He has killed his girlfriend, of that there's no doubt, and trial by both media and judge is underway.
However, it's one thing reporting on a story that OP is a reckless *******, and another thing to leak information with the intention of planting the seed that he maliciously planned a murder.
I have not seen anything from any person or media outlet suggesting that OP sat down with a flip chart, stop watch and pen and planned out Reeva's murder. I really don't think that anybody has.
My use of the word pre-meditated in respect of this killing does not mean months of preparation, but a deliberate act.
Now I was trying to find some definitions regarding SA law and found a very interesting article which (for me at least) sets things out far more clearly than anything else I have found to date.
I think the difference around pre-meditation comes from a real difference in interpretation between some US states and the way things are viewed in SA. I would have gone with the US states (which is probably unprecedented in my lifetime!) in viewing the deliberate going and fetching of the gun as premeditation. It appears that in SA there has to be more deliberate planning for pre-meditated murder.
However, there are then some definitions of murder (as opposed to culpable homicide) near the end of the article, which seem more appropriate for OP. The classification of murder into pre-meditated, the three listed types of murder intent and culpable homicide will affect the length of sentence.
Anyway, some of you may like to have a read. The article starts off by describing the points made during an on air 'animated discussion' between two US attorneys about whether it could be pre-meditated murder or not.
http://www.politifact.com/punditfac...grace-talks-oscar-pistorious-trial-could-pre/
Some types of murder that would be considered premeditated in the U.S. would not be considered premeditated in South Africa, said Bob Dekle, a retired assistant state attorney who teaches the prosecution clinic at the University of Florida Levin College of Law.
In South Africa, murder is defined as the unlawful and intentional killing of another person. There are three different forms of intent that come into play when a judge is determining the length of a sentence. (Memorize the Latin terms like we did and youll seem super informed about this case.)
Dolus directus, or direct intent. It was your goal to kill someone.
Dolus eventualis, or knowing the possible result of your action will kill someone and recklessly going through with it anyway. Its akin to second-degree murder, Dekle said.
Dolus indirectus, or indirect intent. When a persons death is a substantially certain outcome of your action, such as committing arson and knowing factory workers will die as a result.
The judge could also decide the murder was not intentional and find Pistorius guilty of culpable homicide, or an unlawful negligent killing. In that scenario, Pistorius ought to have foreseen the result of shooting through a door but did not, or he should have known Steenkamp was in the bathroom when shooting through the door, said Marius du Toit, a criminal defense attorney in South Africa who is tracking the case. The court would determine how a reasonable person in Pistorius situation would have acted that night and compare it to what he did.
My view at this point would be that OP is guilty of murder rather than culpable homicide and that Dolus eventualis best fits the apparent circumstances.
I would hope that when considering whether culpable homicide is a suitable verdict, common sense wins through. That is after all the judgement which is supposed to be made:
'how would a reasonable person have reacted'?
So actually, when FMs have been criticised for picking holes in OP's two versions of what happened, they are in effect just doing what the judge and assessors will need to do - look at what OP did and decide if it was credible or reasonable.