed across multiple states. His crimes went unsolved for roughly fifty years, making him one of the more striking examples of how effectively a killer can evade accountability through reinvention and mobility.

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June 14, 1928 - Che Guevara

Guevara's role in the Cuban Revolution extended well beyond battlefield command — he presided over revolutionary tribunals that issued death sentences, directed Cuba's early economic restructuring, and worked to export armed insurgency to Africa and South America. His effectiveness as a revolutionary organizer, combined with the ruthlessness he brought to consolidating the new Cuban state, is what grounds his place here alongside the site's other subjects. The romantic iconography that followed his 1967 execution in Bolivia has tended to obscure rather than illuminate the human cost of the causes he advanced.

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