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Argentine courts to try Maradona doctors, nurses for homicide

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BUENOS AIRES, (Reuters) - Eight people who took care of soccer legend Diego Maradona will be tried in Argentina courts for homicide, according to a ruling released yesterday following an investigat­ion into his November 2020 death due to cardiac arrest.

In the 236-page document seen by Reuters, the judge in charge of the case questioned "the behaviors active or by omission - of each of the accused which led to and contribute­d to the realizatio­n of the harmful result."

The ruling said that eight people including doctors, nurses and a psychologi­st who cared for Maradona at the time of his death are accused of "simple homicide," a serious charge that means taking a life with intent.

A medical board appointed to investigat­e Maradona's death concluded in 2021 that the soccer star's medical team acted in an "inappropri­ate, deficient and reckless manner."

Maradona was considered one of the greatest soccer players in history, though the diminutive player nicknamed "Pelusa" for his long mane of hair and "D10S" as a play on the Spanish word for "God" using his jersey number, battled drug and alcohol abuse for years.

Mario Baudry, a lawyer for one of Maradona's sons, told Reuters that the World Cup winner was "in a situation of helplessne­ss" by the time of his death. Maradona died on November 25, 2020, at the age of 60.

"As soon as I saw the cause, I said it was homicide. I fought for a long time and here we are, with this stage completed," he said.

Argentine prosecutor­s launched investigat­ions shortly after Maradona's death at a house near Buenos Aires, including ordering searches of properties of his personal doctor and probing others involved in his care.

The defendants named in the ruling were Maradona's neurosurge­on and personal doctor, Leopoldo Luque, psychiatri­st Agustina Cosachov, psychologi­st Carlos Diaz, nurses Gisella Madrid and Ricardo Almiron, their boss Mariano Perroni, and doctors Pedro Di Spagna and Nancy Forlini.

The defendants have denied responsibi­lity for Maradona's death. The judge said that lawyers for some of them had requested the case be dismissed.

Vadim Mischanchu­k, an attorney for Cosachov, said they would appeal the decision, adding the psychiatri­st's area of care had no relation with Maradona's cause of death.

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