I also said here weeks ago that most bullets are shot out at supersonic speeds. Some at several times the speed of sound.
Even if the scream and shot were at the same time, at the larger distances of the witnesses, say 177m, the supersonic sound waves of the gunshot would arrive at some part of a second ahead of the last scream, even if the two occured at the same time or if the scream occurred a bit before the shot. I've said for year here I hope PT has got a physicist there to testify. Sorry they didn't.
Thanks Shane .. I didn't see your previous posts on this, but it's what I was trying to get at in my post yesterday. I've been doing a bit of reading up on accoustics and it's really not as simple as 'it's not possible for Burger to have heard a scream after the shot' .. although the speed of sound is constant, it depends of the type of sound and the frequency, whether they are supersonic sound waves, etc as to whether that speed changes and in addition to that, decibels (depending on the type of sound) can be heard in different ways (i.e. something can be the same decibel as something else, but can be heard in different ways). Add to that the possibility that Reeva's last scream (which we don't know whether it started a fraction before the head shot, or directly on impact as an involuntary action) could've continued just slightly past the actual impact (i.e. her scream would not have stopped at the *exact* same time as the impact and would've tailed off), then I see no reason whatsoever for Burger not to have heard what she described she heard.
p.s. loved your 'Into the light' parody! I meant to have said when you first posted it, but the thread had been shut before I got the chance to!