Oscar Pistorius, the double-amputee Olympic runner who shot his girlfriend to death on Valentine's Day 2013, can leave prison and move to house arrest next week, South Africa's Department of Corrections said Thursday.
A
parole board at the prison where Pistorius has served nearly a year of
his five-year sentence for manslaughter made the decision. It came after
an initial ruling to release the athlete in August was canceled at the
last minute after intervention by the justice minister.
This time, the board "approved the placement of offender Oscar Pistorius under correctional supervision as from 20 October 2015," the corrections department said in a statement following the meeting of the parole board earlier Thursday.
Pistorius
was acquitted of murder last year for the shooting death of Reeva
Steenkamp, but prosecutors have appealed that trial verdict and will
seek a murder conviction again at South Africa's Supreme Court on Nov. 3.
The appeal will come just two weeks after Pistorius is freed next Tuesday.
If Pistorius is convicted of murder by a panel of five judges at the
appeal, he faces going back to prison for 15 years, the minimum sentence
for murder in South Africa, which no longer has the death penalty.
The
spokeswoman for Pistorius' family, Anneliese Burgess, said in a text
message that they had been informed of the decision to release Pistorius
but would not be commenting further.
Steenkamp's parents are trying to "move on with their lives," their lawyer told the AP.
"Whether
Oscar Pistorius remains incarcerated or is released, it's not going to
change anything in their lives," lawyer Tania Koen said. "It makes no
difference to them."
But, "they still believe that 10 months or 12 months (in jail) is not enough for taking a life," Koen said.
Pistorius
was sentenced to five years after being convicted of culpable homicide,
a charge comparable to manslaughter, for shooting Steenkamp, a model
and reality TV star. Under South African law, an offender sentenced to
five years or less in jail can be released after serving one-sixth — in
Pistorius' case 10 months.
He
has maintained he thought Steenkamp was an intruder in his Pretoria
home and killed her by mistake. Prosecutors said he shot her
intentionally during an argument after she had fled to a bathroom stall.
Pistorius
will now be moved to correctional supervision, a form of house arrest,
where he will have to live under certain conditions for the next four
years. His sentence ends on Oct. 20, 2019.
Pistorius
has been informed of those conditions, the corrections department said,
although it did not detail them all. It did say that Pistorius would
have to continue receiving psychotherapy while under house arrest and
would not be allowed to handle any firearms.
Correctional
services department spokesman Manelisi Wolela did not rule out
ultimately allowing Pistorius to return to training. He also said
Pistorius would not be required to wear an electronic tagging device.
Pistorius,
known as "Blade Runner" for his carbon-fiber running blades, gained
worldwide fame when he ran against able-bodied athletes at the 2012
London Olympics, the first amputee runner to compete at the games.
In June, the same parole board had cleared Pistorius to be released from Kgosi Mampuru II Prison in Pretoria on Aug. 21 only for that decision to be suspended by the minister of justice, who ordered a review.
The 28-year-old Pistorius is expected to serve his house arrest at his uncle's mansion in an upmarket suburb of Pretoria.
(Photo Source: AP)
2 comments:
If he was a black man,,the story about him for change ..
All these killers I hate them
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