I think anyone who made a conscious effort not to buy into incredible media bias against OP will not be too shocked at this outcome. Even up to a couple days ago I read an article that was so wildly slanted against him I just had to roll eyes.
Even the lawyers have to feign disbelief because it goes against what they've been predicting all along. It's also not lost on me that any professional can still be subject to the same biases as any of the rest of us. I've read several lawyers online who were of the opinion that OP could get CH or an acquittal and some who even thought he deserved it. Yet they were never trotted out on these shows to give their opinion.
I am genuinely sick at heart. There should have been absolute justice for Reeva and her family. Now there will never be.
The assessors may also be ready to throw up, although they knew what the decision was, of course. They may feel the way I do but could only challenge her on the law.
Lawyers are saying she is wrong in law there. The law says a person (ie anyone) not a particular person. Whether naming a person matters or not, I have no idea. How on earth can somebody shoot four bullets through a door and not foresee that they could possibly kill them. Defies belief.
Lawyers are saying she is wrong in law there. The law says a person (ie anyone) not a particular person. Whether naming a person matters or not, I have no idea. How on earth can somebody shoot four bullets through a door and not foresee that they could possibly kill them. Defies belief.
Judge Greenland quote from Channel 199 (paraphrasing) :"the judge appears to have applied the test (for eventualis) and in my mind it's a little bit problematical as to how it was resolved"
Those lawyers are ignoring the fact that Masipa also said that she accepts OP's version as true and reliable that he thought his life was in danger. He believed he was acting lawfully - but he was mistaken. That does away with the argument that intending to kill an intruder can be murder.
She said the bathroom window was open, so it was not his imagination. But why did she assume it was already open, and that he didn't open it (to support his version) on one of his unsupervised trips upstairs?
She seems to have rejected anything requiring speculation.
Those lawyers are ignoring the fact that Masipa also said that she accepts OP's version as true and reliable that he thought his life was in danger. He believed he was acting lawfully - but he was mistaken. That does away with the argument that intending to kill an intruder can be murder.