MIAMI--A controversial government witness in the trial of two co-defendants of Manuel Noriega has died in an automobile accident, officials said yesterday.
Testimony by the witness, Ramon Navarro, allegedly tied the ousted Panamanian dictator and the co-defendants directly to the drug-smuggling voyage of the luxury yacht Krill, the central issue in the case.
Navarro was paid $170,000 and given immunity to hundreds of drug crimes in exchange for his testimony against Noriega co-defendant William Saldarriaga.
Richard Sharpstein, co-defendant Brian Davidow's attorney, said yesterday that Navarro's "testimony is central to this case, but I think his death is a total, bizarre coincidence."
A Metro Dade police report said Navarro's car crashed late Wednesday night in southwest Dade County, only a few miles from the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center where Noriega and Saldarriaga are housed.
The accident is still under investigation, according to the report, which gave no further details.
Read more in News
Law School AlumniRecommended Articles
-
Exiled Editor Raps NoriegaThe exiled editor of Panama's last independent newspaper yesterday attacked the Reagan Administration for failing to generate enough world opposition
-
Panama Clergy Condemn Election FraudPANAMA CITY, Panama--Churchgoers applauded nationwide yesterday as Roman Catholic clergy read a letter condemning fraud and violence in the national
-
Reagan Refuses to Discuss Noriega DealWASHINGTON--President Reagan refused to say yesterday whether he had approved the dropping of drug charges against Panamanian ruler Manuel Antonio
-
Noriega Announces 'State of Urgency'PANAMA CITY, Panama--The government of Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega declared a national "state of urgency" yesterday that allows it to
-
Navarro's Back in the Ivies AgainThe checkered career of first year Princeton football coach Frank Navarro has taken him from the shores of the Harlem
-
Overlooked Artist Discussed at SacklerUCLA film professor Chon A. Noriega examined the life and works of the Latino artist Raphael Montañez Ortiz in the latest of the Latin American Leventritt Lecture Series held at the Sackler Museum last night.