Argentines will know how their "God" died.

Eight health professionals will be tried for manslaughter with aggravating circumstances, potential negligence, at the end of the investigation into the death in 2020 of Diego Maradona, with a worn body, alone on a convalescent bed.

A judge from San Isidro (north of Buenos Aires) followed on Wednesday June 22 the requisitions in April from the prosecution, and sent these practitioners to trial, including a neurosurgeon and attending physician, a clinical doctor, a psychiatrist, a psychologist, a manager nurse, nurses.

Maradona died of a cardio-respiratory crisis on November 25, 2020 at the age of 60, alone, on a medical bed at a residence in Tigre, north of Buenos Aires, where he was recovering from neurosurgery for a hematoma on the head.

The former football star suffered from multiple pathologies: kidney and liver problems, heart failure, neurological deterioration and addiction to alcohol and psychotropic drugs.

The eight suspects are facing trial for "simple homicide with dolus eventualis", an offense which is characterized when a person commits negligence knowing that it could lead to someone's death.

The neurosurgeon Leopoldo Luque, the psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov, the psychologist Carlos Diaz, the medical coordinator Nancy Forlini, the nursing coordinator Mariano Perroni, the nurses Ricardo Almiron and Dahiana Madrid, the clinical doctor Pedro Pablo Di Spagna will thus have to appear.

"Abandoned to its fate"

In his recitals, Judge Orlando Diaz considered that "each of the defendants, by the place he specifically occupied in the overall configuration (...) would have exercised joint control of the facts", determining the final event "in depending on the contributions of each of them".

The magistrate noted "the absence of intervention, of any saving action which could have prevented death".

They face sentences ranging from 8 to 25 years in prison but should appear free at trial, the San Isidro prosecutor's office having never requested their pre-trial detention.

No date has been advanced at this stage for the holding of the trial.

According to prosecutors, the staff in charge of Maradona had been "protagonist of an unprecedented, totally deficient and reckless hospitalization at home", and had committed a "series of improvisations, mismanagement and defaults".

A damning expert report, produced in May 2021 by a medical commission as part of the investigation, concluded that the former player had been "left to his fate" by his medical team, leading him to a "period of 'prolonged agony'.

Doctors 'did nothing'

The suspects had all during their hearings, defended their actions, within the framework of their field of competence, at the bedside of the champion.

By sending the ball back into the court of other professionals.

Thus Leopoldo Luque, attending physician and confidant of Maradona, said he was "proud of what (he) did", ensuring at all times that he had "tried to help" Maradona.

He was "a family doctor, not in charge of home hospitalization", his lawyer had pointed out.

The psychologist Diaz had estimated that his work as an addiction specialist had had "no kind of interference" with the death, this one having had "nothing to do with a clinical or psychiatric question".

And the nurse Dahiana Madrid, who had discovered Maradona lifeless, had assured to have only "comply with the indications of the doctors".

There were "a lot of warning signs that Maradona was going to die overnight. And none of the doctors did anything to prevent it," his lawyer pleaded.

With AFP

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