Skip to main content

13

The figures born on this date span centuries and continents, ranging from the celebrated to the condemned. Donald Henry Gaskins, who claimed to be among the most prolific killers in South Carolina's history, and Christopher Wilder, whose cross-country abductions in 1984 drew a nationwide manhunt, represent the darkest strain of this roster — men whose violence was methodical and wide in reach. Christopher Coke commanded a different kind of power, running the Shower Posse out of Kingston's Tivoli Gardens with an authority that rivaled the Jamaican state itself. Set apart from the rest by both era and legacy, Miyamoto Musashi remains one of feudal Japan's most formidable swordsmen — a figure whose life of combat has, over time, passed into mythology.

March 13, 1969 - Christopher Coke

He inherited the Shower Posse from his father at twenty-three and built it into an organization capable of exporting cocaine and marijuana into the United States at scale, while simultaneously functioning as the de facto governing authority of Tivoli Gardens — providing services the state did not, and commanding loyalty strong enough that his 2010 arrest triggered open violence in the streets of West Kingston.

Read more …March 13, 1969 - Christopher Coke

  • Last updated on .

March 13, 1933 - Donald Henry Gaskins

Operating largely in rural South Carolina over several decades, Gaskins managed to kill repeatedly across a range of methods and circumstances before authorities fully grasped the scale of his crimes. His ability to continue killing even after incarceration — engineering the death of a death-row inmate through explosives — distinguished him from most other convicted killers of his era. The breadth of his methods and the length of his criminal record made him one of the more extensively documented serial killers to emerge from the American South.

Read more …March 13, 1933 - Donald Henry Gaskins

  • Last updated on .

March 13, 1945 - Christopher Wilder

Over six weeks in early 1984, Wilder moved across more than 6,000 miles of the United States, leaving a trail of abductions, assaults, and killings that spanned sixteen states before his death brought the spree to an end. What distinguished his case was the combination of scale, speed, and method — he had spent decades refining his approach to gaining the trust of young women before his crimes escalated to murder. The cross-country nature of the spree complicated law enforcement's ability to respond, and investigators have since connected him to additional crimes reaching back to the 1960s.

Read more …March 13, 1945 - Christopher Wilder

  • Last updated on .

March 13, 1958 - Robert Eugene Brashers

Brashers evaded identification entirely during his lifetime, dying in 1999 without ever being named as a suspect in any of his killings — a fact that shaped the long delay in understanding the full scope of what he had done. His crimes spanned multiple states over nearly a decade and targeted women and girls with particular violence. It was only through advances in investigative genetic genealogy, years after his death, that investigators were able to connect him to a series of cold cases, including the 1991 Austin yogurt shop murders, which had remained unsolved for over thirty years.

Read more …March 13, 1958 - Robert Eugene Brashers

  • Last updated on .

March 13, 1584 - Miyamoto Musashi

Musashi occupies an unusual place on this site — his harm was personal and consensual by the standards of his era, confined to the dueling ground rather than directed at populations or institutions. What earns him a entry is the cold, methodical efficiency with which he ended lives across 62 recorded duels, never losing, and the philosophical architecture he built around that record in The Book of Five Rings, which codified killing as a discipline.

Read more …March 13, 1584 - Miyamoto Musashi

  • Last updated on .