Sowetan

New medical report needed on accused after epileptic attack

- TimesLIVE

An exasperate­d Judge Siraj Desai says he wants “to get on with my life” after a two-week delay in the Van Breda murder trial was granted on Tuesday in the High Court in Cape Town.

Henri van Breda stands accused of axing his parents and brother to death‚ and leaving his sister for dead in their luxury estate home in Stellenbos­ch in 2015.

The state finished leading evidence in chief a few weeks ago and the defence was set to complete theirs this week.

However‚ Van Breda had a seizure last week before being diagnosed with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy‚ and now his neurologis­t‚ Dr James Butler‚ needs more time to put his report together.

This means court will only sit again on November 27.

When Desai said “I want to get on with my life‚” Van Breda’s advocate‚ Pieter Botha‚ replied: “So do I.”

Desai said, at the start of Tuesday’s session, that he wanted the defence’s evidence in chief done and dusted by this coming Friday‚ but after it came to light that Butler needed time for his report‚ Desai said he “reluctantl­y” agreed to grant such time‚ but that he wants it “done with no further delays by December 1”.

“This trial has now been unduly prolonged‚ though I accept Botha’s argument that this was unexpected [due to the seizure]. I am reluctantl­y postponing this matter‚ purely in the interests of justice‚” he said.

At stake is the crucial point of the “lost” two hours and forty minutes when Van Breda claims he lay unconsciou­s at the bottom of the stairs after his family had‚ as he claims‚ been brutally attacked by a laughing man in a balaclava.

State prosecutor Susan Galloway has argued that no such loss of consciousn­ess occurred. She questioned why Van Breda would not have mentioned that to the doctor who saw him later that day‚ and also argued that no explanatio­n “at all” existed for him to have lost consciousn­ess.

Butler‚ says Botha‚ will provide testimony on any possible links between the juvenile myoclonic epilepsy and the alleged loss of consciousn­ess. –

 ?? / THULI DLAMINI ?? Liziwe Ngwayishe, 33, and Ali Yusaf, a 46-year-old Malawian national, during their appearance in the Durban Magistrate’s Court for the murder of Luyanda Msomi and Njabulo Mankayi.
/ THULI DLAMINI Liziwe Ngwayishe, 33, and Ali Yusaf, a 46-year-old Malawian national, during their appearance in the Durban Magistrate’s Court for the murder of Luyanda Msomi and Njabulo Mankayi.
 ??  ?? Henri van Breda
Henri van Breda

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa