PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) -- Oscar Pistorius will remain under house arrest pending his sentencing for his murder conviction, after a South African judge granted bail to the Olympic athlete on Tuesday.
The country's Supreme Court of Appeal convicted Pistorius on Thursday of murdering girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in 2013, overturning a lower court's conviction of the lesser crime of manslaughter. The appeals court then said the double-amputee Olympian should be sentenced by the lower court.
Judge Aubrey Ledwaba of that court, the North Gauteng High Court, granted Pistorius bail of $692 and extended his house arrest until his sentencing hearing, which he set for April 18. The judge said Pistorius will be placed under electronic monitoring and may only leave his uncle's home between 7 a.m. and 12 p.m.
Pistorius may not travel further than a 12-mile (20-kilometer) radius outside of his uncle's mansion in a Pretoria suburb, the judge ruled. He must also hand over his passport to the police.
Earlier, the state argued that Pistorius may try to flee, and asked for strict bail conditions but did not say he should be sent back to prison before sentencing.
Pistorius' bail is a fraction of the $113,000 bail he paid when he first appeared in court for the 2013 shooting.
In the meantime, Pistorius' legal team plan to appeal his murder conviction in South Africa's highest court, the Constitutional Court, chief defense lawyer Barry Roux said.
The former track star's lawyer did not say on what basis he would be appealing the murder conviction at the Constitutional Court, South Africa's highest court.
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel told the court that he doubted that this next appeal would be successful.
"We're not convinced that the accused has made out a good case and that his application to the Constitutional Court will be successful, but we acknowledge that he has the right to bring such an application," said Nel.
Pistorius shot Steenkamp through the door of a toilet cubicle in his home early on Valentine's Day 2013. Prosecutors said he killed her after an argument; Pistorius said he killed her by mistake, thinking there was an intruder in the house.
The appeals court said that regardless of who was behind the door, Pistorius should have known someone could be killed if he fired multiple times. Under South African law, a person can be convicted of murder if he or she foresaw the possibility of someone dying through their actions and went ahead anyway.
Pistorius was placed under house arrest in October after serving one year of a 5-year prison sentence for the earlier manslaughter conviction.
During Tuesday's court appearance, the first time he's appeared in court in over a year, Pistorius was dressed in a dark suit. His demeanor was calm and he spoke softly with his lawyer and others before proceedings began. He even smiled.
A champion athlete, before the killing of Steenkamp in the early hours of Valentine's Day 2013 Pistorius had been televised at sporting events and seen in magazines in advertisements. In contrast, he has rarely been seen in public while under house arrest. Last weekend, a South African newspaper published a photograph of Pistorius sitting in a car. On Nov. 14, a cellphone video emerged of Pistorius reporting to a Pretoria police station as part of his community service. On his 29th birthday last month, a relative tweeted a photograph of a smiling Pistorius surrounded by children.
Pistorius went to the North Gauteng High Court from his uncle's mansion in Pretoria, where Pistorius had been serving his house arrest for the manslaughter conviction. He is to continue to remain there under house arrest until sentencing.
The minimum sentence for murder in South Africa is 15 years, though a judge can reduce that sentence for what the law describes as exceptional circumstances.
Prosecutors did not argue for incarceration for Pistorius pending sentencing for murder, saying tight bail conditions are sufficient.
South Africa's prisons are overcrowded and Pistorius was previously jailed in special circumstances because of his high profile and disability. In a logistical challenge for prison authorities, Pistorius was held apart from other prisoners in the hospital wing of a Pretoria prison and had a bathroom fitted with railings to assist with his disability.
Public opinion in South Africa has sometimes taken the view that Pistorius was getting lenient treatment during the long saga of his trial because of his wealth and fame. But the appeals court decision to convict him of murder, as well as reports that he has spent much of his fortune on legal bills, have helped to diminish perceptions that he was somehow above the law.