Bodyguard arrested for 'contradictions' in testimony at Maradona trial

(FILES) A mural depicting late Argentine fooball star Diego Maradona, painted by artist Alfredo Segatori, is seen on a wall at La Boca neighborhood in Buenos Aires, on November 4, 2021. Four years after the death of Argentine football legend Diego Maradona, seven healthcare professionals will go on trial on March 11, 2025, in San Isidro, Buenos Aires, accused of negligence that may have led to his death. Over a hundred witnesses, including members of Maradona's family and doctors who tended to him down the years, will take the stand over the course of the four-month trial. (Photo by JUAN MABROMATA / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION - TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION
A former bodyguard of Diego Maradona was arrested Tuesday for
allegedly giving false testimony in the trial of seven health professionals
accused of criminal negligence in the late football legend's medical care.
Julio Coria left the courtroom in the Buenos Aires suburb of San
Isidro in handcuffs after judges ruled in favor of the prosecution's claim that
he had lied under oath.
Coria was present in the house were Maradona died under conditions
prosecutors say amounted to negligence, and had tried to revive him with
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, according to evidence before the court.
Maradona died on November 25, 2020 at age 60, while recovering at
home from brain surgery for a blood clot. He had battled cocaine and
alcohol addiction for decades.
His seven-person medical team is on trial for what prosecutors
have called the "horror theater" of the final days of his life.
Jana, one of the player's five children who is a plaintiff in the
case along with her siblings and Maradona's sisters, told the court that she
and her sister Gianinna had visited their father a week before his death but
that he was "in bad humor."
She said Maradona's psychologist, who is among the defendants, had
advised them to hold off on further visits "until he (Maradona) asked to
see the family."
She added that her father was "bloated" during the visit
and echoed accounts from other witnesses that there was no medical equipment in
the house.
Maradona died of heart failure and acute pulmonary edema -- a
condition where fluid accumulates in the lungs -- two weeks after going under
the knife.
Coria had tried to resuscitate him until doctors arrived at the
house in the upmarket suburb of Tigre, near San Isidro, and declared him dead.
The bodyguard claimed in court Tuesday he had not spoken with
Leopoldo Luque, Maradona's personal physician and one of the defendants on
trial.
But the investigation revealed multiple text messages between the
two before and after Maradona's death.
The prosecution interrupted Coria's testimony several times,
accusing him of "contradictions and omissions," before asking for his
arrest.
The seven defendants in the case are accused of "homicide
with possible intent" -- pursuing a course of action despite knowing it
can lead to their patient's death.
Prosecutors allege the footballer was abandoned to his fate for a
"prolonged, agonizing period" before his death.
Nearly 120 witnesses are expected to testify in the long-delayed
trial expected to run until July.
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