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Noriega plans to fight charges in Panama

MIAMI - Former dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega hopes to immediately board a plane for Panama when he is released from prison Sept. 9, and he plans to fight his conviction back home in the slayings of two political opponents, his attorney said.

MIAMI - Former dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega hopes to immediately board a plane for Panama when he is released from prison Sept. 9, and he plans to fight his conviction back home in the slayings of two political opponents, his attorney said.

Noriega's eight-year rule over Panama ended after the United States invaded Panama on Dec. 20, 1989, to force him from power. He is being held in the Federal Correctional Institution in Miami on drug-trafficking and money-laundering charges.

Noriega was sentenced to a 30-year term for protecting Colombian cocaine shipments through Panama in the 1980s but received reductions in his punishment for good behavior. Noriega's release in 2007 was first scheduled more than three years ago.

The exact date, Sept. 9, was posted on the U.S. Bureau of Prisons Web site more than a year ago.

"I'd say that is a firm date," Noriega's attorney, Frank Rubino, said Tuesday.

Noriega, 70, had parole hearings in 2002 and 2004 to try to cut short his 30-year sentence. He was not recommended for parole either time.

Rubino said his client planned to waive any deportation hearings and try to board a plane back to Panama the day he is released from prison.

"He wants to go back to Panama, and he wants to enjoy his grandchildren in quiet retirement," Rubino said.

Noriega has received two 20-year sentences in Panama for the 1985 decapitation of dissident leader Hugo Spadafora and the 1989 slaying of Maj. Moises Giroldi, who tried to overthrow him. Rubino said Noriega would fight the charges.

"When he goes back to Panama," Rubino said, "that case will be able to be reopened. Then he'll be able to adequately defend himself."