Oscar Pistorius Granted Bail After Murder Conviction

Star sprinter Oscar Pistorius is seen at the High Court in Pretoria on Monday, 30 June 2014 after spending 30 days under psychiatric observation to determine if he should be held criminally responsible for killing his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp. Picture: Phill Magakoe/Independent Newspapers /Pool

PRETORIA — (CNN) Oscar Pistorius was back in court Tuesday where a judge granted him bail.

Judge Aubrey Ledwaba said Pistorius has proven he is not a flight risk.

The double-amputee sprinter will be free to leave his uncle’s home, where he has been under house confinement, and can travel up to 20 kilometers (12 miles) between the hours of 7 a.m. and noon.

He will be required to seek written permission to leave the house at any other time, and must pay a 10,000-rand ($686) bail, Ledwaba said.

Pistorius will still have to wear an electronic monitoring device.

Last week, South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal overturned his conviction of culpable homicide and found him guilty of murdering his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.

His lawyers said they will appeal that decision to the Constitutional Court, and that Pistorius should be allowed to remain free on bail while they do so.

The hearing before the Constitutional Court could take months.

At the hearing Tuesday, the prosecution said Pistorius could flee to Italy or Mozambique.

“We feel strongly about the fact that he needs monitoring, and should not leave the house at any time,” state prosecutor Gerrie Nel said.

In October, Pistorius was allowed to move from prison, where he served a year of his original five-year sentence, to house detention.

Pistorius’ lawyer Barry Rioux said the athlete was not a flight risk.

The Olympian shot girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, a model, four times through a locked toilet door on Valentine’s Day 2013, saying he mistook her for an intruder.

On Thursday, Judge Eric Leach ruled the original court judgment had been “fundamentally flawed.” The Paralympic gold medalist should have foreseen that his firing of a gun would have killed whoever was behind the door in his bathroom, regardless of whether he thought it was Steenkamp or an intruder.

Prosecutors had argued that the 29-year old — known as the “Blade Runner” in a reference to the prosthetic legs he uses when he races — intentionally killed Steenkamp following an argument.

Leach said although Pistorius had genuine beliefs his life was in danger, he should have acted more rationally.

He never fired a warning shot and shot not once, but four times.

“The identity of victim is irrelevant to his guilt,” he said.

His jail term hasn’t been decided, but he faces up to 15 years in prison.

Pistorius’ next court date will be April 18.

CNN legal analyst Kelly Phelps said that double jeopardy — a defense that prevents a criminal defendant from being retried on the same charges following a verdict — did not technically apply in the Pistorius case for two reasons.

First, Pistorius wasn’t completely acquitted on the original charge but had been convicted of culpable homicide.

“Strictly speaking, because murder wasn’t a separate charge but was tied in with the culpable homicide charge, it’s not considered technically … as reconsidering a case where there has been a complete acquittal,” said Phelps, a senior lecturer in law at the University of Cape Town.

The second reason, she said, was that the appeal “was based on a question of law, not a question of fact.”

“The argument is that where there’s been a mistake in law that’s been made — that is the only reason that an incorrect verdict has been reached — it would be offensive to the interests of justice in order to allow that verdict to stand,” she said.

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2015 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. (Photo: CNN)

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