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The criminal record of Kenneth Allen McDuff, spanning from the mid-1960s to his execution in 1998, represents a critical intersection of psychopathy, institutional corruption, and tectonic shifts in American jurisprudence. McDuff holds a singular and grim distinction in the history of the United States legal system as the only individual to be sentenced to death on three separate occasions for unrelated homicides, a fact that highlights the catastrophic failure of the Texas parole system during the late twentieth century. His case serves as a primary case study for criminologists examining the persistent nature of predatory violence and the social consequences of administrative negligence within the correctional framework. The following analysis explores the biographical, forensic, and legislative dimensions of a man whose release from prison led to one of the most prolific and preventable killing sprees in Texas history
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