Pistorius’ five years not enough, says prosecution

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South African prosecutors confirmed on Monday that they would appeal the verdict and five-year jail term handed down to fallen track star Oscar Pistorius for killing his girlfriend last year.

Judge Masipa believed Oscar Pistorius could not have foreseen that the person he shot at four times through the door of a cramped toilet cubicle would not survive
Judge Masipa believed Oscar Pistorius could not have foreseen that the person he shot at four times through the door of a cramped toilet cubicle would not survive

“The decision to appeal both the conviction and sentence has been taken,” said National Prosecuting Authority spokesman Nathi Mncube.

Pistorius began a five-year prison stretch on October 21 after being found guilty of culpable homicide, a charge equivalent to manslaughter. Trial judge Thokozile Masipa found in September that there was not enough evidence to convict the 27-year-old Paralympics and Olympic athlete of premeditated murder. Her verdict angered the state prosecution, which had sought to prove that Pistorius deliberately shot dead 29-year-old Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine’s Day last year. Steenkamp was shot four times through a locked toilet door at Pistorius’s upmarket Pretoria home in the early hours of February 14, 2013.

Details of the appeal have not yet been released, but Mncube said “the appeal on conviction is based on the question of law”.

South African criminal lawyers had expressed shock that Masipa ruled Pistorius could not have foreseen that someone would die when he fired the shots that killed Steenkamp. They complained that the ruling could open the door to systematic abuse of the legal system, or to people believing it would be okay to shoot in an irresponsible manner.

The double-amputee athlete told his lengthy trial in a Pretoria court that he believed there was an intruder and that he did not consciously fire his pistol. “The merits and the demerits of the NPA’s argument in this regard will become evident when we file papers for leave to appeal,” said Mncube.

“Prosecutors are now preparing the necessary papers in order to be able to file within the next few days.”