Oscar Trial – Day 17, April 8 OSCAR

Oscar returns to the stand for more direct examination.

Roux is now focusing on how Reeva and Oscar met. They met on Nov 4, 2012, at a car event. Justin Devaris is their mutual friend. They hit it off at lunch and Oscar asked her to attend the sports awards with him later that night. Oscar states he had the most amazing time with her.

reeva and oscar

For the first six days they saw each other every day. She then left for Jamaica to film a TV show. Things had slowed down between them when she returned. They spent time getting to know each other in November and December. Oscar planned to go to Cape Town for Christmas vacation. He invited Reeva but she wanted time alone and was going to stay in Johannesburg with friends. The friends she had planned to spend Christmas with ultimately canceled their plans so Oscar stayed through Christmas and spent the day with Reeva, their friend Darren Fresco and Darren’s girlfriend. The next day he left for Cape Town and was scheduled to stay until January 2. Reeva stayed at Oscar’s place in Pretoria while he was away. On January 1st, Reeva called him and asked him if she could come down. Oscar states that January is when their relationship really started to pick up and get going.

Oscar says that they had both come out of difficult relationships and he was probably more in to her than she was in to him. He tried to give her some space. But they started to grow closer in January. They started talking about the future. He had a trip to Brazil in March and he had booked a flight for her to come with him. She told him about her brother and he said to her that he wanted to meet him. They also were picking out furniture together for his new home in Johannesburg. Reeva had shared with Oscar that she was looking for a new place to live and Oscar was helping her with some of her work contracts.

Roux now reviews the Whatsapp text messages that were read in court a few weeks ago to get some clarification and explanation for their conversations. (See my blog entries for Days 14 and 15 of the trial for details.)

They establish that Reeva did have an interest in cars.

They also review the “rabbit” text message that was confusing to many of us. A friend had given him a wood carving of a rabbit and Oscar in turn had often given these little carvings to friends. Reeva saw him taking pictures of them once and got upset. It sounds like they have some sort of sentimental value and perhaps there was some jealousy there, but he doesn’t really explain the full meaning behind it.

They address the text where Reeva says she was not a stripper or a ho. Oscar says it was Reeva being defensive to his previous message where they were arguing about her time in Jamaica.

They next talk about the long message where Reeva tells Oscar that she’s very upset with him for having to leave Darren’s engagement party early. Oscar states it was just a bad day for them. Their friend who they had to pick up was running late and Oscar was also running late, so it started out bad. When they first got there, they were initially enjoying themselves. Oscar then needed to get some food. He was on a specific diet and couldn’t eat what they had there. He also says they had agreed they’d leave by a certain time.

At one point Reeva started talking to a male friend. Oscar was standing behind them and Reeva didn’t introduce him. He walked off angry and states that he felt insecure and a little bit jealous. Reeva then came over and sat with him and was tickling his neck. It annoyed him and he says “he wasn’t kind to her like he should have been”. He needed to leave to get food before training so they left and he dropped her off at her place. She was in a short mood with him. They didn’t talk for the rest of the day until she sent him the long text message.

Oscar then reads his reply back to Reeva which, in my opinion, was a pretty weak attempt at an apology. He states he is sorry and then goes in to a two paragraph explanation of how her actions caused him to act the way he did. Ultimately it ended with him sending her a text message of XXX and she writes back XXXXX.

They then read another text where they are at an event and Oscar wanted to get to the exit quickly. Reeva stopped to talk to a friend and Oscar got upset and embarrassed her in front of people. This is the text message where she says to Oscar that she has tried to make him proud but he didn’t make her feel like a lady that night. She can’t be attacked by outsiders for dating him and be attacked by him at the same time. Oscar explains that he needed to leave early that night; he had a very hard training session in the morning. They did argue but he didn’t think many people could hear. Perhaps only a few people.

In my opinion, I get the impression that Oscar had very specific needs and they were probably difficult to live with. I don’t think Oscar would necessarily deny that. It seems like it could have potentially been a constant source of friction. The one thing that I’m not fond of at all in his explanations is that he tends to make it seem like Reeva is overreacting to everything and that he hasn’t really done much wrong. He justifies all of his actions.

It’s hard to know the true story when you are interpreting people’s messages from a distance but it was very interesting to see the faces of the gallery in the courtroom. Many friends and family members were shaking their heads and having annoyed looks on their faces. Gina Myers, Reeva’s close friend, and her family were there and they did not look pleased at all with most of Oscar’s answers. Even Aimee Pistorius looked annoyed for parts of the day. These people know the inside stories. We will only ever hear Oscar’s side.

