Cape Times

Novella placed under prison suicide watch

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GUATEMALAN murder accused Diego Novella will be placed on suicide watch at Pollsmoor Prison and will be moved from his single cell to a general one.

The case at the Western Cape High Court took an unexpected turn yesterday when Novella told the court that he had lied during his testimony.

The defence was expected to deliver final arguments.

Novella was immediatel­y referred to a district surgeon after his defence lawyer William Booth told the court he was “gobsmacked” by his client’s admission and believed he was emotionall­y distressed and in need of a psychiatri­c or psychologi­cal assessment.

State prosecutor Louise Friester-Sampson arranged for him to be seen by a district surgeon at Victoria Hospital who believed Novella had suffered a panic attack.

The doctor increased the dosage of his medication and said Novella posed a suicide risk, but that he was able to understand proceeding­s and would be fit for court by today provided he was given his medication.

Friester-Sampson said correction­al services would be instructed to maintain a closer watch on him, and his belongings would be searched so that anything of risk could be removed. Novella is on trial for the murder of his 39-yearold American marketing executive girlfriend Gabriela Kabrins Alban.

Alban’s body was discovered in the room she was sharing with Novella at an upmarket boutique hotel in Camps Bay on July 29, 2015. She had been strangled and had suffered blunt force trauma.

Her face was covered with chips and faeces and a note had been left on her body with the Spanish slang word “cerote” scrawled on it, which means “piece of s***”. A fingerprin­t expert has testified that Novella’s fingerprin­t was found on the note.

Novella was arrested the same day, hours after hotel staff found Alban’s body. He has pleaded not guilty. In his plea statement, Novella, who is from a prominent and wealthy family in Guatemala, claimed he had been in an abnormal mental state after he took hallucinog­enic substances.

Judge Vincent Saldanha has repeatedly returned to the issue of criminal capacity.

Last week, during the State’s final arguments, he pointed out that psychiatri­st Sean Kaliski from Valkenberg Mental Hospital where Novella was initially sent for observatio­n, was “of the view that the whole incident arose out of anger”.

“He was motivated by anger and Kaliski doesn’t buy for half a minute your defence’s version that it was psychotic-like. He said the accused was motivated by anger alone, influenced by the intoxicati­on.”

The case was adjourned until today when Novella’s lawyer is expected to deliver final arguments after first having him assessed by a private psychiatri­st.

 ?? Picture: African News Agency ?? ACCUSED: Diego Novella consulting with his legal representa­tive in the Western Cape High Court.
Picture: African News Agency ACCUSED: Diego Novella consulting with his legal representa­tive in the Western Cape High Court.

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