US technology entrepreneur John McAfee apparently took his own life in his prison cell after the Spanish high court authorised his extradition to the United States, his lawyer says.
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Known for his eccentric behaviour and videos, McAfee, 75, was a pioneer of anti-virus software and indicted in Tennessee on tax evasion charges.
He also was charged in a cryptocurrency fraud case in New York.
McAfee was arrested in the Barcelona airport then jailed there in October.
Prison authorities were investigating the cause of death.
Spain's high court agreed to extradite McAfee to the United States, a court document released on Wednesday said.
The provincial justice department confirmed that a US man aged 75 was found dead in his cell on Wednesday.
Jailed in Barcelona for about nine months, McAfee still had opportunities to appeal his conviction but could not stand more time in jail, the lawyer Javier Villalba said.
"This is the result of a cruel system that had no reason to keep this man in jail for so long," Villalba said.
Any final extradition order would also need to get approval from the Spanish cabinet.
During a court hearing last month, McAfee said that given his age, he would spend the rest of his life in jail if he were to be convicted in the US.
"I am hoping that the Spanish court will see the injustice of this," he said, adding "the United States wants to use me as an example".
McAfee, who sold his software company to Intel in 2011 and no longer had any involvement in the business, lived a colourful life.
He said in 2019 that he had not paid US income taxes for eight years for ideological reasons.
That year, he left the US to avoid trial, largely living on a mega-yacht with his wife, four large dogs, two security guards and seven staff.
He offered to help Cuba avoid a US trade embargo using cryptocurrency and sought to run for US president for the Libertarian Party.
McAfee, who said in 2018 that he had fathered at least 47 children, lived in Belize for several years.
He fled after police sought him for questioning in the 2012 murder of a neighbour.
He had a million followers on Twitter.
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with AP
Australian Associated Press