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One piece of info to point out, Oscar did state that he doesn’t often argue with people over text. He prefers to speak directly to sort things out because emotions can be misunderstood.

They review a message where Oscar is telling Reeva that she shouldn’t go running (he states because of safety.) Some may interpret this as he was trying to control her.

He talks about the stresses in their lives. They both had their own financial stresses. Oscar had his career and media stresses. Reeva had her work and health stresses. He’s just talking about their general state of affairs. He then shifts to Reeva dealing with nasty messages on social media that she had been receiving because she was dating Oscar.

Oscar again states that they first met and got together on November 4th. His last communication with Samantha Taylor was on October 27th. Samantha wrote him an email in which she confessed to sleeping with another man. He states that Samantha was calling him constantly after that and he never replied to her messages or emails. And once again… all of Reeva’s friends in the gallery are shaking their heads and whispering to each other. It sure does seem like they know a different side to this story.

He says that on November 4th, Reeva said to Oscar that she was aware that her attending the sports awards with him would be controversial considering he had just been with Samantha in the Seychelles weeks before where they filmed a TV spot together. She knew it could stir up trouble, and sure enough it seems like it did. It really bothered Reeva that she was getting such hateful messages and that people were writing about it in the press. Oscar says his attitude was just to ignore it, live your life and don’t worry about what people are saying.

Roux and Oscar read through several more cutesy messages that the two have exchanged to each other. They show a few text messages where Reeva has sent a pic of herself to Oscar.

Reeva text pic

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They then look at a message where Oscar tells Reeva that he doesn’t want her driving alone at night. Roux asks him why he sent that. Oscar’s response was that in his family the girls aren’t allowed to drive alone at night for safety reasons. Interesting choice of words… allowed.

They read more flirty messages.

The text messages that they are reading are now getting close to Feb 13. A few days prior they exchange some texts that show that Oscar was stressed out about things. Reeva was being supportive of him.

They talk about the text message where Reeva states that she is going to meet up with Warren on Feb 12, but she says she can see him another day. Almost as if she is asking Oscar if it’s ok. Oscar replies that he has a dentist appt at 12:30pm but to come through (I believe meaning come over) when she is done.

Warren is Reeva’s ex-boyfriend. They dated for several years and had lived together. They remained close friends.

warren and reeva

We are now up to the text messages for FEBRUARY 13

Reeva had spent the night before.

10:08am RS to OP – Good luck today baba let me know how things go
OP to RS – Thanks angel

(Oscar had a meeting in Johannesburg that day with a financial advisor)

RS to OP – Baba I hope you don’t mind but I came back to the house to work a bit and do some washing. It will help me a lot to get stuff done and relieve some stress. I’ll go through to Joburg at like 3pm.

RS to OP – It’s a difficult thing to try to console you baba because it’s a shitty thing and you’re a nice guy. I guess these things happen and we can just hope they work out for the best. You are an amazing person with so many blessings and you are more than cared for. Your health and future monetary blessings far outweigh this hurdle I can promise u that.

(Oscar says this message had to do with the financial meeting he had that morning)

OP to RS – Thank you my angel, you don’t have to my angel. Stay tonight if you’d like.

(Oscar says this means he was telling her she didn’t need to go to Johannesburg, she could stay at his place)

OP to RS – I’m just finishing off at Ryan

(this was another meeting that he had that day)

RS to OP – Thank you baba. Let me know if you’d like to spend time with M or Carl. I’m sure you maybe feel like some family tonight.

RS to OP – Angel I’m going to go home at like 6pm. Please stay and do what it is you were going to do.

Roux is ready to move on now but first goes back to two previous test messages, one from January and one from February, where Oscar discusses his injured shoulder. He wants to remind the court about this injury.

Before addressing count 1, the Murder charge, Roux wants to address charges 2, 3 and 4. (You can find the charging documents on the home page menu of my blog)

COUNT 2

This is the charge of Oscar firing his gun through the sunroof on Sept 30, 2012. Darren and Samantha testified to this incident.

Oscar states that the previous night he had been at a wedding and the next day some friends decided to go to the Vaal River. On the way home afterwards that day, Darren Fresco drove (a car from Justin Devaris’ dealership), Oscar sat in the passenger seat and Samantha Taylor sat behind Darren. Oscar had to leave the river that afternoon as he was catching a flight that same afternoon to Scotland. They were traveling on their way back to the house but first had to drop off the vehicle. Their own vehicles were left at Justin’s house.

