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On this day, May 31: Atlanta Olympic Park bomber Eric Rudolph arrested







On May 31, 2003, Eric Robert Rudolph, the long-wanted fugitive in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics bombing, was arrested. File photo, courtesy of the FBI

Former presidential candidate and U.S. Senator John Edwards arrives at federal court in Greensboro, North Carolina, April 24, 2012. Edwards was acquitted of charges of taking illegal campaign contributions that day in 2012. File photo by Nell Redmond/UPI
Smoke rises from the Greenwood District on June 1, 1921, after the Tulsa Race Massacre. File photo, courtesy of the United States Library of Congress
On May 31, 1859, construction was completed and bells rang for the first time from the Big Ben clock tower in London. File photo by Hugo Philpott/UPI
French troops possess a captured German Maxim MG 08 machine gun mounted on a sled at Fort Douaumont, Verdun, circa 1930. 1916. Archive photo, courtesy of the Imperial War Museums

At this date in history:

In 1790, President George Washington signed a bill creating America’s first copyright law.

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In 1859, construction was completed and bells tolled for the first time from the Big Ben clock tower in London.

In 1889, a flood in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, killed more than 2,200 people.

In 1902, Britain and South Africa signed a peace treaty ending the Boer War.

In 1916, the Battle of Verdun exceeded the 100-day mark. This will continue for another 200 days, producing a casualty list estimated at 800,000 soldiers dead, wounded or missing.

In 1921, the Tulsa Race Massacre was sparked when a mob of white residents attacked black residents and businesses in the Greenwood District. The total number of people killed in the violence is unknown, with an Oklahoma commission created in 2001 estimating between 75 and 100 people killed. The number of displaced black residents was much greater.

In 1940, thick fog hovering over the English Channel prevented the German Luftwaffe from carrying out missions against the evacuation of Allied troops from Dunkirk.

Troops evacuated from Dunkirk aboard a destroyer about to dock at Dover, England, May 31, 1940. File photo, courtesy of the Imperial War Museum

In 1985, seven federally insured banks in Arkansas, Minnesota, Nebraska and Oregon were closed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. It was the most closures in a single day since the FDIC was established in 1934.

In 1996, Israeli voters elected opposition Likud party leader Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister.

In 2003, Eric Robert Rudolph, the long-wanted fugitive in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics bombing and attacks on abortion clinics and a gay nightclub, was arrested while searching through a dumpster in North Carolina. Rudolph, whose bombings killed two people and injured many others, was sentenced to four life terms in prison.

In 2005, Mark Felt admitted that, although he was the FBI’s No. 2 man, he was “Deep Throat,” the shadowy contact who aided Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein during the he Watergate break-in of 1972 led to US President Richard. Nixon’s resignation.

File photo by Alexis C. Glenn/UPI

In 2012, John Edwards of North Carolina, a former U.S. senator and presidential candidate, was acquitted of accepting illegal campaign contributions, and a judge declared a mistrial for five others charges brought against him.

In 2014, U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, 28, captured in Afghanistan almost five years earlier, was released by the Taliban in exchange for five detainees at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba. In March 2015, the Army announced that Bergdahl had been charged with desertion.

In 2019, a shooting at a civic center in Virginia Beach, Virginia, left 12 victims and the shooter – a disgruntled former employee – died.

In 2021, China announced plans to allow couples to have a third child, abandoning its controversial two-child policy amid falling birth rates and an aging population.

File photo by Stephen Shaver/UPI