Barry Roux SC (equivalent to a QC) is a first class heavyweight, who has represented Roger Kebble and other high profile clients. Gerrie Nel who leads the prosecution is also very good indeed. He was previously head of the Directorate of Special Operations (Scorpions), and prosecuted the former National Commissioner of Police, Jackie Selebi, who is currently serving 15 years in prison.
This could be interesting.................
But what if he thinks that he heard the sold of an automatic weapon being cocked? Guns can be fired through doors from either direction. And anyway, if their had been a violent, armed thief in there and he had come out shooting, he wouldn't have been standing long enough to return fire. In this country, using pre-emptive force in self defence is acceptable, I doubt whether it will be any different in SASomeone who's shut themselves in a bathroom cannot be an immediate threat to him, whatever way you try and present it.
Agreed. He could have called the police and simply trained his gun on the door until they arrived. If some stranger did come out then that would be the time to perhaps think about
using his gun.
Al
Al
donutagain said:just wondering if a loud fart could sound like an automatic weapon being cocked
But what if he thinks that he heard the sold of an automatic weapon being cocked? Guns can be fired through doors from either direction. And anyway, if their had been a violent, armed thief in there and he had come out shooting, he wouldn't have been standing long enough to return fire. In this country, using pre-emptive force in self defence is acceptable, I doubt whether it will be any different in SA
Well, if that turns out to be his defence then it would be reasonable to assume that someone who has bribed a guard or otherwise gained entry to a secure, gated estate in SA is very likely to be armed - assuming of course that the intruder wasn't one or more of the guards. And yes, if someone had cocked something like an AK47 or one of its many variants, it could certainly be heard through an internal door.Would he really have heard a faint metalic click through the door - according to his statement he says he thought he heard someone entering through the window - automatic weapons arent mentioned.

I'm not defending him. I'm just thinking aloud about what my defence might be in a similar situation, if I wanted to make up a story to justify my actions.however it would also be reasonable to check where your partner is before assuming that multiple automatic weapon toting intruders are forcing entry.
Personally If I thought I was facing multiple assailants with automatic weapons i wouldnt be firing blind through the door as that would just waste rounds and invite returned fire
But what if he thinks that he heard the sold of an automatic weapon being cocked? Guns can be fired through doors from either direction. And anyway, if their had been a violent, armed thief in there and he had come out shooting, he wouldn't have been standing long enough to return fire. In this country, using pre-emptive force in self defence is acceptable, I doubt whether it will be any different in SA
. Even if this fairy tale is believed, the issues still remain, was it reasonable and proportionate to start to blaze away? Thats a matter for whoever sits in judgment, but I don't rate his chances.
@SkyNewsBreak: Oscar Pistorius has been granted bail by magistrate in Pretoria court ahead of full trial accused of girlfriend's murder
Pistorius has now been granted bail.
Absolutely unbelievable:thumbsdown:
I wonder if bail would have been granted if he had been an "unknown" black person, or indeed an "unknown" person of any race?
Problem is the State has cocked up their case monumentally, they have produced circumstantial evidence at best, guesswork and supposition by the investigating officer at worst.
Without a lucid, precise laying down of evidence by the State, what other conclusion could the Magistrate have come to?

Surely the only issues here areAbsolutely unbelievable:thumbsdown:
I wonder if bail would have been granted if he had been an "unknown" black person, or indeed an "unknown" person of any race?
Garry Edwards said:Surely the only issues here are
1. Will he do a runner?
2. Will he interfere with witnesses?
3. Is he likely to commit other offences if released on bail?
These are the questions that always have to be asked, regardless of how much money someone has or their social status.
In the case of someone who is world famous and rich, there is little chance that they will disappear, they are too easy to find and have too much to leave behind.
I would say his wealth makes it more likely he'll do a runner (pun intended). He doesn't need to disappear, just get to a country without an extradition agreement with SA.
pepi1967 said:I don't think he will i think he will stay and fight his corner. But we will see.
I think you're right. The bail hearing will have encouraged him to stay and fight, but I still think he'll lose in the end. Once the prosecution have had time to build their case, the holes in his story are going to get bigger and bigger.
Problem is the State has cocked up their case monumentally, they have produced circumstantial evidence at best, guesswork and supposition by the investigating officer at worst.
Without a lucid, precise laying down of evidence by the State, what other conclusion could the Magistrate have come to?
They had a reporter from SA on Today at just after 7 this morning, she said it's not without precedent and there have been a few cases of people shooting loved ones thinking they were burglars due to the high crime rate and widespread handgun ownership.
Anywhere else in the world beautiful n wealthy except South Africa Id have thought it was a story ...but im inclined to think its a true nightmare, folk in SA do feel that nervous most of the time, gotta be way worse without legs I guess ....I feel for them all.
So from seeing his statement a few gaping holes jump out at me: 1. He hears the intruder when out on the balcony - goes to get his gun from under the bed where he fails to notice that his girlfriend is no longer sleeping. 2. He screams at the intruder and Reeva apparently fails to call back something to the tune of "It's just me in here you plonker". 3. He batters the door down with a cricket bat - is that likely? I'd imagine the bat would break before the door?!.
In this country (and I very much doubt whether it will be any more difficult for people in other countries where their defence is one of self defence) there is a requirement for the person who uses force to protect themselves, others or their property to be in genuine fear and to truly believe that their actions are appropriate and necessary.
It doesn't matter whether the danger is in fact genuine or not, what matters is the belief of the person who uses force to defend. At present, a lot of leeway is given to the person accused of using self defence in this country, because the Courts recognise that people can take the wrong decisions for the right reasons when they are half asleep, scared witless and have only seconds in which to make their decision. And the degree of force used doesn't need to match the degree of danger either, in linear terms. Proposed changes to the law will give people even more leeway than they have now.
As an obvious example, if you can see someone pointing what turns out to be a toy gun at you, you are perfectly entitled to fire a real one at him. If the police end up shooting a totally innocent person (Stockwell tube) because they wrongly believe that he was armed with a bomb, then that's self defence because of that true, although mistaken belief.
So, if he genuinely believed that there was an intruder in his bathroom, in a country known for violent home intrusions, that should be good enough. And hopefully the evidence will make it clear whether or not his belief was genuine.
Dave
No, I am rationalising it in terms of common ,law, which, whatever you say the differences are in terms of types of burglary between the 2 states, remains a constant.
The fact is that force when used has to be proportionate, and in simplistic terms this wasn't. There's nothing supporting his story at all, and a lot of holes in his tale. It matters not one jot who he thought was in the loo, burglar or his girlfriend (and it really is stretching credibility that he didn't notice her not being in bed), there was no real reason for him to fire through the door, nothing apart from his word that he heard what sounded like someone coming through the bathroom window, and nothing to support the idea that whoever was in the loo was armed.
In short, it doesn't matter who he thought was in there, the force used was disproportionate.
If he bothers turning up for his trial, I am sure all of those points will be made. If of course he doesn't, well, it simply means that the next person to come along in similar circumstances is less likely to get bail.
Would the reasonable person not have switched lights on? Firing indiscriminately into a door was probably not the right thing to do IMHO...
Maybe he couldn't reach the switches while he was stumping around?