SAfrica: judge in Pistorius case suffers loss
By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA (Associated Press) | The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- Last week, the judge who granted
bail to Oscar Pistorius was in the international spotlight, presiding
over dramatic hearings in a courtroom as the Olympic athlete sat in the
dock charged with murdering his girlfriend. This week, the judge is in
private mourning.
Desmond Nair, chief magistrate of the Pretoria Magistrate's Court,
confirmed Tuesday that he is related to a woman suspected of killing her
two children and committing suicide on the weekend.
The revelation was the latest twist in the saga of Pistorius and
prominent figures linked to the case against the double-amputee athlete,
who faces a charge of premeditated murder in the Feb. 14 shooting death
of Reeva Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model who appeared in a television
reality show.
The bodies of a woman and her two sons were found Sunday evening at
their Johannesburg home by her ex-husband, police Warrant Officer Balan
Muthan said. Authorities suspect the woman administered a substance that
killed her children, and took her own life by ingesting it as well.
''I can confirm the deceased is my first cousin,'' Nair told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.
The woman's brother, Vishal Maharaj, identified her as Anusha
Maharaj. Police said Maharaj was her family name before she married.
South African media identified her as Anusha Mooljee.
Muthan said police suspect ''she took her own life by ingesting a
substance that killed her,'' and that she ''most probably'' gave the
same substance to her children. Autopsies were conducted Monday and
toxicologists were analyzing the substance believed to have killed the
three family members.
Suicide notes were found and a murder investigation was underway,
Muthan said. He said copies of the notes were admitted as evidence in
the probe and declined to comment on the contents.
Eyewitness News, a South African media outlet, said the boys who died
were 12 and 17 years old and cited neighbor Claire Osment as saying she
rushed outside after hearing screams coming from the townhouse where
they lived.
''We asked what happened. The dad just said, 'She has killed my
boys.' He was just crying,'' Eyewitness News quoted her as saying. ''He
couldn't believe it, he couldn't believe that his sons are gone.''
Nair, 44, has presided over a number of high-profile cases, including
the 2008 conviction on fraud charges of Sydney Maree, a South African
who took American citizenship and became a track star in the United
States; a 2011 plea agreement in which rugby player Bees Roux received a
five-year suspended prison sentence for the beating death of a
policeman; and inquiries into alleged misconduct by magistrates around
South Africa.
On Friday, Nair delivered a lengthy discourse on why he was granting
bail to Pistorius, including an assertion that prosecutors had not
argued persuasively that the Paralympian was a flight risk. Nair
criticized shortcomings in the state's investigation, but he also said
aspects of Pistorius' account of what happened were not convincing.
Pistorius says he killed Steenkamp accidentally, opening fire after
mistaking her for an intruder in his home. Prosecutors alleged he
intentionally shot her after the couple had an argument.
Last week, the chief investigator in the case against Pistorius,
Hilton Botha, was removed from the inquiry after it was revealed that
attempted murder charges against him had been reinstated in early
February. The charges relate to a 2011 incident in which Botha and two
other police officers allegedly fired on a minibus.
In another surprise, a lawyer for the Pistorius family said Sunday
that Oscar's brother, Carl, faces a charge of unlawful, negligent
killing for a 2008 road death. That charge had also been dropped and
later reinstated.
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