This
matter has taken an unusually long period of time to be concluded. It has been
a long walk to justice on the part of the accused person and all those
involved.Having
been convicted of having committed the crime of murder with actual intent by my
brother Judge BLACKIE J on 16 July 2002, we ...
This
matter has taken an unusually long period of time to be concluded. It has been
a long walk to justice on the part of the accused person and all those
involved.
Having
been convicted of having committed the crime of murder with actual intent by my
brother Judge BLACKIE J on 16 July 2002, we were only able to reconvene on 16
November 2010 to deal with the existence or non-existence of extenuating
circumstances before sentencing the accused person.
Dealing
with the issue of extenuation, I feel more inclined to lean on the views of
HOLMES J in SV Letsolo 1970 (3) SA 476…,when the learned Judge stated:
“Extenuating
circumstances have more than once been defined by this Court as any facts
bearing on the commission of the crime, which reduce the moral blameworthiness
of the accused, as distinct from his legal culpability. In this regard the
trial Court has to consider;-
(a)
Whether there are any facts which might be relevant to extenuation, such as
immaturity, intoxication or provocation (the list is not exhaustive).
(b)
Whether such facts, in their cumulative effect, probably had a bearing on the accused's
state of mind in doing what he did.
(c)
Whether such bearing was sufficiently appreciable to abate the moral blameworthness
of the accused in doing what he did.
In
deciding (c), the trial court exercises a moral judgment. If its answer is yes,
it expresses its opinion that there are extenuating circumstances.”
It
is important to emphasise that the enquiry to extenuation is critical in a
murder conviction. It is upon the conclusion of this enquiry that the Court is
then enjoined to exercise its discretion to either “take the drastic step of
ordering” the accused to forfeit his life or to consider some other competent
alternation sentence.
It
will be noted that after the accused had led evidence in extenuation of
sentence the State counsel conceded that indeed extenuating circumstances
existed. The Court expressed the view that it was not bound by that concession
and the defence appeared to have been raffled by the position taken by the
court. The defence counsel's contrary view was that once the State had made
this concession the Court was “humstrung” from making a finding to the
contrary. Counsel could not provide authority to back up his argument. The Court was certainly not impressed by the
position blindly adopted by counsel….,.
Coming
back to the issue at hand, the enquiry on the accused's mental and emotional
state at the time of the offence largely zeroed on two fairly detailed
psychiatric reports coupled with the viva voce evidence of Dr D.
Chibanda and Dr Munyaradzi Madhombiro, two fairly experienced psychiarists.
The
evidence presented by the two doctors was quite revealing in assisting the
court in its quest to determine the existence or non-existence of extenuating
circumstances in this case.
Both
psychiastrists examined the accused person on different occasions. Both
concluded the accused showed an abnormal E E G (electro encephalogram). Dr
Chibanda indicated in his report that the abnormality on the E E G scan
suggested Temporal Lobe Epilepsy on the part of the accused. He recorded that
on interviewing the accused, the accused revealed to him that he was, on
occasions, having visual and auditory hallucinations associated with a
sensation of smelling things. The accused further revealed to the doctor that
at one stage before this murder occurred, he was taking steroids to enhance his
body building exercises. Dr Chibanda was unable to gather the accused's
collateral history to support his psychiastric examination of the accused hence
he recommended that a second opinion be obtained from another qualified
psychiatrist - hence the coming into the picture of Dr Madhombiro.
Dr
Madhombiro was able to gather the accused's collateral history from the
accused's mother, father and the accused's former workmate. The information
gathered from the mother was particularly revealing. The doctor recorded that
the accused's mother revealed to him that the accused had what appeared like
“fits“ medically referred to as 'febrile convulsion' which he reasoned are a
precursor to complex partial seizures in adults. In addition, the accused also
told the doctor of his use of anabolic steroids between 1999 and 2000.
His
examination concluded that the accused suffered from Temporal Lobe Epilepsy.
The
court found the following extract from Dr Madhombiro's report to be
particularly of assistance:
“INDICATIONS
OF TEMPORAL LOBE EPILEPSY IN THE ACCUSED
16.
Accused is an adult of 32 years of age. When the accused was young, he was
reported to have had what appeared like “fits” medically known as febrile
convulsions. These are a precursor to COMPLEX PARTIAL seizures in adults.
17.
Accused admits using drugs, anabolic steroids, between 1999 and 2000. I
reiterate that often patients with temporal lobe epilepsy often abuse drugs as
an unconscious form of medication to fight sublime depression.
18.
In this case, the condition could have been worsened by the stress that the
accused was going through as he genuinely believed that he was being falsely
implicated to be responsible for the pregnancy of the deceased and this could
have definitely triggered the seizure.
19.
I aver that it is my opinion that any one of these factors may have triggered temporal
lobe epileptic seizures on the day the accused stabbed the deceased.”
There
was no evidence led to try and controvert the medical evidence which tended to
show some form of diminished responsibility on the part of the accused at the
time he committed the offence. If anything, the reckless manner in which he
used the knife would seem to suggest that something had gone terribly wrong
with him….,.
At
the time of this offence, the accused was aged 21 years and a youth leader in
his church and his parents appear to have been active members of the church.
Youthfulness
as a factor in extenuation has not escaped our minds.
The
responsibility associated with the accused being a youth leader, and the usual
high expectations from the church, must have weighed heavily against the
accused person when he had to deal with the pregnancy of the deceased. The
stress and anxiety which the accused person, as a 21 year old, must have gone
through at the time cannot be over-emphasized. The immaturity and desperation
on the part of the accused person manifested itself in the manner in which he
sought to get himself out of this mess. He sought to take the pregnant deceased
to her former boyfriend to try and resolve the pregnancy of the deceased. How
that would work out remains anybody's guess but, in our view, it demonstrates
irrational behaviour which cannot be separated from the accused's youthfulness
at the time.
Cumulatively,
we are unanimously agreed that the
accused's mental state (as explained by the two psychiatrists), and the
youthfulness, and how he sought to extricate himself out of the mess he had
himself created must amount to extenuating circumstances which tend to reduce
the accused's moral blameworthiness as distinct from his legal culpability.