Who’s the Daddy? Maradona legend continues with court ordering DNA is preserved

December 17 – The body of Diego Maradona “must be conserved” in case his DNA is needed in a paternity case, an Argentine court has ruled.

Maradona died of a heart attack last month and was buried on November 26 in a cemetery just outside Buenos Aires. The court said the body must not be cremated at some later date.

Five recognised children and six others are part of a complex inheritance process in Argentina. One of the six, Magali Gil, 25, says she found out two years ago that the football icon was her biological father.

The ruling from the court said, “Ms. Gil requests that a study be carried out … and that for this purpose the acting prosecutor’s office send a DNA sample.”

For 25 years, Maradona insisted he had only two daughters, Dalma and Giannina, born in 1987 and 1988 to Claudia Villafane, his childhood sweetheart who was his wife for 24 years.

Since their divorce, Maradona has admitted to fathering at least five additional children in Italy, Cuba and Argentina through extramarital affairs. He is alleged to have at least six other children, two of whom are said to have tried to get a DNA test before he died.

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