South African Paralympian star sprinter Oscar Pistorius has been sentenced to five years in prison Tuesday for the killing of his girlfriend last year, as his sensational trial reached a climax.
Pistorius,
who had vomited and wept at times during the trial, stood stock-still in the
dock as he was sentenced, veins bulging in his forehead and his jaw muscles
clenched.
“Count
one, culpable homicide the sentence imposed is five years,” judge Thokozile
Masipa said.
Pistorius,
27, was also given a three-year suspended sentence on a separate gun offence
conviction.
Masipa
said she wanted to find a balance between retribution, deterrence and
rehabilitation, dismissing defence claims that the disabled athlete would face
particular suffering in prison.
“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,” said Masipa.
She
also weighed his ability to cope with incarceration given his physical
disability.
“Yes
the accused is vulnerable, but he also has excellent coping skills,” she said.
Discussing
the gravity of Pistorius’s crime, the judge said he had been responsible of
“gross negligence”.
“Using
a lethal weapon, a loaded firearm, the accused fired not one, but four shots
into the door,” said Masipa.
“The
toilet was a small cubicle and there was no room for escape for the person
behind the door,” she said.
The
double amputee sprinter was acquitted of the more serious charge of murder over
Reeva Steenkamp’s death on Valentine’s Day last year.
The
prosecution has called for 10 years in jail. The defence pleaded for house
arrest and community service.
Pistorius
testified that he shot Steenkamp, a 29-year-old law graduate and model, four
times through a locked bathroom door at his upmarket Pretoria home after he
mistakenly believed she was an intruder.
His
lawyers, arguing that Pistorius would be more vulnerable than most in prison
because of his disability, had argued against jail time, and called instead for
the equivalent of house arrest and community service.
Prosecutor
Gerrie Nel said such a sentence would be “shockingly inappropriate” and could
cause South Africans to lose faith in their legal system.
The
trial has drawn international attention and media gathered outside the
courthouse shortly after dawn to get into position for the star runner’s
entrance and the arrival of friends and families on both sides of the case who
have attended the long trial.
A
man dressed in prison orange draped himself in chains, holding a sign saying:
“Are certain offenders more equal than other offenders before the law?”
Before
the sentence was pronounced, legal experts had been divided on which way judge
Masipa would swing.
“There
is a strong argument to be made for certainly a period of direct imprisonment,”
said William Booth, a criminal lawyer based in Cape Town. “You do have to send
a message to the public.”
The
athlete made history by becoming the first Paralympian to compete against
able-bodied athletes at the 2012 London Olympics, inspiring millions with his
story.
But
during his trial the prosecution painted a darker picture of the one-time
sports star, presenting a dangerously volatile young man with a penchant for
guns, beautiful women and fast cars.
With
the conviction and sentence, Pistorius has lost his glittering sports career,
lucrative contracts and above all his hero status, tarnished forever.
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