21 October 2014

Pistorius given five years


The BBC has their British take on Oscar:
South African athlete Oscar Pistorius has been given five years in jail for killing his girlfriend Reeva SteenkampJudge Thokozile Masipa also gave Pistorius a three-year suspended sentence for a firearms charge.
The parents of Reeva Steenkamp told the BBC they were happy with the sentence and relieved the case was over. The defense said it expected Pistorius to serve about ten months in prison.
Pistorius was convicted of culpable homicide, but cleared of murder. Prosecutors had called for a minimum ten-year term, and the defense had argued for community service and house arrest.
Pistorius showed little reaction to the sentence other than to wipe his eyes before being led away to the cells downstairs. He was then driven away from court in a police van (photo, above) to Pretoria's Kgosi Mampuru prison. It is expected that he will be held in a one-man cell in the hospital wing.
Correctional services spokesman Manelisi Wolela later told the AFP news agency that Pistorius was "already accommodated at Kgosi Mampuru".
Defense lawyer Barry Roux said his client was expected to serve ten months in prison, with the rest under house arrest.
Dup De Bruyn, a lawyer for the Steenkamp family, told Reuters that "justice was served", although he believed Pistorius would probably serve two years. 
Andrew Harding of BBC News, reports from Pretoria:
Before he went down the stairs and out of court, Oscar Pistorius slipped off his expensive watch and handed it to a relative. It seems the athlete probably knew his sentence beforehand, which helps explains the subdued atmosphere in court today.
This case has revealed plenty about South Africa: its gun culture, the strengths and inadequacies of its police and prisons. But above all it has been a simple story, about the rise and fall of a global icon.
As the crowds and cameras drift away from the courthouse, what lingers is the sense of waste. Of lives and careers for sure. But of time, too.
A man and a woman went into a bathroom. Only one came out alive. As the judge made clear, the trial should have been over in a matter of weeks. Instead it turned into a tortuous, overwrought epic.
Pistorius' uncle, Arnold, said: "We accept the judgment. Oscar will embrace the opportunity to pay back to society." He appealed to the media to "accept the ruling of court and let us move forward in this process and give us some degree of dignity and privacy". He said the family would support and guide the athlete as he served his sentence.
The BBC's Nomsa Maseko, outside the court, said opinion there was divided on the sentence, with some saying it was too light, others that it was fair.
Reeva Steenkamp's mother, June, said she believed justice had been served.
Judge Masipa said she considered her sentence "fair and just, both to society and to the accused". She said: "A non-custodial sentence would send the wrong message to the community. On the other hand, a long sentence would also not be appropriate either, as it would lack the element of mercy."
Judge Masipa said that nothing she could say or do could bring back Reeva Steenkamp, but "hopefully, this judgment on sentence shall provide some sort of closure for the family". The judge begun reading her decision by saying there must be a balance between retribution, deterrence and rehabilitation. In summarizing the evidence, she described defense witness and social worker Annette Vergeer as "slapdash and disappointing". Vergeer had argued Pistorius would be "a lot more vulnerable than the normal man" in jail. But Judge Masipa said she was sure prisons were equipped to cater for the requirements of a special-needs inmate. She also said she had a "feeling of unease" at what she called an overemphasis on the athlete's vulnerability. However, she said Pistorius had made an "enormous contribution to society", in his charity work and in changing the public perception of disability. The judge also said: "It would be a sad day for this country if an impression were to be created that there was one law for the poor and disadvantaged, and another for the rich and famous."
The three-year suspended term was for unlawfully firing a gun in a restaurant, in a separate incident before the Steenkamp killing.
The case may not yet be over, as both prosecution and defense have the right to appeal.
The prosecution service said it had not yet decided and the defense has not yet commented.
The International Paralympic Committee told the BBC it would not allow Pistorius to run at any of its events for five years, even if he were released early.
Pistorius, 27, an amputee sprinter who became the first athlete to compete in the Olympic and Paralympic Games, killed Steenkamp on Valentine's Day in 2013.
He says he shot her by mistake, fearing there was an intruder in his house in Pretoria.
Steenkamp (photo, below, left), a 29-year-old model, reality television star, and law graduate, was hit three times by bullets fired by Pistorius (photo, below, right) through a toilet door.
 
Rico says that the guy still got off easy...

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