He used those too
I know
He used those too
Also, in his affidavit, the slamming of the toilet door was never mentioned (quite an important detail to leave out considering that was the third 'startle' that made him shoot), and the word 'screamed' is mentioned just once - when he said he screamed at the intruders to get out. Masipa said his screaming was not contested, but he practically contested it himself by only mentioning he screamed once - and only to the intruders. My brain is fried (must stop scaling electric fences looking for toilet paper) so off to bed.
Also, in his affidavit, the slamming of the toilet door was never mentioned (quite an important detail to leave out considering that was the third 'startle' that made him shoot), and the word 'screamed' is mentioned just once - when he said he screamed at the intruders to get out. Masipa said his screaming was not contested, but he practically contested it himself by mentioning he only screamed once - and only to the intruders. Yet somehow screaming once turned into a lot more screaming (to cover Reeva's screams?) and 'screaming like I'd never screamed before'. My brain is fried (must stop scaling electric fences looking for toilet paper) so off to bed.
Both cases revolve around whether in the absence of reliable evidence from the accused the court can rule out that the accused might have believed he was under attack or about to be and thought he had the right to shoot. It's plain in the De Oliveira case that he couldn't possibly have been in any danger. He was in his house upstairs I think. The men were outside. The Judge noted that there was no sound of breaking glass that might suggest a break in. In short not even a man of low intelligence could have really believed he might be in danger. Contrast this with op. He's on his stumps. He thinks the danger is very close. It's hard to see the comparison. I'd have thought it was obvious that someone in his place might think he was possibly in danger and would have the right to shoot to defend himself. It doesn't matter whether this is the truth, it's the version the court us working on. The only argument against this is that he did know he shouldn't shoot without seeing his target, but I'd say that what you know when writing on a piece of paper when safe and what you do when you think you're in danger are two different things and the court should put themselves in the place of the accused to answer whether there's a chance he could have believed he was acting in self defence.
Sorry you are wrong. There is a chronology to what he did. The screams of anguish and anger at himself along with calls for help occurred after he realized that it could have been Reeva in the toilet.
Yep. And he handed his gun straight to the police, was desperate to talk to them, answering any questions and then told everyone he'd plead guilty to whatever they charged him with and would go to prison for life if need be. That's remorse.....the direct opposite of everything we saw from "How dare the State even charge me Pistorius".
BIB - and didn't he get medical assistance straight away instead of sitting with her for "I don't know how long" and then phoning a friend?
Wrong. He testified that he was alternating screaming and silence as he made his way along the hallway and again as he was standing before the door. It is there in the evidence you say you are familiar with.
The point I was making was that he did not just charge down the hall screaming like an idiot as has been said here time after time ... there was a chronology to what happened. He yelled at them to leave and waited ... he yelled at Reeva to phone the police ... he yelled at them again to leave ... then, later when he went back slowly into the bedroom while still having the gun pointed at the window he found that Reeva was not in the bed. As it dawned on him that it might have been Reeva in the toilet he started screaming in anguish and calling for help and trying to break through the toilet door ...
Again all I am trying to do is get rid of the "running towards the toilet screaming like and idiot phrase" ...
He could very easily have been in shock. This commonly happens after a tragic accident. Just think of how people wondered about aimlessly after 911
Only his STORY is completely idiotic, otherwise he is simply a murderer.
That's it isn't it. When you point out all the inconsistencies, as you have done so systematically, you have to suspend all rational thought to even consider his ridiculous version might ever be reasonably, possibly true. It's not even possible, much less reasonable of truthful. It just beggars belief!
Sorry you are wrong. There is a chronology to what he did. The screams of anguish and anger at himself along with calls for help occurred after he realized that it could have been Reeva in the toilet.
The screams are pretty crucial though, wouldn't you say? OP has to deny Reeva uttered a single sound from the minute she asks if he can't sleep until the moment she's dead, otherwise he's a cold-blooded murderer. Much of it hinges on whether you believe the neighbours who heard a woman screaming in fear were actually hearing OP scream like a woman (which, as we know, Roux was going to absolutely prove, but never did) and Mangena and Saayman's testimony that Reeva would have had time to scream after the first shot. Any noises from Reeva before she was murdered (or any sighting of her) prove OP was lying.....not "simply" because we don't know nothing about the lead up to the shooting........for the time being we have a sentence but no evidence from before the shooting to back it up ........maybe apart from the screams.......still a long way to go yet.....
Only his STORY is completely idiotic, otherwise he is simply a murderer.
So the screams that the multiple witnesses were woken/disturbed by that occurred well before 3:12am and then the subsequent first set of "shots" that caused them to call security would most probably have been RS then, right?
Reading that brings home just how odd the SCA judgement was imo. In that case,the accused shot at men outside his property where no one could think he was in danger. He didn't fire a warning shot to scare them away. In those circumstances the judge's conclusions make sense. But in OP's case, he thought he had an intruder in the house. Very close. I don't think it makes any sense to say he should have fired a warning shot or that that is prima facie proof that he knew he wasn't acting lawfully in the circumstances he described. Plainly Leach has tried to use the same logic but he's applied it to very different set of facts in which it's far from obvious that no one could think they were acting lawfully.
I know you think he's guilty of DD of Reeva but I'm surprised you think there's any real comparison between the facts of the two cases that would justify Leach using the same logic.
The screams are pretty crucial though, wouldn't you say? OP has to deny Reeva uttered a single sound from the minute she asks if he can't sleep until the moment she's dead, otherwise he's a cold-blooded murderer. Much of it hinges on whether you believe the neighbours who heard a woman screaming in fear were actually hearing OP scream like a woman (which, as we know, Roux was going to absolutely prove, but never did) and Mangena and Saayman's testimony that Reeva would have had time to scream after the first shot. Any noises from Reeva before she was murdered (or any sighting of her) prove OP was lying.