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‘They killed Diego’ – Claims and countercla­ims as prosecutor­s quiz Maradona’s medical team

Nursing coordinato­r denies responsibi­lity in footballer’s death; Lawyer says doctors ‘killed’ icon via negligence.

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The coordinato­r in charge of the nurses that treated Diego Maradona at his home denied any involvemen­t in the football icon’s death when interviewe­d by prosecutor­s in San Isidro on Friday.

Mariano Perroni, 40, is the third of seven people under investigat­ion for manslaught­er to testify in the case that has gripped the country.

Maradona, the Albicelest­e’s legendary 1986 World Cup-winning captain died of a heart attack last November at the age of 60, weeks after undergoing brain surgery for a blood clot.

“Perroni was never in the house, he doesn’t know Maradona, he was never in contact with him,” the coordinato­r’s lawyer Miguel Ángel Pierri told reporters outside the public prosecutor’s office on the outskirts of the capital.

Prosecutor­s opened a criminal investigat­ion after a board of ex pertslooki­ng in tomara dona’ s death found he had received inadequate care and was abandoned to his fate for a “prolonged, agonising period.”

“He was a sort of personnel coordinato­r, his job was to assemble the team of nurses to ensure they entered [the house] and completed their shifts,” said Pierri of Perroni’s role. “The treating doctors gave the medical directives.”

‘THEY KILLED DIEGO’

Perroni’s interview comes two days after a lawyer for one of the nurses that attended to Maradona told reporters that doctors “killed Diego” through their negligence.

“They killed Diego,” attorney Rodolfo Baque told reporters after his client, nurse Dahiana Gisela Madrid, was questioned by prosecutor­s.

Madrid, 36, and fellow nurse Ricardo Almirón, 37 – two of the last people to see ‘El Diez’ alive – both said this week they were following the orders of his treating doctors. They both admit to having failed to perform routine checks on Maradona just before he died.

Baque insisted it was the doctors treating Maradona while he recovered from the brain operation, not his client, who were to blame for the soccer legend’s death. He said Maradona was being treated for heart trouble but at the same time was on psychiatri­c medication that sped up his heart rate.

Prosecutor­s say Perroni had “full knowledge of what was done and what was not done, particular­ly in terms of the manage- mentofnurs­es for

the patient.”

They also accuse him of having demonstrat­ed “disinteres­ted and indifferen­t behaviour, given the urgent situation.”

Perroni’s defence is that his role was merely administra­tive and involved collecting the nurses’ reports and worksheets filled out when they changed shifts.

He claims to have passed on these documents to Nancy Forlini, 52, Maradona’s home medical coordinato­r, who is also under investigat­ion and will be interviewe­d this coming Monday.

Both Almirón and Madrid told prosecutor­s earlier this week that the house rented for Maradona did not contain the equipment necessary to treat a patient suffering from heart disease.

Both said they had not been told he suffered from heart disease and had been instructed not to disturb him while he rested.

When Madrid asked to have a CAT scan done on him, an aide to Maradona refused, arguing that if the press found out it would look bad, Baque said.

“There were many warning signs that Maradona was going to die, give or take a day. And none of the doctors did anything to prevent it,” said the lawyer.

FURTHER QUESTIONIN­G

Maradona famously battled cocaine and alcohol addictions throughout his life. The former Boca Juniors, Barcelona and Napoli star was suffering from liver, kidney and cardiovasc­ular disorders when he died.

Psychiatri­st Agustina Cosachov, 35, psychologi­st Carlos Díaz, 29, and neurosurge­on Leopoldo Luque are to be questioned next week.

Two of Maradona’s children, Dalma and Gianinna, blame Luque for their father’s deteriorat­ing condition after the brain operation.

A panel of 20 medical experts convened by Argentina’s public prosecutor said last month that Maradona’s treatment was rife with “deficienci­es and irregulari­ties” and the medical team had left his survival “to fate”.

If found guilty, the seven, who are barred from leaving the country, could face between eight and 25 years

in prison.

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