South African athlete Oscar Pistorius has every reason to look uncertain as he returns to court this week in Pretoria.
His future is about to be untangled - and there is a
bewildering range of possibilities that must surely now be dancing
before his eyes.Will he vanish into South Africa's prison system for years, or should he be thinking seriously about training for the Brazil Olympics?
Judge Thokosile Masipa - who rejected a murder verdict last month in favour of the lesser charge of culpable homicide - has wide discretion either to put the athlete in jail for years, to give him a suspended sentence or no sentence at all, to fine him, give him a form of house arrest, or community service, or some combination of the above.
As prosecution and defence prepare to call witnesses to support their arguments on sentencing, here are a few thoughts about Judge Masipa's options, and the broader trial:
- Jail term
If there is an appeal, will Pistorius remain on bail?
That now strikes me as the likely upper limit for Judge Masipa as she ponders his fate.- No jail term
The judge could argue that he is a first-time offender who has shown genuine remorse. But given his criminal misuse of a firearm, what sort of message would that send to the public?
And - this is unanswerable, I suppose - would it even be in his own best interests to serve no prison time?
The athlete's fate is in the hands of Judge Thokozile Masipa
Would the public here and abroad welcome him back into society, and what sort of stress would he find himself under?Having given Pistorius the benefit of the doubt in reaching her verdict - and taken plenty of flak for it - Judge Masipa may choose to lean the other way in sentencing.
- Culpable homicide appeal
The prosecution maintained Pistorious shot Reeva Steenkamp after an argument
I am told it is very likely - indeed many legal experts feel Judge Masipa's ruling was deeply flawed and demands correction. But if Pistorius is given a significant prison sentence for culpable homicide, might the state decide to make a political decision, cut its losses and let the original verdict remain uncontested?
- Appeal and bail
- Murder conviction?
Gerrie Nel wanted a premeditated murder conviction that would have been an mandatory life term of 25 years
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel spent weeks trying to prove Pistorius and
Reeva Steenkamp's relationship was on the rocks only to see Judge
Masipa reject that evidence with a contemptuous wave of her hand (the prosecutors of Shrien Dewani - the UK businessman on trial in Cape Town for murdering his wife - might well take note). Might the grandstanding Mr Nel have secured a murder conviction if he had not over-reached?
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