Waluś and Derby-Lewis were sentenced to death for their actions, but after the abolition of the death penalty in South Africa their sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. With the introduction of the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission after apartheid, Waluś applied for amnesty, which would give him parole. After extensive investigation the commission found that he and Derby-Lewis were not acting on higher orders and refused amnesty; he remained in prison. he died on November 3, 2016, from lung cancer. On 10 March 2016, the
High Court in
Pretoria ruled that Waluś should be released on parole. The Department of Home Affairs indicated in September 2016 that Waluś would be stripped of his South African citizenship and deported back to Poland if he was released on parole. In May 2017,
Justice Minister Michael Masutha introduced an application to the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Bloemfontein to overturn Waluś's parole. Meeting on 29 May, the court reserved
judgment in the case, citing a procedural irregularity involving the Hani family's victim impact statement. During the hearing, Waluś's advocate, Roelof du Plessis, stated that his client's South African citizenship had been revoked by the Department of Home Affairs "just a few weeks" earlier, and that a warrant for his deportation had been issued. On 18 August 2017, the Supreme Court of Appeal overturned Waluś's parole, a decision that was welcomed by the SACP. On 16 March 2020, Waluś was again denied parole by Justice Minister
Ronald Lamola. Waluś appealed the decision to the
Constitutional Court in Johannesburg. In his filing, he claimed remorse for Hani's murder and recognized apartheid had failed. Hani's widow
Limpho continued to oppose his release, believing his admission of remorse to be insincere, and pointing out that other convicted assassins (such as
James Earl Ray, the accused murderer of
Martin Luther King Jr.) spent the rest of their lives in prison. In November 2022, the Constitutional Court ruled in favour of Waluś's appeal against these decisions and ordered his parole. Limpho Hani condemned the court's decision as "diabolical". On 7 December 2022, Waluś was discharged from the hospital and officially released on parole under "strict conditions". His parole period lasted for two years, during which time he was barred from leaving South Africa. His parole ended in November 2024. Finally, on 7 December 2024, Waluś arrived in Poland, accompanied by
Grzegorz Braun during the flight. ==Aftermath==