Oscar Pistorius' lawyers failed today in their attempt to stop prosecutors from appealing the double-amputee athlete's negligent killing conviction and again seeking a murder verdict against him for shooting girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.
Judge Thokozile Masipa dismissed an application by Pistorius' defense lawyers to challenge the appeal by prosecutors, who want Pistorius convicted of the more serious charge of murder for shooting Steenkamp multiple times in a bathroom in his home in 2013.
"The order that I grant in this matter is to strike off the application," the black-robed Masipa said in her ruling today, dismissing the defense's application.
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Pistorius' lawyers were arguing that Masipa should not have allowed that appeal.
The Olympian and multiple Paralympic champion is currently serving a five-year prison sentence for culpable homicide, or negligent killing.
The 28-year-old Pistorius could be eligible for release from the jail in the capital Pretoria in August to serve the remainder of his sentence under house arrest.
If prosecutors succeed in their appeal against the culpable homicide conviction in the Supreme Court of Appeal and have it upgraded to murder, Pistorius would face a minimum of 15 years in jail.
Masipa, who presided over Pistorius' seven-month murder trial and the start of the appeal process by prosecutors, made her latest ruling after a short court session in Johannesburg.
Pistorius' trial was held in another courthouse in Pretoria.
Masipa heard arguments by Barry Roux, Pistorius' chief defense lawyer at trial, and Gerrie Nel, the chief prosecutor. Roux argued prosecutors had "mistakenly" been given permission to appeal against Masipa's initial trial verdict.
Nel said there was no basis for this application by the defense, which wanted a "never-ending case" to prevent it from going to the appeal court.
Pistorius' trial now looks set to be reviewed by a panel of judges at the Supreme Court of Appeal, which sits in the central city of Bloemfontein. No date has been given for that appeal but cases can sometimes take two years to reach the court, legal experts have said.