Former Olympic runner Oscar Pistorius was denied parole Friday and will have to stay in prison for at least another year and four months after it was decided that he had not served the “minimum detention period” required to be released following his murder conviction for killing girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp 10 years ago.
The parole board ruled that Pistorius would only be able to
apply again in August 2024, South Africa’s Department of Corrections said in a
short, two-paragraph statement. It was released soon after a parole hearing at
the Atteridgeville Correctional Centre prison where Pistorius is being held.
The board cited a new clarification on Pistorius’ sentence
that was issued by South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal just three days
before the hearing, according to the statement. Still, legal experts criticized
authorities’ decision to go ahead with the hearing when Pistorius was not
eligible.
Reeva Steenkamp’s parents, Barry and June, are “relieved”
with the decision to keep Pistorius in prison but are not celebrating it, their
lawyer told The Associated Press.
“They can’t celebrate because there are no winners in this
situation. They lost a daughter and South Africa lost a hero,” lawyer Tania
Koen said, referring to the dramatic fall from grace of Pistorius, once a
world-famous and highly-admired athlete.
The decision and reasoning to deny parole was a surprise but
there has been legal wrangling over when Pistorius should be eligible for
parole because of the series of appeals in his case. He was initially convicted
of culpable homicide, a charge comparable to manslaughter, in 2014 but the case
went through a number of appeals before Pistorius was finally sentenced to 13
years and five months in prison for murder in 2017.
Serious offenders must serve at least half their sentence to
be eligible for parole in South Africa. Pistorius’ lawyers had previously gone
to court to argue that he was eligible because he had served the required
portion if they also counted periods served in jail from late 2014 following
his culpable homicide conviction.
The lawyer handling Pistorius’ parole application did not
immediately return phone calls seeking comment.
June Steenkamp attended Pistorius’ hearing inside the prison
complex to oppose his parole. The parents have said they still do not believe
Pistorius’ account of their daughter’s killing and wanted him to stay in jail.
Pistorius, who is now 36, has always claimed he killed
Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model and law student, in the pre-dawn hours of
Valentine’s Day 2013 after mistaking her for a dangerous intruder in his home.
He shot four times with his licensed 9 mm pistol through a
closed toilet cubicle door in his bathroom, where Steenkamp was, hitting her
multiple times. Pistorius claimed he didn’t realize his girlfriend had got out
of bed and gone to the bathroom.
The Steenkamps say they still think he is lying and killed
her intentionally after a late-night argument.
Lawyer Koen had struck a more critical tone when addressing
reporters outside the prison before the hearing, saying the Steenkamps believed
Pistorius could not be considered to be rehabilitated “unless he comes clean”
over the killing.
“He’s the killer of their daughter. For them, it’s a life
sentence,” Koen said before the hearing.
June Steenkamp had sat grim-faced in the back seat of a car
nearby while Koen spoke to reporters outside the prison gates ahead of the
hearing. June Steenkamp and Koen were then driven into the prison in a
Department of Corrections vehicle. June Steenkamp made her submission to the
parole board in a separate room to Pistorius and did not come face-to-face with
her daughter’s killer, Koen said.
Barry Steenkamp did not travel for the hearing because of
poor health but a family friend read out a statement to the parole board on his
behalf, the parents’ lawyer said.
Pistorius was once hailed as an inspirational figure for
overcoming the adversity of his disability, before his murder trial and
sensational downfall captivated the world.
Pistorius’s lower legs were amputated when he was a baby
because of a congenital condition and he walks with prosthetics. He went on to
become a double-amputee runner and multiple Paralympic champion who made
history by competing against able-bodied athletes at the 2012 London Olympics,
running on specially designed carbon-fiber blades.
Pistorius’ conviction eventually led to him being sent to
the Kgosi Mampuru II maximum security prison, one of South Africa’s most
notorious. He was moved to the Atteridgeville prison in 2016 because that
facility is better suited to disabled prisoners.
There have only been glimpses of his life in prison, with
reports claiming he had at one point grown a beard, gained weight and taken up
smoking and was unrecognizable from the elite athlete he once was.
He has spent much of his time working in an area of the
prison grounds where vegetables are grown, sometimes driving a tractor, and has
reportedly been running bible classes for other inmates.
Pistorius’ father, Henke Pistorius, told the Pretoria News
newspaper before the hearing that his family hoped he would be home soon.
“Deep down, we believe he will be home soon,” Henke
Pistorius said, “but until the parole board has spoken the word, I don’t want
to get my hopes up.” -AP