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The figures born on this date span centuries and continents, yet several share a professional relationship with institutionalized violence. Giovanni Battista Bugatti served as the Papal States' official executioner for nearly seven decades, carrying out 516 executions under the sanction of church and state. Vjekoslav Luburić operated at the opposite extreme of legitimacy, commanding the Ustaše concentration camp system in wartime Croatia with a brutality that drew notice even among Axis allies. Alongside them stand individual perpetrators — Gesche Gottfried, who poisoned fifteen people in early nineteenth-century Bremen over the course of years, and Wanda Klaff, a concentration camp overseer hanged at twenty-four. The list also includes organized crime figures, a spree killer on California's death row, and soldiers whose conduct crossed into war crimes.

March 6, 1914 - Vjekoslav Luburić

As the architect and administrator of the NDH's concentration camp network, he held direct authority over the conditions and operations that resulted in the deaths of approximately 100,000 people at Jasenovac alone. His role extended beyond administration — he personally directed early mass killings in the field and remained the effective authority over the camps even while nominally under house arrest. The combination of organizational control and direct participation in atrocity made him a central figure in the Ustaše genocide against Serbs, Jews, and Roma during the war years.

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March 6, 1940 - Gerard Ouimette

A career criminal operating at the upper edges of New England organized crime, Ouimette built his reputation through decades of association with the Patriarca family — one of the most entrenched crime organizations in the northeastern United States. His longevity in that world, and his closeness to its leadership, made him a significant figure in the history of Providence's underworld.

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March 6, 1785 - Gesche Gottfried

Over the course of fourteen years, she moved through her closest relationships — husbands, children, parents, a fiancé, neighbors — leaving a trail of arsenic poisoning that was repeatedly obscured by her reputation as a devoted caregiver. The same attentiveness she used to nurse her victims through the illnesses she had induced earned her the name "Angel of Bremen" and kept suspicion at bay long after the deaths had multiplied. It was only when a surviving victim found white powder in his food and brought it to a physician that the pattern became visible to authorities.

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March 6, 1894 - Wilhelm Röttger

He operated at the center of the Nazi judicial execution apparatus during its most lethal years, carrying out his work through the guillotine facilities at Berlin-Plötzensee and Brandenburg-Görden. The scale is difficult to absorb: of the roughly 16,000 executions conducted across the Third Reich, Röttger and two colleagues accounted for nearly 12,000. What marks him for inclusion here is less ideological fervor than institutional function — he was a professional executioner who applied for a promotion and received it, then fulfilled the role with thoroughness across the war years.

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March 6, 1779 - Giovanni Battista Bugatti

Over nearly seven decades, he served as the official instrument of capital punishment for one of Europe's most enduring theocratic states, carrying out executions across a span that touched six pontificates and a period of French occupation. The breadth of offenses represented among his 516 subjects — from property crime to homicide — reflects the wide reach of the Papal States' criminal code, and the variety of methods employed speaks to the era's gradations of punishment by offense and status.

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March 6, 1916 - Irwin Weiner

His career traced the connective tissue of mid-century organized crime in America — bonding houses, Teamsters pension funds, Cuban casino interests, and a web of personal relationships spanning Chicago Outfit figures from Felix Alderisio to Tony Spilotro. What draws particular attention is the phone call he received from Jack Ruby on October 26, 1963, less than a month before the Kennedy assassination, which he refused to discuss with federal investigators and deflected under oath before the House Select Committee on Assassinations. The committee later cited the Warren Commission's failure to pursue this lead as emblematic of a broader investigative blind spot regarding organized crime's possible role in the assassination. He was also present when his longtime associate Allen Dorfman was shot dead in a parking lot in 1983, walking away unharmed while investigators suspected he had facilitated the ambush.

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March 6, 1959 - Faryion Wardrip

His case is a study in how jurisdictional fragmentation can allow a pattern of violence to go unrecognized — three agencies working separate investigations on crimes that occurred within miles of one another. The five murders attributed to him spanned multiple Texas counties and stretched across several years, and it was ultimately his own confession to one killing, rather than investigative convergence, that first brought him to authorities' attention.

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March 6, 1846 - Thomas D. Carr

Carr's brief life compressed an unusual range of serious crimes — theft, arson, wartime atrocities, and murder — into little more than two decades. He was hanged at twenty-four for the killing of a thirteen-year-old girl, but his deathbed confession extended his admitted body count to fourteen men, including a role in a notable 1867 West Virginia killing. The confession, offered on the eve of execution, remains the primary lens through which his full record is understood.

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March 6, 1941 - Hans van Zon

His social presentation — charming, well-groomed, described as intelligent — was largely at odds with a pattern of killing that emerged in the late 1960s and left investigators suspecting him in far more deaths than he was ever convicted of. The confirmed murders were carried out with improvised weapons and followed by deliberate efforts to mislead police, suggesting a practical, unsentimental approach to violence. His time in prison became a minor scandal in the Netherlands, and his eventual release after a life sentence drew continued public and journalistic attention that followed him until his death.

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March 6, 1922 - Wanda Klaff

Her own courtroom statement — boasting of intelligence and a self-imposed daily quota of beatings — distills something essential about how ordinary people could become instruments of systematic cruelty within the camp system. Klaff spent less than a year as an overseer at Stutthof subcamps before the collapse of the Reich ended her career, yet the record was sufficient for a Polish court to impose the death penalty. She was among the first concentration camp personnel to be tried and executed in the postwar reckoning, hanged publicly at Biskupia Górka Hill at twenty-four years old.

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March 6, 1961 - Ramon Salcido

Over the course of a single day in April 1989, Salcido killed seven people across two California cities, targeting his own family alongside a coworker's relatives — crimes that included three young children, one of whom survived despite her injuries. The case became one of the most closely followed capital cases in California, in part because of the domestic intimacy of the violence and the near-miraculous survival of his daughter Angela, who was found alive in a garbage dump days later.

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March 6, 1971 - Sergey Osipenko

Operating in the Voronezh Oblast over roughly fourteen months, Osipenko targeted women and girls in their own homes, following a consistent pattern of entry, violence, and theft that spanned two cities. His background working for Kazakhstan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and his personal interest in psychology and criminology lend an unsettling dimension to the methodical nature of his crimes. He spoke openly about his actions after arrest and sought a jury trial in hopes of leniency — a bid the Voronezh Regional Court rejected.

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March 6, 1724 - Henry Laurens

Among the Founding Fathers, Laurens occupied a singular position: a Revolutionary statesman whose fortune was built almost entirely on the trafficking of human beings. As a senior partner in the largest slave-trading firm in North America, he helped facilitate the sale of more than eight thousand enslaved Africans in a single decade. His political career — including service as a Continental Congress president and diplomatic envoy — unfolded in direct continuity with that commercial history, not apart from it.

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March 6, 1902 - Li Mi

Li Mi commanded the remnant KMT forces that retreated into Burma after the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War, directing a years-long covert campaign — backed by Taiwan and the CIA — that repeatedly violated Burmese sovereignty and destabilized the country's borderlands. The failed incursions into Yunnan gave way to an entrenched irregular presence that became deeply intertwined with the Golden Triangle opium trade, laying groundwork for the region's narcotics economy that would persist for decades. Even after international pressure forced a nominal withdrawal in 1954, thousands of troops remained, continuing to operate beyond the reach of any formal authority.

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