In reference to Mr. Fossil's previous post:
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...-10-Day-46-sentencing&p=11097412#post11097412
With regard to the critical information the door yielded it IS making up evidence when you imply that there is some equally plausible alternative explanation, even though Nel didn't offer a single substantive hint of it in court. He asks only about the unprovable timing of the one mark, and in that concedes the unanimous conclusions of all the experts on both sides regarding the significance of the other one. I think Vermulen agreed or agreed with qualification at least three times that the door was damaged after the shots, that it was intact when the shots were fired.
The testimony was that it was the hard strike that penetrated the door allowing the bat to be used as a wedge and lever that ultimately broke open the door. How could it be reasonable to think that somehow, despite no evidence supporting it, that Oscar later quietly surreptitiously pulled at the door with his hands, or invisibly kicked it or whatever excuses are offered to avoid this evidence devastating to the state. No reasonable or fair person would do so. The evidence is clear and reasonable assumptions must be made:
1) one set of sounds was bat strikes, one set was gun shots.
2) the strike that testimony indicated was key in breaking open the door was almost certainly loud and part of one of the sound sets
3) there was no stray bang after the second sounds the state calls gun shots that could account for the strike attributed to breaking open the door
4) the angle on both bat strike impressions was the same, suggesting Pistorius was at the same height (ie legs on or off) for both. As per testimony and common sense it seems much more reasonable to think Pistorius was on his legs in order to swing a bat with sufficient force to break open a door. It also makes more sense with the timeline after the second sounds that he already had is prostheses on at this point.
5) Again, the two distinct sets of sounds supports the idea that all the bat strikes came together. Though the the two bat marks were at the same angle they were not made from the same standing position. This perhaps correlates with Michelle Burger's recollection of a pause between the first bang and the ones that followed. He hit it, it wasn't productive or the section hit shocked his hands as he testified, and he moved to tackle it from a different stance.
6) Michelle Burger also recalled hearing the terrified screaming throughout the second sounds and, most importantly, lasting for a few moments after the last bang. Is this not much more likely to have been Oscar screaming as he was hammering the door and then for a few moments after the hit that 'worked' as he was wedging the bat to break open the door? And stopping when he was through and able to proceed? Or is it more likely that Reeva screamed through her devastating head wound and for a few moments after it?
7) The sound guy testified that it was unlikely that sounds from a closed toilet with a closed window would have been intelligible from the distances in involved. Again, more likely that people almost 200 m away heard Oscar screaming from the bathroom with the open window rather than Reeva screaming through a devastating head wound from a room with a closed door and a closed window.
It's devastating evidence. And I will repeat that you have to avoid, dodge, and invent to escape it. Even Gerrie Nel didn't really try, thus Roux's point about his utter failure to address the key issue of the first sounds.