By Lucila Sigal
BUENOS AIRES, April 14 (Reuters) - A new trial over the death of Argentine soccer legend Diego Maradona will begin on Tuesday, with seven members of his medical team charged with negligent homicide nearly a year after a previous case collapsed in a mistrial https://www.reuters.com/sports/soccer/diego-maradonas-homicide-trial-declared-invalid-says-local-media-2025-05-29/.
An enduring presence in Argentina - from towering murals https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/giant-new-mural-celebrates-warrior-maradona-buenos-aires-2022-10-24/ to tattoos https://widerimage.reuters.com/story/argentines-celebrate-eternal-love-for-maradona-with-tattoos - Maradona died https://www.reuters.com/sports/soccer-world-mourns-argentina-great-maradona-dies-aged-60-2020-11-25/ on November 25, 2020, at 60, after a heart attack while he was recuperating from brain surgery to remove a blood clot.
A court in San Isidro, near Buenos Aires, will hear testimony from just under 100 witnesses as it tries Maradona's medical team over alleged negligence in the death of the 1986 World Cup champion.
His medical team has denied wrongdoing. The defendants are psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov, neurosurgeon Leopoldo Luque, psychologist Carlos Angel Diaz, physician Nancy Edith Forlini, nurse Ricardo Almiron, head nurse Mariano Ariel Perroni, and physician Pedro Pablo Di Spagna. An eighth defendant, nurse Dahiana Madrid, will be tried in a separate jury trial, with no date yet set.
Two months into the first trial https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/argentina-kicks-off-trial-into-death-soccer-star-diego-maradona-2025-03-11/, which started last March, a mistrial was declared when one of three judges, Julieta Makintach, resigned after video surfaced showing her being interviewed by a camera crew in the corridors of the courthouse and in her office as part of a documentary, in breach of judicial rules.
The retrial will require both prosecutors and defense lawyers to reassess their strategies after the first trial aired photographs, videos, audio recordings and forensic evidence. Many witnesses, including Maradona's children and his former wife, Claudia Villafane, have already testified.
Prosecutors argued in the initial trial that medical professionals broke treatment protocols and that the home where Maradona was recovering from surgery amounted to a "theatre of horror," where necessary care was not provided.
The defense countered that his death was inevitable given his longstanding health problems. Maradona struggled for decades with cocaine and alcohol addiction.
The negligence charges emerged in 2021 after prosecutors appointed a medical board https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/maradona-care-deficient-reckless-before-death-medical-board-report-finds-2021-04-30/ to investigate Maradona's death. The panel concluded his medical team acted in an "inappropriate, deficient and reckless" manner.
If convicted, the defendants could face prison sentences ranging between eight and 25 years.
(Reporting by Lucila Sigal; Writing by Leila Miller; Editing by Cassandra Garrison and Rosalba O'Brien)




