Exactly.
What makes this thread frustrating to read at times is the assertions that Nel should have done things contrary to evidential and court procedure.
The call records were state exhibits. Stipp is a state witness.
Neither counsel challenged the contents of the exhibits.
The timing of Stipps call to security is thus common cause. As we know, Masipa changed around the timing of events Stipp witnessed to fit with Roux's timeline.
Clearly Roux's timeline is not common cause and never could be.
And of course Nel is "objecting" (sic) to the alleged timing because it is contrary to the State Witnesses own testimony
Finally, in terms of trial procedure, each side makes its closing arguments.
While there is room for submissions on particular points, it is not the case that State then picks the defence case to bits all over again.
Unfortunately all of these issues arise from Masipa's illogical approach to the evidence.
Masipa employs circular reasoning in deciding that Stipp must have observed events with wildly different timing because then everything fits.
By far the more obvious conclusion is that the timeline was simply incorrect.
Which, as I have said before, is exactly why Nel does not get into all of this speculation
The problem with arguing that only the state's phone records can be used to create a timeline is that there were 2 calls to security at different times in relation to events in the Stipps' evidence which the phone records don't agree with. I don't see why this should be ignored.
Moreover, if the state's case relied on a phone call that OP claimed he made and which wasn't made, wouldn't you be arguing that this was a legitimate use of phone records? But then in that case, the state would have produced all the phone records to prove that the call wasn't made. Yet they didn't do this to prove the Stipp's first call was made.
The state repeatedly said the second bangs were at 3.17 during the first week of the trial and again in their final arguments. I don't really see on what basis Masipa could have rejected this given that it was the State's own case.
And as far as I can see, if Masipa and the assessors had doubts about the timeline, then that's all they needed to dismiss the state's case. If they wondered whether they could trust Johnson's time then they may well have thought that the State could easily have refuted this evidence and proved Stipp's evidence was reliable by just producing the phone records. So why should the court do the State's job for them if the State couldn't be bothered to do it?
If it isn't standard practice for the state and defense to address each other's case in the closing arguments, then one wonders why they have sight of each other's heads before submitting their own (in the case of the defense) and a week before verbal submission (for the state). Surely, it is to give them the chance to properly address points raised by the other side that they hadn't planned to address.