Boston Herald

Jimmy ‘Superfly’ Snuka, former pro wrestler, at 73

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PHILADELPH­IA — Former pro wrestler Jimmy “Superfly” Snuka, who earlier this month was found not competent to stand trial in the 1983 death of his girlfriend, has died at his son-in-law’s home in Florida. He was 73.

Attorney Robert Kirwan II said Mr. Snuka was taken yesterday to the home near Pompano Beach so that he could spend his last moments there. The family informed him shortly after 1 p.m. yesterday to say he had died, Kirwan said.

Lehigh County Judge Kelly Banach on Jan. 3 dismissed the murder case against the retired WWE star after the defense said he had dementia, was in hospice care in Florida and had six months to live.

Mr. Snuka’s daughter, Tamina Snuka, also a WWE wrestler, tweeted yesterday afternoon: “I LOVE YOU DAD” with a hashtag #RestWell.

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, also a WWE star, called it “sad news” in a post on his Twitter page.

Mr. Snuka was charged in 2015 with third-degree murder and involuntar­y manslaught­er in the death of Nancy Argentino, whose body was found more than three decades earlier in their Whitehall Township hotel room. Prosecutor­s allege she was beaten, while Mr. Snuka maintained she died from a fall.

Authoritie­s reopened the investigat­ion after The Morning Call newspaper raised questions about the case in 2013.

Banach had first ruled last summer that Mr. Snuka was not competent to stand trial after his attorney argued the exathlete suffers from dementia, partly due to the head trauma sustained over a long career in the ring. Prosecutor­s countered that Mr. Snuka’s brain shows normal signs of aging and suggested he might be feigning symptoms.

At a hearing last month to re-evaluate Mr. Snuka’s mental fitness, Mr. Snuka’s wife told the judge that the family struggles to keep him from leaving home during bouts of psychosis in which he thinks he’s late for a wrestling match. Banach then took time to review Mr. Snuka’s medical records before ruling.

Kirwan said Mr. Snuka died “due to complicati­ons from his ongoing medical problems.”

“The family is simply heartbroke­n. It’s been a long journey,” he said. “They are grateful to the judge for dismissing the charges against him.”

Mr. Snuka wrote about Argentino’s death in his 2012 autobiogra­phy, maintainin­g his innocence and saying the episode had ruined his life.

“Many terrible things have been written about me hurting Nancy and being responsibl­e for her death, but they are not true,” he wrote. “This has been very hard on me and very hard on my family. To this day, I get nasty notes and threats. It hurts. I never hit Nancy or threatened her.”

Kirwan said that he believes his client’s name will eventually be cleared.

Mr. Snuka, a native of Fiji who previously lived in Camden County, N.J., was known on the wrestling circuit for diving from the ropes and even the top of steel cages in a career that spanned decades. He was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 1996.

 ??  ?? MR. JIMMY SNUKA
MR. JIMMY SNUKA

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