Oscar Pistorius GUILTY of Reeva’s manslaughter but is allowed to go free on bail while he waits weeks for sentencing
- Paralympian faces up to 15 years in prison – but could also walk free
- He was sensationally acquitted of two murder charges over shooting
- But judge said runner was ‘negligent’ when he shot through toilet door
- Prosecutors ‘disappointed’ by murder verdicts – and say they may appeal
- His uncle said: ‘We never had any doubt about Oscar’s version of events’
- Law experts question decision not to convict on a lesser murder charge
Shamed athlete Oscar Pistorius has been released on bail despite being found guilty of the manslaughter of his girlfriend. The Paralympian was granted an extension to his bail until his sentencing on October 13 despite claims by the prosecution that he might flee the country. Both sides will be able to call witnesses to argue ahead of the judge’s ruling on if, or for how long, Pistorius is sent to prison for negligently killing Reeva Steenkamp. The hearing will decide whether he faces a prison term of up to 15 years, but equally could see him walk free with a suspended sentence. After the verdicts, his uncle Arnold Pistorius said: ‘We never had any doubt about Oscar’s version of events. ‘It won’t bring Reeva back, but our hearts go out to her family and friends.’ Earlier, the athlete stood impassively in the dock as the judge convicted him of culpable homicide after he shot Miss Steenkamp dead at his home on Valentine’s Day last year.
Speaking outside the court, he said: ‘We respect the judgment that has been delivered. ‘We believed in this instance there was enough evidence to secure a conviction under pre-meditated murder. ‘Of course we are disappointed. We are disappointed we did not secure a conviction under pre-meditated murder and also there was acquittal on the other two (gun) charges. ‘The matter has not been concluded yet, we are still waiting for a sentence to be imposed.’ Masipa’s decision also sparked anger outside the court, particularly among those campaigning for women’s rights in a country with high levels of violent crime against women and children. After the verdict, Pistorius sat with his sister Aimee on the wooden bench where he has spent most of his six-month murder trial. She put an arm around his shoulders and spoke to him. For the first time in the trial, Pistorius left by going down the stairs that led to the cells in the courthouse because his bail expired after his conviction. Pistorius’s lawyer, Brian Webber, said he had been taken to a ‘holding position.’ Defense lawyer Barry Roux told the judge that Pistorius should stay free on bail until sentencing because he had complied with bail conditions imposed on him after he killed Steenkamp. Chief prosecutor Gerrie Nel, however, said Pistorius had more reason to flee because he had probably hoped for an acquittal during the trial. ‘Now he knows for a fact that “I’ve been convicted of a serious offense and imprisonment is probable,”‘ Nel said. The athlete, dubbed Blade Runner due to his prosthetic limbs, has always admitted he shot Miss Steenkamp, though he told police he simply mistook his girlfriend for an intruder. But in clearing him of murder,judge Masipa had hinted the 27-year-old may be convicted of a lesser charge of culpable homicide after describing his actions as ‘negligent’ on the night she died.
She told the court in Pretoria, which included members of both the defendant’s and the victim’s families, that Pistorius acted ‘hastily’ with ‘too much force’ when he fired four bullets through his toilet door in the early hours of February 14 2013. Pistorius was also described by the judge as a ‘very poor witness’ who ‘lost his composure’ during cross-examination.
BLADE RUNNER’S CHARGE SHEET: WHAT REEVA’S KILLER WAS ACCUSED OF
Count 1: MURDER (pre-meditated and the lesser straight murder charges) or CULPABLE HOMICIDE of Reeva Steenkamp on February 14, 2013.
VERDICT: NOT GUILTY of murder but GUILTY of culpable homicide
POSSIBLE SENTENCE: Up to 15 years in prison
Count 2: DISCHARGING A FIREARM IN PUBLIC. Pistorius accused of firing a bullet into the floor of Tasha’s restaurant, Johannesburg, on January 11, 2013.
VERDICT: GUILTY
POSSIBLE SENTENCE: Up to five years in prison
Count 3: DISCHARGING A FIREARM IN PUBLIC. Pistorius accused of firing a gun through the sunroof of a car he was traveling in with his girlfriend, Samantha Taylor, and Darren Fresco, a friend.
VERDICT: NOT GUILTY
Count 4: ILLEGAL POSSESSION OF AMMUNITION. Pistorius had .38 calibre ammunition in his safe, and did not have a license for a gun that takes this ammunition, or a permit for it. Pistorius claims he was keeping it for his father, who declined to testify in support of him.
VERDICT: NOT GUILTY of murder but GUILTY of culpable homicide
POSSIBLE SENTENCE: Up to 15 years in prison
Count 2: DISCHARGING A FIREARM IN PUBLIC. Pistorius accused of firing a bullet into the floor of Tasha’s restaurant, Johannesburg, on January 11, 2013.
