Military officer Jorge Rafaél Videla took over Argentina during a coup d'état in 1976.
At the time, the country was straddled with a corrupt government and a battered economy, and was "besieged by attacks from guerrillas and death squads," with many Argentines "welcoming Videla's move, hoping the three-man military junta would put an end to the violence," according to Biography.com.
Videla tried to bring back economic growth via free-market reforms, and was "moderately successful." However, he closed the courts and gave legislative powers to a nine-man military commission.
His government conducted a notorious "'dirty war,' during which thousands of people considered to be subversive threats were abducted, detained and murdered," among them intellectuals, journalists, and educators.
The official estimate of people killed during his presidency is 9,000, but some sources believe the number is between 15,000 and 30,000.
He was sentenced to life in prison in 1985, but pardoned in 1990. He was once again put on trial in 2010, and received another life sentence. He died in prison in 2013.