Court rejects appeal over ‘lenient’ Pistorius sentence

Court rejects appeal over ‘lenient’ Pistorius sentence
Judge Thokozile Masipa reads her verdict. (Reuters)
Updated 26 August 2016
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Court rejects appeal over ‘lenient’ Pistorius sentence

Court rejects appeal over ‘lenient’ Pistorius sentence

JOHANNESBURG: A South African judge on Friday rejected the state’s appeal seeking a longer jail sentence for Paralympian Oscar Pistorius, who is serving a six-year term for killing his girlfriend three years ago.
Thokozile Masipa, the same judge who imposed the sentence last month, said in the High Court in Johannesburg that she was not persuaded there was a “reasonable prospect of success on appeal.”
“The application for leave to appeal against the sentence is dismissed with costs,” she said.
Masipa presided over Pistorius’s lengthy trial, and South African law empowers the trial judge to grant or reject applications to appeal their own judgments.
After Masipa’s decision, the prosecution is now left with the option of directly petitioning the Supreme Court of Appeal to ask it to toughen the sentence. The prosecution had been pushing for a longer sentence against the fallen 29-year-old sprint star over the 2013 murder of Reeva Steenkamp.
“The sentence of six years is shockingly lenient and disturbingly inappropriate,” prosecutor Gerrie Nel argued in court.
Pistorius shot Steenkamp, a model and law graduate, in the early hours of Valentine’s Day in 2013, saying he mistook her for a burglar when he fired four times through the door of his bedroom toilet.
At his sentencing in July, Masipa listed mitigating factors for ordering Pistorius to serve less than half the minimum 15-year term for murder, including the athlete’s claim he believed he was shooting an intruder.
“I’m of the view that a long term of imprisonment will not serve justice,” Masipa said.
But Nel argued that the six-year sentence was flawed and that it should be appealed.
“Another court may find that this court misdirected itself,” said Nel.
Masipa was also the judge who had originally convicted Pistorius of the lesser charge of culpable homicide, the equivalent of manslaughter, in 2014.
An appeals court upgraded his conviction to murder in December last year.
Pistorius’s defense said it was an “insult” to suggest that the court’s sentencing had been flawed and that it was time the case came to a close.
“Enough is enough. What does the state want?” defense lawyer Barry Roux said.
“This case has been exhausted beyond a point of any conceivable exhaustion,” he added, accusing the prosecution of sending Pistorius “like a ping pong ball between courts.”
The prosecution still has recourse.
“Any party who has to apply to the trial judge for permission to appeal and is unsuccessful, the option is open for them to petition the Supreme Court of Appeal,” said Stephan Terblanche, a law professor at the University of South Africa.
Terblanche said the Supreme Court which consists of five judges would study the grounds of appeal and those opposing the appeal, and make a decision without conducting a hearing.