I’ve made it through 20 minutes of Roux’s mitigation and find it genius so far. Roux is speaking only to Masipa and those who have any influence over her, the two defense friendly assessors. Roux rightfully does not really give a damn about public opinion when it comes to the verdict or the sentencing, Roux is there to argue Oscar’s case for mitigation and he is doing so by affirming the validity of the verdict, the application of law and quite masterfully bringing in uBantu (Mandela was a strong proponent of this philosophy) and restorative justice. It seems from past interviews that judge Masipa is an advocate of restorative justice. And again I'd bet a dollar to a donut that the assessors are both big fans of uBantu and restorative justice. For Goodness sake one is a defense attorney and one is an academic.
Roux was also adamant that he would be approaching sentencing with full respect toward the judgement that Masipa handed down.
A few excerpts from Roux's summation in the first 20
I understand everything must be read in context but it is there and I need to highlight this it is at page 33326 and onwards I would just read short passages where it says “In the present case, on his own version the accused suspected that an intruder had entered his house through the bathroom window his version was that he genuinely but erroneously believed that his life and the life of the deceased was in danger there is nothing in the evidence to suggest that this belief was not honesty entertained.
Further at page 33347 where the court repeated this “It cannot be said from the above that the accused did not entertain a genuine belief that there was an intruder in the toilet that posed a threat to him And then at page triple 34 coming to the culpable homicide, very correctly I believe the court found the accused acted too hastily and used excessive force.
And on page 3328 the court found clearly, and I’m just reading one part that is important he did not subjectively see that he would kill the person behind the door and then importantly let alone the deceased as he thought she was in the bedroom at the time.
The accused did not consciously act unlawfully and it’s an important factor in the consideration of sentence.It is also so important my lady when you look at the excessive force used by the accused, the negligent conduct of course there is a high degree of negligence when you fire 4 shots into a door when there is someone behind it, no one can dispute that, but we cannot isolate it is it just someone walking to the door and thinking there is an intruder and recklessly firing shots into the door or is it a compromised person reacting excessively. Yes it was. It is not what we are saying, it is the evidence of a highly regarded independent psychologist (mentions 4 experts).
Factually whatever way we see it, the accused actions were to some extent dominated by vulnerability and anxiety and that is very different from a person walking up to a door thinking there is an intruder and firing shots into it. It is compromised person doing that and for purposes of judgement of course the reasonable man with the same disabilities approach that is perfectly correct to convict but when you come to sentence you cannot isolate those actions you have to look at those actions within his frame of mind to see if there was any deviousness was there any conscious unlawfulness and there was not.Masipa already spoke about the courts allowance for "subjective reality" in her rendering of the verdict there is no reason to think she will totally dismiss it at sentencing.
And more from Roux'x first 20
I am simply dealing with the principle and what it says to me, what uBuntu worked and must still work is in this way, get him to give the goat back and if he cannot get him to do something for that society to compensate, to work back carry water whatever do something good in society coupled with your apology that everyone can benefit, the victim, the family and the restorative justice principle that could not be separated from rehabilitation. When that person stealing the goat is back in the community pays the price in a very correct and restorative way and then when one looks at the case law where Justice Battlesman(?) dealt with stand we will refer to this case and 2 judges in the (?) high court explain this principle. One gets a far better understanding of the real meaning of restorative justice and a far better understanding of the judgements to which I will refer to say, previously as if it were standard you commit a crime you must go to jail.
Maybe there are cases where we must just sit back and look again and see is that really, is that really what the law is all about? And of course it is always one danger and that is the wrong concept of society, the society is very different, from the interests of society and case law makes this clear. In society there will always be a part of society that will want the death penalty for the accused irrelevant of what the courts finding is. In society he will always be crucified as by some people as a cold blooded murderer and, I will deal with that, and they would want the maximum sentence but that is not the case, the case is what is in the interest of society and that is why the court is there because the court is the ultimate custodian on behalf of the interest of society, to say taking into account all the facts what is really in the interest of society. IMO Roux does a lot in this short excerpt, he pounds down the fact that the goal with Oscar has to be rehabilitation along with punishment, because even the maximum sentence is only 15 years which means at some point Oscar will be reentering the community, Roux emphasizes the importance of "
restorative justice" and in his previous words Roux drives home the fact that this is a case of negligence by a comprised man, a vulnerable, anxious man, who
thought he was protecting himself and Reeva.
No idea what way Masipa will go, but Roux has certainly opened the door for a restorative justice sentence (read non-custodial). I have not listened to Nel at all but I did read a bit. What I read came across as sour grapes about it not being a murder verdict all tossed about with a lot of vindictiveness and hate.
Hopefully I can catch up later.
One of these days I will write a short review
