South African prosecutors have filed an
appeal calling for Paralympian star Oscar Pistorius to be convicted of
murder for killing his girlfriend — just days before he is due to be
released from prison.
Pistorius has spent less than a year
behind bars since being convicted in a sensational trial on the lesser
charge of culpable homicide, and is expected to leave jail on Friday for
a form of house arrest.
But the 28-year-old could soon be back in
prison if prosecutors are successful in their argument in the appeal
court filed Monday that he should have been convicted of murder rather
than culpable homicide — a charge equivalent to manslaughter.
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If they win their case, which is expected to be heard in November, Pistorius could face at least 15 years in jail.
The athlete — known as the “Blade Runner”
for the prosthetic legs he wears on the track — won international fame
after racing against able-bodied competitors in the 2012 London
Olympics, and his trial was broadcast live around the world.
“I think the chances are pretty good that
the appeals court will rule in favour of the state and overturn the
verdict,” said Ulrich Roux, a criminal lawyer in Johannesburg.
“He is faced with the unusual
circumstance that he’s released on house arrest and then the court could
find him guilty of murder and he’ll have to return to prison.”
Pistorius does not dispute that he shot
model and law graduate Reeva Steenkamp four times through a locked
toilet door in his Pretoria home in the early hours of the Valentine’s
Day in 2013.
But he said he mistook the 29-year-old
for an intruder. Prosecutors insist that he deliberately killed the her
after an argument.
They are appealing both the judgement and the sentence, calling the five-year jail term “shockingly light”.
Prosecutors argue in the appeal papers
that even based on the athlete’s own version of events, Pistorius “knew
there was a person behind the closed door” and “deliberately fired shots
into the door”.
“The only conceivable finding… should be
that he intended to kill the person in the cubicle,” they say, adding
that Pistorius’ evidence “can never be found to be reasonably possible”.
The athlete’s defence team has until September 17 to file its response.
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