VERDICT: GUILTY
POSSIBLE SENTENCE: Up to five years in prison
Count 3: DISCHARGING A FIREARM IN PUBLIC. Pistorius accused of firing a gun through the sunroof of a car he was traveling in with his girlfriend, Samantha Taylor, and Darren Fresco, a friend.
VERDICT: NOT GUILTY
Count 4: ILLEGAL POSSESSION OF AMMUNITION. Pistorius had .38 calibre ammunition in his safe, and did not have a license for a gun that takes this ammunition, or a permit for it. Pistorius claims he was keeping it for his father, who declined to testify in support of him.
VERDICT: NOT GUILTY
One aspect of the ruling has also sparked legal controversy, turning ordinary South Africans into overnight armchair experts on the vexed issue of ‘dolus eventualis’, a concept of intent that holds a person responsible for the foreseeable consequences of their actions. While Masipa ruled that prosecutors had failed to prove explicit premeditation to kill Steenkamp – a decision that had been anticipated by many legal experts – she also cleared Pistorius of murder dolus eventualis. A 2008 paper by KwaZulu Natal law professor Shannon Hoctor explained dolus eventualis as when a person ‘foresaw the possibility that the act in question… would have fatal consequences, and was reckless whether death resulted or not’. Masipa said the state had not proven that Pistorius had foreseen such a possibility. She did, however, find on Thursday that: ‘A reasonable person would have foreseen if he fired shots at the door, the person inside the toilet might be struck and might die as a result.’ But Stephen Tuson, a law professor at Johannesburg’s University of Witwatersrand, said the state would arguably be able to appeal on dolus eventualis (which is Latin for ‘indirect intent’). ‘How can you shoot four bullets through a door and not foresee their death?’, he told Bloomberg News. Other South African leading legal experts also did not hold back on criticizing the judge for leniency. ‘I’m shocked,’ criminal lawyer Martin Hood said. ‘I think she’s going to get quite a lot of criticism from the judiciary and the legal system. ‘This could really open the door to systematic abuse of our legal system by people who shoot their partners and claim self-defense. ‘If someone can shoot in an irresponsible manner, and even in a negligent manner and not be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law, then it means that we are not able to use the law as a tool to address violent crime in this country.’
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel – who had mauled Pistorius so viciously as he struggled in the witness box – was last night said to be waiting for Judge Masipa to hand down her final verdicts, before considering an appeal on her interpretation of the law. Delivering her murder verdicts yesterday, judge Masipa criticized Pistorius’s decision to reach for his 9mm pistol and fire it through the toilet cubicle in his home rather than raise the alarm or fire a warning shot. She said: ‘If the accused, for example, had awoken in the middle of the night and in darkness seen a silhouette by his bed and in a panic shot at that figure, only to find it was the deceased, his conduct would have been understandable and perhaps excusable.’
She added: ‘The accused had reasonable time to think, reflect and conduct himself. ‘I’m not persuaded that a reasonable person with the same disability would have fired the four shots. ‘The accused knew there was a person behind the toilet door, he chose to use a firearm. ‘I am of the view the accused acted too hastily and used too much force. It is clear his conduct is negligent.’
Her verdicts came after a long wait for a conclusion in the case, the defendant having shot his girlfriend some 18 months earlier. Interest in the trial was intense, and a ruling that parts of it could be broadcast live on television added to the scrutiny. It opened on March 3 with a witness describing how she heard ‘bloodcurdling screams’ on the night of the shooting. But the case was riddled with delays and adjournments, including a lengthy break in proceedings while Pistorius’ mental state was assessed. The prosecution, led by Gerrie Nel – nicknamed The Bulldog for his courtroom tenacity – sought to depict the star as having a short fuse and being obsessed with guns. His defense team, headed by Barry Roux, presented a case that portrayed him as anxious about crime and claimed evidence at the crime scene was mishandled. Pistorius’s reactions as the case against him was set out ranged from crying during evidence about texts they exchanged to vomiting at a description of her injuries.
‘BLOOD-CURDLING’ SCREAMS, TRAILS OF BLOOD AND VOMITING ON THE STAND: A TIMELINE OF ONE OF THE MOST DRAMATIC TRIALS IN HISTORY
March 3 – Oscar Pistorius pleads not guilty in court to murder and three gun charges.
Later, neighbor Michelle Burger, the first witness called by the prosecution, tells the court she heard ‘blood-curdling’ screams before the sound of four gunshots on the night the Olympian killed his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.
March 5 – Prosecutor Gerrie Nel says neighbour Charl Johnson received texts and calls after his telephone number was read out in court the previous day. He described one voicemail message as saying: ‘Why are you lying in court? You know Oscar didn’t kill Reeva. It’s not cool.’
March 10 – Pistorius vomits repeatedly in the dock as he hears graphic details of the injuries sustained by the girlfriend he fatally shot.