As they were about to hop on the highway they were pulled over by a police officer. The car they were driving did not have a registration sticker in front. The officer wrote a ticket and gave it to Darren. Darren took it and threw it in to the foot well where Oscar was sitting. He then got on the highway. Just after the plaza they were pulled over by a metro police officer. They asked Darren to get out of the car and walk to the front. A short period of time two more police cars pulled up.

Oscar felt he needed to get out and help “diffuse the situation”. This is troubling to me. Darren is talking to police officers. What does Oscar need to diffuse? I don’t understand his actions here. He took his weapon and put it on the seat before he got out of the car because he thought it would be a bad idea to approach the officers with a weapon. I imagine it would be.

One of the officers stated they had been following Darren on the highway due to speeding for quite a while. There was discussion amongst the officers at that time. Another cop yelled over to them asking whose firearm was in the vehicle. Oscar walked over to him and told him it was his firearm and to please give it back. Oscar then states the cop was aggressive with the firearm and ejected the cartridge out in to the car. He then dropped the gun on the seat and asks for Oscar’s registration. He wants to know why the gun is just sitting in the car and Oscar explains that he didn’t want to get out of the car with a weapon on him. The cop lost his temper, lit a cigarette and walked away.

Oscar was trying to find the bullet but couldn’t find it. Another cop came over to help. At this point, Oscar says he was quite agitated and angry that the cop had handled his firearm. Oscar thought Darren was going to get arrested but he only got a fine for speeding. Several minutes later they were done and they took off.

From there they went to Justin Devaris’ house. They also went to dinner nearby. He doesn’t remember what time. He left for Scotland later that evening.

As for shooting his gun through the sunroof, Oscar states that never happened. He also does not recall going to anybody’s house that day to sign gun papers. He is denying this charge against him.

COUNT 3

This is the Tashas Restaurant incident where he unlawfully discharged a firearm.

Oscar had a friend in town visiting at the time. Kevin Lerena asked them if they wanted to have lunch that day. Darren Fresco also met them at the restaurant. Oscar was considering purchasing a new firearm at the time and he wanted to see Darren’s gun. He states it was stupid of me but I asked Darren to hand me the gun under the table. He wanted to check that the gun was safe and as he was checking the chamber a round came out and the gun discharged.

He was “overcome with fear” that somebody may have gotten hurt. He was angry at Darren for handing him an unsafe firearm. He stated “what if somebody got hurt” and “take your firearm back” and he gave it to Darren under the table. At this point people started talking again in the restaurant. He thinks that people probably thought it was an explosion in the kitchen of some sort. Oscar couldn’t believe what happened. He didn’t really know what he was thinking. He feels they both were to blame. He made the mistake of wanting to see the firearm in the restaurant and Darren made the mistake of giving him a firearm that was loaded and one up. Oscar states that Darren told him not to say anything.

Roux then asks him if he made any comments about the media. Oscar first says no, not at that time. But then he states that he did say to Darren “do you know how stupid this was” and that he “couldn’t afford for it to get out in the media”. Oscar was stumbling with his words here. To me, it seemed like he was not just relaying the incident but rather trying to make sure he said the right thing at the right time. Just my impression. Darren told Oscar he would take the blame. He’ll say it got hooked on his pants and fell on the floor. Darren was coming up with excuses.

Mr. Loupis came to their table and asked if they knew what had happened. Darren told him the story about it getting stuck on his pants. Oscar then says it was his fault, I’m sorry and he’ll pay for the damages. He states he said this many times until they left. This is in contradiction to what Mr. Loupis, Kevin Lerena and Darren Fresco all testified.

He says he was relieved that nobody was injured or worse. Oscar paid the bill with his credit card and he apologized to Mr. Loupis again. Oscar also said that Mrs. Loupis stopped by the table and was joking with Darren and smacked him on the back of the head, jokingly.

He made it seem like it wasn’t a big deal to Mrs. Loupis, and actually made her look foolish as if she thinks gunfire is a joke. Oscar then says it wasn’t a matter to be joking about. Again, in my opinion Oscar is spreading around the blame and making himself look like the innocent, responsible one in the group.

They left the restaurant and noticed that Kevin had been hit in the leg with a small piece of tile. There was a small trickle of blood on his leg. Oscar asked him if he was ok and he apologized.

