minor4th
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He says he perceived a threat, however great he makes that perception out to be, what he is not claiming is that he saw a real threat and that is the key.
We have laws against killing for a reason, to prevent people from killing people. SA laws regarding self defense are not the same as US laws. In SA you are not permitted to use deadly force against a person that is not demonstrating an immediate threat to you or others, that is the law. If an armed theif is stealing your car on your property you cannot shoot at him, you have a responsibility to stay in your home and allow the theif to live. The value to human life is easy to understand from the SA law's intentions, the value of your car that he is stealing or anything else cannot be valued higher than a human's life, including the thief's life.
So OP violated the law. He did not visualize anyone that was immediately intend in causing him great harm or death. Instead he fired four shots, not just one by accident or whatever, fired four shots through a door intending to murder whomever was behind that door. That is against the law. Although he killed Reeva and not an intruder doesnt change the fact that he intended to kill, he fired four shots attempting to kill, and he killed a person - that is murder.
From what I've learned, that is not exactly the law in SA. There is a concept of "putative self defense" that could lead to culpable homicide or even an acquittal.
If an accused uses deadly force with a genuine belief that he is facing an imminent threat of harm (even if in hindsight it is known that there was no actual threat at all) - then he is not guilty of intentional murder. At most he can be guilty of culpable homicide.
Here's an explanation from a SA case where putative private defense was asserted:
The test for private defence is objective – would a reasonable man in the position of the accused have acted in the same way (S v Ntuli 1975 (1) SA 429 (A) at 436 E). In putative private defence it is not lawfulness that is in issue but culpability (‘skuld’. If an accused honestly believes his life or property to be in danger, but objectively viewed they are not, the defensive steps he takes cannot constitute private defence. If in those circumstances he kills someone his conduct is unlawful. His erroneous belief that his life or property was in danger may well (depending upon the precise circumstances) exclude dolus in which case liability for the person’s death based on intention will also be excluded; at worst for him he can then be convicted of culpable homicide.”
http://www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZASCA/2002/71.html
Strangely, the Court overturned one or two of his murder convictions - and not only found him not guilty of intentional murder but also acquitted him of culpable homicide, even though he shot and killed someone who was not posing an actual threat to him.