Rodolfo Walsh was one such journalist, who fled Buenos Aires and created an underground news network. Walsh wore thick rimmed glass and a thin suit with a tie. He was always clean shaven. He secretly published and distributed resistance leaflets in the city on a regular basis. In doing so, he quickly became a target for assassination, and so did his daughter, Victoria. Now, people who resisted, knew that if they were taken away by the military police, they would be tortured into revealing information that would lead to the imprisonment and death of the people they worked with in this underground resistant. Victoria, was a known contact of her fathers and military police decided it was time to arrest her. She, like other resistors, chose suicide rather than capture. After an incident known as the Battle of Corro Street, in which Victoria and others fought with the police, she took her own life to avoid being captured. She was 26 years old. Rodolfo Walsh continued publishing his resistance leaflets. He would sneak into the Buenos Aires to hand deliver them to a contact who would distribute them. After making a delivery, one of his associates had been captured by the police, and tortured into tricking Walsh to meet with him. When Walsh arrived to meet his associate on March 25, 1977, he was met with heavily armed military police instead. They intended to arrest him, but he had other plans. Walsh, carried a small pistol in his coat pocket. He pulled it out, took cover behind a tree and began firing first. He knew he would be killed regardless of the outcome. The military police fired at him with automatic machine guns, littering the tree and the buildings behind him with bullets. Walsh hit one of the MPs, but was eventually overwhelmed by the guns. The military dictatorship ended in 1983. Dozens of military officers were imprisoned for their actions during that time. It took until October of 2005 for some of the military personnel who were involved in Rodolfo Walsh’s death to be arrested. Most recently, in 2011, a former Commander in the Argentine Marine Corps was sentenced to life in prison for his involvement in the deaths of people during the dictatorship.

It's Illegal to name your child after Lionel Messi