Category
page 1Male murderers
Joseph Goebbels
Nazi politician and Propaganda Minister (1897–1945)

Gavrilo Princip
Bosnian assassin (1894–1918)

Lee Harvey Oswald
Lee Harvey Oswald was a U.S. Marine veteran who assassinated John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States, on November 22, 1963.
Oscar Pistorius
South African sprinter and convicted murderer (born 1986)

Mehmet Ali Ağca
Turkish contract killer (born 1958)
Mark David Chapman
John Lennon's killer
Phil Spector
American record producer (1939–2021)

Chris Benoit
Canadian professional wrestler and murderer (1967–2007)

Timothy McVeigh
American domestic anti-government terrorist (1968–2001)
John Gotti
American crime boss (1940–2002)

Jihadi John
British terrorist and murderer

Mohamed Atta
Egyptian hijacker and one of the ringleaders of the September 11 attacks (1968–2001)
James Earl Ray
American criminal, convicted for the murder of civil rights activist and Nobel peace prize laureate Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968

Seung-Hui Cho
South Korean mass murderer; perpetrator of the Virginia Tech massacre (1984-2007)

Armin Meiwes
German cannibal

Charles J. Guiteau
Charles Julius Guiteau was an American office seeker who assassinated 20th United States president James A. Garfield in 1881. A failed lawyer suffering from mental illness, Guiteau delusionally believed he had played a major role in Garfield's election victory, for which he should have been rewarded with a consulship. Guiteau felt frustrated and offended by the Garfield administration's rejections of his applications to serve in Vienna or Paris to such a degree that he shot Garfield in Washington, D.C. on July 2, 1881. Garfield died on September 19 from infections related to the wounds. Caught immediately after shooting Garfield, Guiteau was tried, convicted, and publicly executed by hanging on June 30, 1882.

Sidney Reilly
Russian-born adventurer and secret agent (1873–1925)

Richard Kuklinski
American criminal (1935–2006)
Charles Whitman
American mass murderer and spree killer; perpetrator of the University of Texas Tower shooting (1941–1966)
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold
American mass murderers (1981–1999)
Johnny Lewis
American-Canadian actor (1983-2012)
Leopold and Loeb
American kidnapper-murderer duo, committed "the crime of the century"

Lyle and Erik Menendez
Joseph Lyle Menendez and Erik Galen Menendez, commonly referred to as the Menendez brothers, are American brothers convicted of killing their parents, José and Mary Louise "Kitty" Menendez, in their Beverly Hills home in 1989.
Christopher Scarver
American convicted murderer of Jesse Anderson and Jeffrey Dahmer (as well as a previous murder conviction)
Abd al-Rahman ibn Muljam
Kharijite assassin of Ali ibn Abi Talib (died 661)
Aaron Hernandez
Aaron Josef Hernandez was an American professional football player who was a tight end in the National Football League (NFL). He played three seasons with the New England Patriots until his arrest and conviction for the murder of Odin Lloyd.
Joe Meek
English record producer (1929–1967)
Yvan Colonna
Corsican independentist and criminal (1960–2022)
Abdelbaset al-Megrahi
Libyan mass murderer (1952-2012)
Clyde Barrow
American bank robber (1909-1934)
Albert Salmi
American actor (1928–1990)
Edwin Valero
Venezuelan boxer (1981-2010)
Stephen Paddock
American mass murderer (1953–2017)

James Holmes
American mass murderer, perpetrator of the July 20, 2012 mass shooting at a Century movie theater in Aurora, Colorado
Khalid al-Islambuli
Egyptian military officer (1955-1982)

Richard Speck
Richard Benjamin Speck was an American mass murderer who killed eight student nurses in their South Deering, Chicago, residence by stabbing, strangling, slashing their throats, or a combination of the three on the night of July 13–14, 1966. Speck also raped one victim before killing her. A ninth potential victim, student nurse Corazon Amurao, survived by hiding beneath a bed.
Hawley Harvey Crippen
American executed homeopath (1862–1910)
Joachim Gottschalk
German actor (1904–1941)
Andrew Kehoe
American mass murderer and bomber (1872–1927)
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Australian terrorist (born 1990)
Robert William Fisher
American fugitive
Jhon Jairo Velásquez
Colombian contract killer under Pablo Escobar (1962-2020)
John Ausonius
Swedish murderer
Remig Stumpf
German cyclist (1966-2019)
Ira Einhorn
American murderer (1940–2020)
Bobby Beausoleil
American criminal
Narayan Apte
Murder Convicted, Indian entrepreneur and activist (1911–1949)
Terry Nichols
American domestic terrorist
Phillip Adams
American football cornerback (1988–2021)
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French and Algerian Spree Killer (1988-2012)
Gerard John Schaefer
American serial killer (1946–1995)
Jovan Belcher
American football player (1987–2012)
Marc Lépine
Canadian mass murderer (1964-1989)

William Unek
African spree killer, killed 57 people at two separate slayings in 1954 and 1957
Adam Lanza
American spree killer; perpetrator of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting (Born 1992–Died 2012)
Yaser Abdel Said
man accused of murdering his two teenage daughters
Nikolas Cruz
American mass shooter and former student of Stoneman Douglas High School
Mamoru Takuma
Japanese mass murderer responsible for the 2001 Osaka School Massacre (1963–2004)
Amedy Coulibaly
perpetrator of Montrouge shooting and Hyper Cacher hostage crisis
C-Murder
Corey Miller (born March 9, 1971), better known by his stage name C-Murder, is an American rapper. He initially gained fame in the mid-1990s as a part of his brother Master P's label No Limit Records, primarily as a member of the label's supergroup, TRU. Miller went on to release several solo albums of his own through the label, including 1998's platinum Life or Death. C-Murder has released nine albums altogether on six different labels, No Limit Records, TRU Records, Koch Records, Asylum Records, RBC Records, and Venti Uno.