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The figures born on this date span continents and decades, yet most share a common thread of violence enacted against the vulnerable. Vsevolod Merkulov rose through the Soviet security apparatus to serve as one of Stalin's principal instruments of state terror, bearing direct responsibility for mass executions including the Katyn massacre. The others represent a grimmer, more individual category of harm: Jürgen Bartsch, Alton Coleman, and Bai Baoshan each carried out serial murders that drew sustained public attention — Bartsch in postwar West Germany, Coleman across the American Midwest in a weeks-long 1984 rampage, and Bai in rural and urban China during the 1990s. The scale and contexts differ considerably, but the records they left behind remain subjects of criminological and historical scrutiny.

November 6, 1895 - Vsevolod Merkulov

A senior figure in the Soviet security apparatus during some of its most lethal years, Merkulov served as head of the NKGB during periods that encompassed mass deportations, wartime repression, and the institutionalized use of state terror. His tenure placed him in direct administrative authority over operations responsible for the deaths and displacement of vast numbers of Soviet citizens and others under Soviet control. He was ultimately tried and executed following the fall of Beria, the patron under whom much of his career had been built.

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November 6, 1946 - Jürgen Bartsch

Between 1962 and 1966, Bartsch lured young boys into an abandoned mine shaft near Langenberg, where he carried out a series of killings that shocked West Germany and forced a reckoning with how the justice system understood the relationship between childhood trauma and violent crime. His case became a landmark not only for its brutality but for the legal precedent it set, with the court's formal consideration of his psychosocial background — including years of institutional and domestic violence — marking a shift in how German courts approached criminal sentencing.

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November 6, 1958 - Bai Baoshan

What distinguished Bai Baoshan's late-1990s killing spree was its deliberate, escalating logic: each stage involved stealing a weapon from a law enforcement target to fund the next phase of violence, spanning multiple provinces and regions of China. His prison sentence, rather than interrupting this trajectory, appears to have sharpened it — he emerged and moved quickly toward armed robbery and homicide on an expanded scale. The breadth of his crimes, from Beijing to Hebei to Xinjiang, and the calculated elimination of a co-conspirator to consolidate stolen funds, made his case one of the most closely followed criminal prosecutions in China during that period.

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November 6, 1955 - Alton Coleman

Over roughly eight weeks in the summer of 1984, Coleman and his accomplice moved through the Midwest in a spree that crossed six state lines — a geographic range that complicated law enforcement efforts and allowed the violence to continue far longer than it might otherwise have. The scale of the crimes was sufficient to earn him death sentences in three separate states, an uncommon legal outcome that reflected both the breadth of the rampage and the severity of what investigators found in its wake.

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