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28

This date claims a remarkably varied roster of historical notoriety. Among its most consequential figures is Henry VIII, whose reign reshaped English religion, law, and royal authority while leaving a trail of executions that included two of his six wives. Nearly four centuries later, Aribert Heim was born — an SS physician at Mauthausen concentration camp whose documented methods of killing prisoners earned him the designation "Dr. Death" and a place among the most-wanted Nazi war criminals for decades after the war. The remaining figures skew toward organized crime and serial violence: Benedetto Capizzi rose to lead a Palermo-area Mafia clan, while Tommy Lynn Sells, convicted of murders across multiple U.S. states, became one of the more itinerant criminal cases of the late twentieth century.

June 28, 1968 - Ion Prodan

Operating across the Moscow Oblast through the late 1990s, Prodan carried out a sustained campaign of robbery, rape, and killing that targeted victims in and around the railway corridors where he had long drifted. What distinguished his case was not only the breadth of offenses — multiple homicides, serial rape, and opportunistic violence against both men and women — but his pattern of deliberate contact with police and media, including phone calls directing investigators to bodies he had left. The social margin he occupied as an undocumented migrant worker without stable housing shaped both his access to victims and his ability to evade detection across several years.

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June 28, 1951 - Alexander Taran

A beekeeper from the Stavropol region, Taran carried out a years-long campaign of targeted shootings after the deaths of his two children — deaths he attributed to negligence, corruption, and a justice system he believed had been bought. Armed with AK-47s and operating over several years without detection, he killed three people and wounded others before physical evidence and a witness eventually led to his arrest. The case drew national attention in Russia less for the scale of the violence than for what it revealed about public distrust of law enforcement and the courts, with his first jury acquitting him entirely before a retrial resulted in a 23-year sentence.

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June 28, 1964 - Tommy Lynn Sells

What distinguished Sells from many convicted killers was the sheer geographic spread of the violence he claimed — spanning multiple states over years, with investigators never able to fully verify or refute the scope of his confessions. He was executed for a single murder, but the gap between his two convictions and his self-reported toll of up to seventy victims left a body of cases that remained, for many families, unresolved.

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June 28, 1914 - Aribert Heim

Among the SS physicians stationed at concentration camps during the Second World War, Heim stands out for the particular cruelty documented at Mauthausen, where he is alleged to have performed fatal injections and lethal surgeries on prisoners without anesthetic. He evaded postwar justice for decades, living under an assumed identity in Cairo — and perhaps elsewhere — while remaining on wanted lists across multiple countries. The uncertainty surrounding even the most basic facts of his death, disputed by his own family members and unresolved to the satisfaction of Nazi-hunting organizations, reflects how thoroughly some perpetrators succeeded in disappearing.

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June 28, 1944 - Benedetto Capizzi

His significance lies less in personal notoriety than in what his nomination represented: a coordinated effort by Cosa Nostra's surviving leadership to reconstitute a centralized power structure in the wake of successive high-profile arrests. Capizzi was positioned to head a revived Mafia Commission that would have reunified the organization under a single paramount boss, reversing years of fragmentation. Operation Perseus in 2008 — which swept up 94 individuals, many of them elderly bosses who had returned to activity after release on health grounds — dismantled the attempt before it could take hold.

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June 28, 1491 - Henry VIII

Henry VIII reshaped English religious and political life through a combination of personal will and institutional force, breaking from Rome not on doctrinal grounds but to secure a marriage annulment — then building an entire church structure around the crown's supremacy. The dissolution of the monasteries, the execution of ministers and nobles who fell from favor, and the fates of two of his six wives reflect how thoroughly he wielded the new powers he had consolidated. His reign is a study in how personal authority, when structurally unchecked, can redirect the course of a nation.

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