Me too - for the clocks. But you miss the point of the phone times evidence. We know that Mike and his wife heard male crying (not sobbing, more like high pitched wailing) before his call to security at 3.16. So OP was crying out before 3.16 and for some time. We know that Burger/Johnson heard approximately 5 minutes of female screaming and 'shots' after the phone call he made to a different security number at 3.16 that lasted 58 seconds. Many have pointed out that these may have been on different clocks and that's true but the key point is that the state who bear the burden of proving their case didn't produce the phone logs for Johnson that could have proved their case if in fact the times are wrong. Why not? It can only be because they wanted to lose (!), were unbelievably incompetent or because the phone logs don't prove their case - I can't see any other explanations for that failure. They put the time of the shots at 3.17 based on Johnson's evidence, the evidence so many posters want to ignore, it seems. So it's not about different time stamps or clocks, it's about the choice of the state to not produce evidence they could easily have obtained and put to the court if it helped them.
BBM
No, we don't know this. This is the Nglengethwas' interpretation of what they heard and you have chosen to accept it.
I don't see how you can simply gloss over the fact that, apart from one loud bang, followed by a man wailing, the Nglengethwas didn't hear most of the loud noises that, on OP's own version, must have occurred that night; noises, which, moreover, were detected by the State's witnesses, lending credence to the accuracy of their version.
As a matter of logic, if such close neighbours as the Nglengethwas somehow managed to miss the gunfire and the cricket bat strikes, there is no reason why they may not also have missed Reeva's screams. And yet, we are repeatedly informed that, had Reeva screamed, they would have heard her, due to their advantageous proximity.
On your version, how can it be that the Nglengethwas, wide awake, close by, and listening intently, heard Oscar wailing after the last shot but failed to hear the bat strikes?
You seem to set great store by the fact that a non-witness heard OP crying after the event and proceeded to correct his wife's assumption that it was a lady crying; yet, you blithely ignore the fact that a Defence witness stated on oath that she was wondering 'what happened to the lady'.
It goes without saying that it is enormously disappointing that Nel didn't pick up on this slip. But, my question is, why have you also chosen to gloss over it?
It isn't clear to me whether you are trying to establish the truth of what happened that night or whether you are merely discussing whether or not the State proved its case.