In 2003, Argentine Federal Judge
María Servini de Cubría asked Chile for the extradition of Townley's wife, Mariana Callejas, who was accused of involvement in Carlos Prats' murder. But, in July 2005, Chilean judge Nibaldo Segura of the Court of Appeals stated that the case cannot proceed, arguing that Callejas was already being tried in Chile. Questioned in March 2005 by Judge Alejandro Madrid about former Chilean Christian Democrat President
Eduardo Frei Montalva's death, Michael Townley acknowledged links between
Colonia Dignidad, led by
Paul Schäfer and
DINA on one side and the Laboratorio de Guerra Bacteriológica del Ejército (Bacteriological Warfare Laboratory of the Army) on the other. It is suspected the toxin that supposedly killed Frei Montalva in a Santa Maria clinic in 1982 was created there. This new laboratory in Colonia Dignidad would have been, according to him, the continuation of the laboratory the DINA had in Via Naranja de lo Curro where he worked with DINA biochemist
Eugenio Berríos; despite this claim, Townley previous acknowledged that the laboratory where he based his production of toxins was located in the basement of his home. In 1992, Townley testified that the Spanish diplomat
Carmelo Soria, assassinated in 1976, had been detained at his home on Via Naranja in the sector of Lo Curro. There he was tortured and, since he did not speak, subjected to
sarin (which had been made by Berríos). Soria was then detained and tortured again in the
Villa Grimaldi and his case was included in Spanish magistrate
Baltasar Garzon's
indictment of Pinochet. In May 2016, Chile's Supreme Court asked the United States to extradite Chilean Armando Fernandez Larios, Townley and Cuban Virgilio Paz, all three of whom were linked to the September 21, 1976, car-bombing murders in Washington, D.C. In November 2002, Soria's widow, Laura Gonzalez-Vera, along with the personal representative of Soria's estate, sued Townley seeking damages for Soria's torture and killing. When Townley defaulted, the district court entered a $7 million judgment against him. The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the foreign ministry of Chile should file an extradition request to the United States for Michael Townley and Armando Fernández Larios. In May 2016, the
Supreme Court of Chile asked for the extradition of Townley, Virgilio, and Armando Fernández Larios for their alleged roles in the murder of Soria in 1976. Townley remained in the U.S. Witness Protection Program and his whereabouts were unknown. In August 2023, however, it was reported that a recent conviction which was given to six former DINA agents and two former army officers would be the "final conviction" issued by the Supreme Court of Chile for Soria's murder.
2023 confessions publication On November 22, 2023, Townley's confessions about his four-year career as a DINA assassin were "reproduced in full and published together" for the first time by the
National Security Archive. Despite this, the National Security Archive's website also acknowledged that "Over the years, references to Townley's confession have appeared in books and articles as researchers and reporters gained access to Chile's judicial files." In another "confession," dated March 14, 1978, Townley detailed how he was recruited by DINA officials in 1974 and how he served DINA's lead international assassin. In a U.S. Department of Justice affidavit dated August 23, 1991, U.S. Justice Department attorney Eric B. Marcy noted how the United States obtained the documents from his wife between 1982 and 1990, stating, among other things, that the confessions “were prepared by Townley prior to his expulsion from Chile in order to protect him from the fugitives Manuel Contreras and Pedro Espinoza and to protect his expulsion from Chile." In a letter from March 14, 1976, Townley noted how he received the order to assassinate Orlando Letelier from Pedro Espinoza.
Alleged role in Pablo Neruda's death In 2011, an investigation was launched into the death of
Pablo Neruda, partially on the strength of a statement from his driver that he was injected with a poison by a man calling himself "Dr. Price" whose description closely matched that of Townley. Police examined this link while Neruda's body was exhumed and tested for possible toxins. On November 8, 2013, the test results were released, with head of Chile's medical legal service Patricio Bustos stating that "No relevant chemical substances have been found that could be linked to Mr. Neruda's death". However, Carroza said that he is waiting for the results of the last scientific test conducted in May 2015, which found that Neruda was infected with the
Staphylococcus aureus bacterium, which can be highly toxic and result in death if modified. The Chilean government suggested in 2015 that it was "highly probable that a third party" was responsible for Neruda's death, and a forensics test taken through samples of Neruda's remains in 2017 rejected Neruda's "official cause of death," which had been listed as
prostate cancer. However, scientists who exhumed Neruda's body in 2013 had backed claims that he was suffering from prostate cancer. It was also acknowledged that Neruda's driver was the one who claimed he was poisoned. ==In literature==