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The figures born on this date span continents and centuries, yet share a common gravity: lives defined by violence, whether sanctioned, criminal, or somewhere in between. Albert Pierrepoint carried out hundreds of executions as Britain's most prolific hangman, a figure who later questioned the deterrent value of the work he had performed with meticulous professionalism. Slobodan Praljak, convicted of war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, dramatized his own end by drinking poison in the courtroom. Alongside them stand an Old West outlaw, a French serial killer who achieved unlikely folk-hero status in Chile, and Jimmy Chérizier, whose armed grip on parts of Port-au-Prince has shaped one of the most volatile political crises of the modern Caribbean.

March 30, 1871 - George Curry

A career built on bank and train robbery across the frontier West, his significance lies partly in what he passed on — Harvey Logan, whom he mentored, would go on to become one of the most violent members of the Wild Bunch. Curry's own trajectory, from regional outlaw to a founding presence in Cassidy's gang, reflects how criminal networks of the era were built through personal allegiance as much as opportunity.

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March 30, 1982 - Ra Diggs

His music career and his criminal operation ran in parallel — and ultimately, his own recordings became some of the most damning evidence against him at trial. As leader of the Murderous Mad Dogs in Brooklyn's Boerum Hill housing projects, he oversaw a criminal enterprise spanning drug distribution, extortion, and contract killing, while personally committing multiple murders across nearly a decade. The federal RICO conviction and resulting sentences — twelve life terms plus 105 years — reflected both the scale of the organization and the difficulty prosecutors faced in securing earlier convictions, given allegations of witness intimidation.

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March 30, 1867 - Émile Dubois

A French-born drifter who reinvented himself across multiple countries, Dubois left a trail of robberies and killings through South America before settling into a pattern of targeted murders in Chile — strangers lured or ambushed, their valuables taken. His victims were largely merchants and businessmen, and the class dynamics of Valparaíso at the time were enough for contemporaries to recast him as a figure of popular justice, a legend that outlasted his execution and persists in Chilean folk memory to this day.

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March 30, 1905 - Albert Pierrepoint

Britain's most prolific executioner of the twentieth century, Pierrepoint carried out his work with a professional detachment that became something of a public fixation — his name appearing in newspapers alongside the names of those he dispatched. Among those he executed were convicted Nazi war criminals hanged in the aftermath of World War II, alongside some of the most notorious killers tried in British courts during the postwar decades. Late in life he expressed doubt about whether capital punishment served as a deterrent, a reflection from the man who had administered it more than any other in his era.

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March 30, 1977 - Jimmy Chérizier

A former police officer who leveraged institutional knowledge and a talent for coalition-building to assume control of a federation of armed groups across Port-au-Prince, Chérizier represents a particular kind of post-state power in a country where central authority had already badly eroded. His orchestration of the largest jailbreak in Haitian history and the coordinated assaults of early 2024 were less random violence than a calculated campaign to force political outcomes — and they worked, contributing directly to the resignation of acting Prime Minister Ariel Henry.

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March 30, 1945 - Slobodan Praljak

A military commander turned war criminal, Praljak was convicted by an international tribunal for crimes committed against Bosniak civilians during the Croat–Bosniak War — offenses that included violations of the laws of war, crimes against humanity, and breaches of the Geneva Conventions. His case is remembered as much for its dramatic conclusion as for the convictions themselves: upon hearing his appeal rejected in open court, he swallowed poison and died within hours. The act was interpreted by many observers as a final, public rejection of accountability rather than an expression of remorse.

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