Erm! ......
At a loss for words
I've got a plethora of words on Judge Masipa's verdict. It is making my head spin. Here goes:
Controversy has been about her rejection of Dolus Eventualis. The answer to the test whether Oscar knew the possible consequences must be yes. He knew his ammo, he knew the legal boundaries, he knew his tiny toilet cubicle. He had no mental incapacity at the time. There was an error in persona. He said, I killed Reeva. I thought she was an intruder.
Judge Masipa rejected Dolus Eventualis, claiming, if I understood, that Oscar had the intention to shoot at the person behind the door, not to kill. The evidence failed to prove intention to kill. Hence culpable homicide.
Or did she say that Oscar did not have the intention to kill REEVA, hence culpable homicide, in which case if I get it, she did not understand the implications of error in persona?
She said the state hadn't proved that Oscar accepted the possibility of killing someone when he fired a gun four times through the toilet door. How was the state meant to prove it? Did Oscar need to read the terms and conditions and tick the little "I accept" box before he fired the shots?
But did Judge Masipa accept putative self defence as some legal commentators are claiming? She didn't seem to. But if she accepted that Oscar believed that his and Reeva's life were in imminent danger, and this state of his mind is now a determined FACT, then surely the appeal court can overturn the verdict of culpable homicide in favour of not guilty, as his action was not unlawful, even if it accepts that this verdict is perverse, which is in itself perverse
Or is it a combination? She accepted putative self defence but his action was over the top?
Quite frankly, I found Masipa's reasoning, also in determination of facts, so bizarre in general, that I wonder, is there any chance (other than proof of corruption) for the entire evidence and verdict to be re-examined. This does not look good for South Africa.
Does anybody remember the old 70's or 80's TV programme, "Soap", in which every episode ended with "Confused?" That is how I felt when Oscar was in the witness box, and how I felt when I listened to the verdict. Maybe I got it wrong. I stopped taking notes and got a drink
Also, as echoes of OJ continue, can June and Barry Steenkamp file a civil case against Oscar, so that maybe the facts of the matter can emerge?
Final caveat; All of above is IMO. How can it be otherwise? I am not South African, I am not a lawyer or legally trained. I guess I have to be considered a trial observer, a thorn in the side of some in the legal profession, who think that plebs should not express their views, hence lots of Latin (which I happily can follow sufficiently). But on the other hand I have many in the legal profession to thank for my understanding of South African criminal law, such as it is, not least the estimable retired judge, Chris Greenland.
p,p.s, on the illegal possession of ammunition - I thought that was a matter of strict liability so absence of animus not mitigating.