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The figures born on this date span continents, centuries, and categories of harm — from the bureaucratic machinery of state terror to the violence of individual criminality. Rudolf Höss administered Auschwitz as its longest-serving commandant, overseeing the murder of an estimated 1.1 million people with the detached efficiency of a functionary. Augusto Pinochet, who seized power in Chile through a military coup in 1973, presided over a regime responsible for torture, forced disappearance, and the deaths of thousands. Against these architects of institutionalized violence, this date also counts an American outlaw of the frontier West and Richard Cottingham, a New Jersey serial killer whose crimes across the 1970s earned him multiple life sentences.

November 25, 1868 - William Ellsworth Lay

A trusted lieutenant within one of the American West's most organized outlaw networks, Lay operated at the operational core of the Wild Bunch during its most active years of robbery and evasion. His role went beyond rank-and-file membership — he was among Butch Cassidy's closest confederates, participating in train and bank robberies across the frontier before his eventual capture and imprisonment.

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November 25, 1901 - Rudolf Höss

As the longest-serving commandant of Auschwitz, he oversaw the industrialization of mass killing on a scale without precedent, refining procedures and infrastructure that processed victims by the hundreds of thousands. His role was not merely administrative — he actively sought more efficient methods, including the adoption of Zyklon B in the camp's gas chambers. The memoirs he wrote during his imprisonment before execution remain a primary document of how the machinery of genocide was built and maintained from within.

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November 25, 1946 - Richard Cottingham

Cottingham operated for roughly fifteen years before his arrest, and the span of his confirmed crimes across two states suggests an ability to avoid detection that outlasted most investigations of the era. The mutilation of some victims — and the removal of identifying features — reflected deliberate effort to obstruct identification, a pattern that complicated law enforcement efforts for years. His later claims of up to eighty unconfirmed killings, made under non-prosecution agreements, have never been fully resolved, leaving the true scope of his activity uncertain.

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November 25, 1915 - Augusto Pinochet

His rise through Chile's military establishment was unremarkable until September 1973, when he led the coup that ended South America's longest-running democracy and inaugurated nearly two decades of authoritarian rule. Under his regime, thousands were killed, tortured, or forcibly disappeared through a systematic apparatus of state repression. The involvement of American intelligence services in facilitating the overthrow of a democratically elected government gave his seizure of power a Cold War dimension that extended well beyond Chile's borders.

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