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The figures born on this date span more than a century of criminal history, crossing continents and categories of violence. Jesse Pomeroy, convicted in 1870s Boston as the youngest person sentenced to life imprisonment in Massachusetts history, stands as one of the most disturbing cases in the annals of juvenile crime. Nearly a century later, Rosemary West became central to one of Britain's most harrowing murder investigations, her crimes against young women — including her own daughter — carried out alongside her husband over more than a decade. Alongside killers and organized crime figures, this date also produced Anatole Deibler, France's long-serving chief executioner, who administered state justice for four decades — a reminder that the machinery of death has always required its operators as well as its perpetrators.

November 29, 1959 - Ivo Karamanski

Karamanski rose to prominence during the chaotic post-communist reorganization of Bulgarian organized crime, a period when former state security assets and athletic networks frequently converged into criminal enterprise. His reputation rested less on direct violence — he was said to have avoided wielding weapons himself — than on the organizational authority that earned him the title of godfather within that milieu. The business holdings and the alleged ties to the communist-era security apparatus suggest a figure who understood how to operate across the formal and informal economies of a transitional state.

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November 29, 1859 - Jesse Pomeroy

His crimes began when he was barely into adolescence, making the scale of his violence — directed entirely at younger, smaller children — particularly unsettling to the Boston communities where it unfolded. The legal record that followed set a grim precedent: convicted of first-degree murder at fourteen, he became the youngest person in Massachusetts history to carry that distinction. The case forced courts and the public alike to confront questions about juvenile culpability that had few precedents to draw on.

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November 29, 1967 - Francisco de Assis Pereira

His method was patient and social — identifying women who appeared emotionally vulnerable, approaching them near subway stations, and presenting himself as a modeling scout. Operating across São Paulo's park system in the late 1990s, Pereira killed eleven women and assaulted nine more before a brief and self-undermining lapse led to his identification and arrest.

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November 29, 1953 - Rosemary West

Her case stands out not only for its duration and scope but for the domestic setting in which the crimes unfolded — a family home that concealed the remains of victims for years. The partnership with her husband amplified the harm each might have caused alone, and her active role throughout placed her among a rare cohort of women convicted of serial murder in Britain. She remains one of only a small number of people in England and Wales subject to a whole life order, meaning release is categorically excluded.

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November 29, 1863 - Anatole Deibler

France's longest-serving chief executioner, Deibler operated the guillotine across four decades at a time when press coverage and photography transformed public executions into national spectacles — and the executioner himself into a recognizable public figure. His career spanned the Belle Époque through the interwar period, touching some of the most sensational criminal cases of the era. The sheer duration and scale of his tenure, nearly four hundred executions, made him an institution within the French justice system rather than a peripheral figure within it.

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