Imperial Valley Press

Oscar Pistorius’ sentence increased to 13 years, 5 months

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SOMERSET WEST, South Africa (AP) — Oscar Pistorius’ prison sentence was more than doubled to 13 years and five months on Friday, a surprising­ly dramatic interventi­on by South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal in the Olympic athlete’s fate after the murder of girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

In an announceme­nt that took a matter of minutes, Supreme Court Justice Willie Seriti said a panel of judges unanimousl­y upheld an appeal by prosecutor­s against Pistorius’ original sixyear sentence for shooting Steenkamp multiple times in his home in 2013.

Under that initial sentence, which the court called “shockingly lenient,” the double-amputee runner could have been released on parole in mid-2019. Now, the earliest he’ll be eligible for parole is 2023.

The ruling could finally bring an end to the near five-year legal saga surroundin­g Pistorius, a multiple Paralympic champion and record-breaker who was the first amputee to run at the Olympics and one of the most celebrated sportsmen in the world.

Steenkamp’s parents, Barry and June, were “emotional” as they watched Seriti deliver the verdict live on television at their home, family lawyer Tania Koen said.

“They feel there has been justice for Reeva. She can now rest in peace,” Koen told The Associated Press. “But at the same time, people must realize that people think this is the end of the road for them ... the fact is they still live with Reeva’s loss every day.”

Pistorius killed Steenkamp in the pre-dawn hours of Valentine’s Day 2013 after shooting four times through a closed toilet cubicle door with his 9 mm pistol. He claimed he mistook the 29-yearold model and reality TV star for an intruder and was initially convicted of manslaught­er by trial judge Thokozile Masipa. That conviction was overturned and replaced with a murder conviction by the Supreme Court in 2015. Pistorius was then sentenced to six years for murder by Masipa, a decision also now rejected by the Supreme Court.

Prosecutor­s called the six-year sentence much too lenient and the Supreme Court agreed, saying in a full written ruling released later that “the sentence of six years’ imprisonme­nt is shockingly lenient to a point where it has the effect of trivialisi­ng this serious offence.”

The Supreme Court said that Pistorius “displays a lack of remorse, and does not appreciate the gravity of his actions.”

Pistorius’ brother, Carl, wrote on Twitter: “Shattered. Heartbroke­n. Gutted.” A spokesman for the Pistorius family didn’t answer calls from the AP.

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