March 11 – A witness describes how a ‘furious’ Pistorius fired a gun out of a car sunroof after being pulled over by police for speeding.
March 12 – Part of the crime scene is reconstructed in court as a forensic analyst demonstrates how Pistorius may have bashed a cricket bat on the door of his toilet to get to the girlfriend he had just fatally shot.
March 13 – Photographs of Pistorius’s bloodstained prosthetics, the alleged murder weapon and of the crime scene are shown.
March 17 – The manager of a South African gun training academy says the athlete had ‘a great love and enthusiasm’ for firearms.
March 19 – A police ballistics expert claims Ms Steenkamp was standing in a toilet cubicle and facing the closed door when she was hit in the right hip by the first of four bullets fired by Pistorius.
March 24 – Text messages between Pistorius and Ms Steenkamp are read to the court. In them she states she was sometimes scared of him and complained about what she described as his short temper and jealousy in the weeks before he killed her.
March 25 – The following day, defence lawyer Barry Roux notes that the messages were a tiny fraction of roughly 1,700 that police Captain Francois Moller, a mobile phone expert, extracted from the couples’ devices. Later that day, and in a rare comment, Pistorius says he is going through ‘a tough time’ as the prosecution case closes
March 28 – Judge Masipa delays proceedings until April 7 due to illness.
April 7 – The defense case opens. In a break from tradition, owing to illness, a pathologist is called as its first witness rather than the defendant. When he takes to the stand later, an emotional Pistorius begins with an apology to Ms Steenkamp’s family. He says: ‘There hasn’t been a moment since this tragedy happened that I haven’t thought about your family.’
April 8 – Pistorius breaks down in tears and howls while describing how he shot girlfriend Ms Steenkamp, forcing the court to adjourn.
April 9 – Giving evidence for a third day, Pistorius tells how his girlfriend ‘died while I was holding her’, describing how he put his fingers in her mouth to try to help her breathe and put his hand on her hip to try to stop bleeding from one of several gunshot wounds.
April 9 – Mr Nel begins cross-examination, showing a photograph of Ms Steenkamp’s bloodied head. He tells the defendant: ‘It’s time that you look at it.’
April 11 – Pistorius’s first week giving evidence ends with a dramatic exchange between Pistorius and Mr Nel about the moments before the shots were fired.
April 14 – There is another adjournment in court as the Olympian breaks down again while giving evidence.
April 15 – Re-examined by his own counsel, Pistorius recalls how he was ‘terrified’ that the person in the bathroom was an intruder. ‘I feared for my life. I was just scared,’ he says. ‘I was thinking about what could happen to me, to Reeva. I was just extremely fearful.’
April 16 – Judge Masipa announces the trial will adjourn until May 5, following a request for a break from Mr Nel.
May 5 - Upon resumption, Pistorius’s neighbour, Johan Stander, describes how he received an urgent call to help following the incident. He says: ‘He (Pistorius) said on the call, ‘Johan, please, please, please come to my house. Please. I shot Reeva. I thought she was an intruder. Please come quick’.
May 8 - A social worker who visited Pistorius in the aftermath of the killing describes the murder suspect as ‘heartbroken’. Yvette van Schalkwyk, who says she decided to give evidence at the trial because she was upset by suggestions reported in the media that Pistorius was feigning grief to sway the judge in his favour, adds: ‘He cried 80% of the time. ‘He talked to me about what they planned for the future, his future with her.’
May 9 – A ballistics expert says his analysis of the scene where the Olympic athlete shot Ms Steenkamp differs from the reconstruction of the shooting by police investigators.
May 12 – Mr Nel says the athlete should be placed under psychiatric observation after an expert called by the defence said Pistorius has an anxiety disorder.
May 14 – The much-delayed trial receives another set back, as the judge orders the athlete to undergo psychiatric tests. The case is delayed until until June 30 while he is observed as an outpatient at Weskoppies Psychiatric Hospital.
May 26 – Pistorius arrives at the hospital for the first day of psychiatric tests.
June 30 – After a month-long break, the murder trial resumes when mental health experts state Pistorius was not suffering from a mental illness when he killed girlfriend Ms Steenkamp.
July 2 – Mr Roux reads a psychologist’s report which concludes Pistorius is severely traumatized and will become an increasing suicide risk unless he continues to get mental health care.
July 7 – Mr Nel challenges the credibility of a doctor who testifies that the athlete has an anxious nature linked to his disability.
July 8 – The defence team closes its case and the trial is adjourned.
August 7 – After a lengthy adjournment, closing arguments begin.
August 8 – Judge Masipa announces she will deliver her verdict on September 11.
August 9 – Pistorius is cleared of two murder charges, but faced an agonizing 24-hour wait to see if was guilty of manslaughter.
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