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The figures born on this date span more than a century of recorded violence and abuse of power, ranging from the last authoritarian sultan of the Ottoman Empire to architects of Nazi terror to a mid-century American serial killer who exploited law enforcement itself as cover. Abdul Hamid II, whose long reign ended with the Armenian massacres of the 1890s and the erosion of Ottoman constitutional governance, and Paul Otto Radomski, an SS functionary embedded in the machinery of the Holocaust, represent state-sanctioned brutality at institutional scale. Scott Lee Kimball offers a different register entirely — a confidence man who turned an FBI informant arrangement into a license to kill. Together they illustrate how notoriety takes root across vastly different systems of power and accountability.

September 21, 1902 - Paul Otto Radomski

His own SS colleagues considered him brutal, and an SS judge at his Greek trial described him as a drunkard "primitive in all his thoughts and feelings" — a rare candor that underscores just how far outside accepted norms his conduct fell even within a system defined by organized violence. As commandant of two concentration camps, first at Syrets in occupied Ukraine and then at Haidari near Athens, he imposed regimes of deliberate cruelty: punishment for minor infractions, labor designed not for productivity but to destroy morale, and personal acts of lethal violence carried out before assembled prisoners. Eyewitness testimony from Haidari places the number executed during his tenure in the hundreds, with thousands more processed through the camp's systematic brutality. His career ended not through Allied justice but through a drunken altercation with his own adjutant, which led to his demotion and removal — a measure of how thoroughly he had made himself ungovernable even to his superiors.

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September 21, 1966 - Scott Lee Kimball

His case sits at an unusual intersection of white-collar crime and homicide — a skilled forger and check fraudster whose financial schemes gave him the tools to obscure his killings, making victims appear alive through fabricated records long after their deaths. The FBI's use of him as a paid informant during the period he was actively murdering raises unresolved questions about institutional oversight and the costs of that arrangement. Investigators have linked him to as many as twenty-five deaths in total, though only four convictions were secured.

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September 21, 1842 - Abdul Hamid II

His reign began with a constitution and ended with its suspension — a pattern that defined the decades that followed. Ruling as an autocrat for thirty years, Abdul Hamid II presided over the systematic massacre of Armenians and Assyrians in the 1890s, events that drew international condemnation and prefigured the catastrophes of the following century. His use of pan-Islamic ideology and a vast network of spies and informants allowed him to maintain control over a weakening empire even as its territorial losses mounted.

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