Yes, I remember that being said, but I don't recall the context exactly. There were a few references to the "retrial". Booth says that the Appeal Court could ask where the sentencing should be and then receive arguments. Not hard to know who would be arguing what. lol
The part that gets me is that Booth said that if the SCA rules it was murder, the sentence could be the same as what Masipa gave. So what would be the point of this Appeal?
If this goes back to Masipa for sentencing, can she rule that time has been served?
Can you (or someone) explain this to me, please?
Hi Jilly, sorry was hoping someone more knowledgeable would answer this with confidence.
I haven't actually watched the William Booth interview and I am no expert as I have not been "reading around it" ( sentence) so much as I did the Appeal issues,
so really someone more knowledgeable should answer you or correct this.
I will have a bash ....... let's say, if, Op get's DE murder....
AFAIK it's
uncertain whether SCA will sentence OP or refer back to High Court. What the SCA seemed to be saying on the day is they probably would not , BUT they have the powers to sentence. ( IMO that would be preferable)
Could it go back to Masipa - apparently possible. Lets say it does. So she has sentence guidelines for DE murder, guideline is
minimum 15 years unless there is a compelling argument against it.
At sentencing Pros will argue for a strong sentence, Defence will provide mitigating arguments. ( will those be much different to what they already stated when Masipa originally gave the 5 years.?) They could have more substantial arguments, he could now be really psychologically damaged (!) and has come out and risk of returning, his psych might say, is enough to break a broken man ( Err?) IDK what they will use, could it be "substantial" grounds to go under 15 years? ( I would need to research what that might be)
Anyway, if they produce something substantial they could get it below the 15 yrs minimum.
Whatever the next judge/Masipa gives is not added to what he already has. He has 5 years already. So if she gave him 10, 10 +5 does not equal 15. It would be 5 +(5 already serving). But let's say she DID give 10 for DE, he wouldn't spend all the extra 5 in jail and he would still be entitled to house arrest. (maybe thus 2.5 more yrs inside? for a 10 year murder sentence)
I can't remember if the 1/6th rule still applies to murder, I vaguely recollect a higher proportion . ( She sentence him on CH under a special section of law that allows 1/6th before) May be as much as 1/2.
BUT IMO I cannot see under any circumstances she will say 5 years for murder after all this ...for the reason that you gave, it's a more serious charge, it makes no sense as you say. A line needs to be drawn under this, I don't see them bending over backwards to give something that lenient, justice needs to be seen to be done. I don't think 5 years would be seen as a just sentence. And I'm not 100% that Masipa would be asked to do it.
Again, I don't really know enough on this to be sure. Sorry . If someone can correct this or add to it for Jilly...?