I can't seem to find Duchy's post with the photo now .. have gone back several pages, so I think it must've been deleted by the mods (maybe no link/photo credit given?)
Anyway .. this is the photo of the bed for the photoshoot ..
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http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/oscar-pistorius-first-picture-blade-1724074
.. that one definitely does appear to have blocked in sides .. and the beside table appears to be part of the bed .. it's like an all-in-one type thing .. but the bedside table and lamp looks quite different to this photo of the crime scene which I posted upthread ..
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http://pbs.twimg.com/media/BjARo9PCcAAWOTi.jpg:medium
.. the side of that bed does look the same though, doesn't it .. it deffo looks blocked in .. how odd that he says the gun was under the bed, then??!
As roux would say... "I put it to you"...
Seriously speaking, look again and you will see the lamp is the same it is only the lampshade that is different. In the Mirror's photo the lampshade is a large plain white plastic looking square block (fashionable a few years back), in the crime scene photo the lampshade has been changed for a much smaller round one in a brocade. The lamp itself has the same wooden block legs. It looks as if there are only three legs in both photos, one each side and one in the middle, but it just may be (I doubt it) that there is a fourth leg at the back hidden by the the shadows and perspective and by the poor quality of the photos.
In respect of the actual table it also one and the same. It is rectangular. In the Mirror's photo it has been sited running length-wise against the bed with the drawer opening away from the bed, (i.e. perpendicular to the length of the bed), while in the crime scene photo it has been sited with the drawer opening parallel with the bed. The kick-plank base over which the drawer overhangs can be seen clearly on the right side in the Mirror's photo, while in the crime scene photo the frontal angle does not permit seeing the kick plank as you can't see either of the sides to see the recess over which the drawer overhangs.