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No. The evidence was that OP "thought there was an intruder" and "shot his girlfriend". Not that he made a mistake or that there was not an intruder. Burger was given many chances to say that this was not what she was told but never once disputed it. It's easy to make the leap to believing that it was a mistake and that there was no intruder if you don't think about it logically and that's the point - she fell into an easy trap. I'm not saying it's wrong, I did it too when she first gave her evidence.
2. However Michelle Burger and her husband now know what they heard was his girlfriend screaming bloody murder followed by four shots from Oscar's gun.
Correct. But remember I'm talking only about Burger knowing the extra information I quoted in 1. You say "now know" but she already knew she heard a woman screaming and four shots which she had already attributed to a home invasion.
3. Logic dictates Oscar also would have heard his girlfriend screaming (and should have recognized her voice) and not fired four bullets in the direction of his girlfriend's screams.
He would have heard Reeva screaming but remember Johnson did not tell Burger there was not actually an intruder. It does not matter if there was/wasn't or it had been reported or not or who other than Burger knew what. The point is that at that time Burger knew only that OP thought there was an intruder. If she had believed OP at that point then the circumstances under which OP "shot his girlfriend" could much different to those of murder. Not just OP's version but any number of others once there is a real intruder in there with them. For example an intruder could have advanced on Reeva with gun raised ready to kill her when OP grabbed his gun and shot at the intruder but missed the intruder and killed Reeva. That would also fit the bloody murder screaming and shots.
Really now! If someone tells me they "thought" there was an intruder in their home last night and then accidentally shot their cat while investigating the noise, I would feel safe in assuming there was probably not an actual intruder. According to you, I should think the poor cat was just unlucky and in the wrong place at the wrong time and the intruder probably escaped unharmed.
Burger said she was surprised and shocked to learn that it was not a home invasion when her husband called with the news that it was Oscar Pistorius who reportedly "thought" there was an intruder and then shot his girlfriend. Before she even had time to fully process this new version of events she would have immediately learned more details from the early morning news reports. And as she testified in court, NO ONE (including Oscar) was saying there actually had been an intruder at Oscar's house.
Roux repeatedly refused to accept Burger's answer to his question about how she knew there was not an actual intruder at OP's. As she tried to explain, the minute she learned OP shot Reeva, Burger naturally understood that the woman she heard screaming in mortal fear of her life was not screaming like that because there was a suspected intruder in their house-- that woman was screaming like that because she faced someone about to murder her or her loved ones.
Then, as she and her husband discover the next morning, it was not a home invasion and Reeva was never threatened by an intruder. The only person she could have been in mortal fear of would had to have been Oscar Pistorius. And when he later files a bail affidavit stating that Reeva never uttered a sound during the events of that night, Burger and Johnson are forced to conclude he is lying, and decide to give their statements to the police.
You have apparently fallen for Roux's totally specious line of questioning about when Michelle Burger came to know there was not an intruder at Oscar's house and his protracted badgering of this extremely important witness. Why does it matter what she knew precisely at the moment of her husband's call? Is that any different than what she was thinking 2 minutes later after getting additional information from the tv or radio news reports? They did not decide he was lying until they heard his bail affidavit.
To disregard Michelle Burger's testimony, you must also be willing to accept Roux's theory that Oscar can pitch his voice and scream like a woman and also yell help alternately both like a woman and a man. You must also accept that while Burger was awakened by blood-curdling screams, she somehow failed to hear the initial gunshots-- instead she only heard Oscar screaming in mortal fear, sounding just like woman, as he bashed down the toilet stall door... Bang (interval) Bang, Bang, Bang.
Far from worrying about whether or not this witness was prejudiced against the defendant, I am simply astounded that anyone would fall for that fuzz dazzle of a cross examination by Roux. But I do believe Masipa did just that.