1) IIRC you asked for an example and I gave you one.
Like it or not the law does allow some leeway when an accused gives evidence precisely because we can never know why they may answer the way that they do.
2) He does not have to be charged with CH for it to be a competent verdict. Do you think CH was not proven?
3) At the moment he heard the noise he was clearly testifying that he did not intend to fire. I think he intended to use the gun if he had to but not necessarily to fire at that point. He could have fired at any point if his intention was to shoot at the door - creep up quietly and fire immediately for example.
1) I asked for an example supported by evidence. I was quite specific about the evidence bit, since without it it's mere speculation on your part.
Your "evidence" is what you think and what makes sense to you. Strange as it may seem, this is not evidence. Try again without reference to your personal supposition because - in the nicest possible way - I don't care about that.
2) Stop using phrases like "reasonably, possibly true" and "competent verdict" when you don't know what they mean. I am sure MrJitty could explain for you.
I don't think CH was "proven" because I don't think he didn't know he'd hurt a human being by firing four times into the toilet cubicle. He quite clearly did know, so no, on that basis, CH was not "proven". It should have been murder.
I repeat, since he was not charged with CH, no one was trying to "prove" it. The defence were trying to get him acquitted and indicated that the charge should never have been more than CH anyway...which was a hint that Masipa should (if she was trying to find him guilty of anything, it should be that). Masipa agreed. But this does not mean CH was "proven".
3) Someone not intending to fire does not do it four times, pausing to change trajectory after the first shot. Not in the universe I live in.
Masipa found he intended to fire. If not, she'd have acquitted him.
He intended to fire. Did fire. Ought to have known it would kill someone/amount to an unlawful act, but (because of his subsequent behaviour) somehow didn't know that.
You are trying to divorce him from intent when even Masipa didn't do that.