COUNT 4

This charge is for possessing illegal ammunition, .38 special rounds.
Oscar understands the charge and doesn’t dispute that he had it in his safe.

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But… he never purchased this ammunition; it belongs to his father who has a registered .38 in his name. He was only keeping it for him in his safe. It wasn’t his and it wasn’t in his possession, Oscar states. His understanding of the law is that you’re allowed to give your ammunition to another person for safe keeping. He had no intention of ever using this ammunition.

Although… let’s not forget he had placed an order for a .38 special from Sean Rens in June 2012. He was just waiting on the licensing to be finalized which never happened due to the killing. So to say he never had any intention of using the ammunition could be up for debate.

COUNT 1

This is the murder charge. Roux wants Oscar to tell the court what happened on the day and the evening of February 13.

That day Oscar woke up with Reeva who had slept over. He left Pretoria early to beat the traffic to Johannesburg. He was there for a financial meeting. He arrived an hour early, met up with a friend for coffee (he didn’t say who and I’d like to know who), then went to the meeting until about noon.

He had no plans that afternoon. He was not going to train that day because of his shoulder injury. He thought that Reeva was going to come back to Johannesburg so he was planning to call her after the meeting. But after the meeting he ended up seeing his estate agent, Ryan.

From there he went to see Justin Devaris at work. He asked him what his plans were for the day and they talked about having dinner. Samantha Grayvenstein, Justin’s girlfriend and Reeva’s close friend, showed up then. Oscar told her that the boys were thinking about doing a guys dinner and she said she was in the mood to just watch a movie in Johannesburg. She said she’d phone Reeva and ask her if she’d like to join her.

Oscar and Reeva then exchanged messages about what they wanted to do. Oscar said that Samantha had invited Reeva to watch a movie but Reeva said she preferred to stay in Pretoria again over night. Oscar then decided he was too tired to go out with the guys so he decided to go home and spend the night with Reeva. Reeva asked Oscar if he’d like her to cook them dinner.

There’s something about this exchange that just doesn’t sit right with me. I don’t know if I believe that Reeva wanted to stay and that she suggested they have dinner. The way he described their exchanges and the way he states that “she” suggested dinner when just shortly beforehand she was texting him saying “he should stay where he was and continue to do what he was going to do” (the guys dinner) makes me wonder who was pressing who to spend time together that night. And why?

Oscar then states that “from phone evidence”, she messaged her friend and told her that she wasn’t going to go home that night to Johannesburg and would be staying at Oscar’s house. Also “from phone evidence”, she left the estate to go get food for dinner. Interesting that he’s stating phone evidence. He’s not relying on what he knows, but rather evidence that has been entered.

Oscar arrived home shortly after 6pm. He parked his car in the driveway and went to the front door and it was locked and the dogs were running around the house. He started to say “the door was locked…” and the Judge cut him off and asked him to slow down. He then starts up again and says Reeva was cooking dinner in the kitchen. For some reason he abandoned that previous sentence. Oscar chatted with Reeva for a short time then went upstairs to shower and change. He changed in to his pajamas. He started to say that he went downstairs at 7pm then Roux jumps in and asks him if he had access to his iPad that evening.

Oscar says yes he had access to his iPad all day. Roux says no, he means only that night. Oscar really fumbles here. He starts to say again that Reeva was in the kitchen (almost as if this part is rehearsed), but he says he was also talking on his iPad… then he says he was surfing the net… he was looking at cars that he wanted to get around to that day to get a look at… Then the iPad is upstairs with him while he is drawing his bath. He may have even used it while he was in the bath. He took off his suit on the bed and he used it there again. It was really hard to understand exactly what he was doing with it. His sentences were very broken and honestly didn’t make a lot of sense.

Oscar says he stopped using it when he went down for dinner. Oscar and Reeva started dinner shortly after 7pm. Roux tells him due to website activity he can see an open period from about 7:10pm to 8:00pm, so is that the time that they were having dinner and Oscar says that sounds about right.

After they ate, they sat at the dining room table and chatted about Oscar’s day and Reeva’s new work contract. Reeva’s work from that day was on the table and she asked Oscar to go through her modeling contract that she was about to sign. He went thru it and made some changes for her that he felt were in her best interest. This makes me wonder if something will come up in cross-examination about this. All of the hints that we’ve seen about his controlling nature makes me wonder if there is something up with this paperwork. Maybe he had an issue with some work she was going to take. Just a thought. The fact that he specifically stated that Reeva asked him to review her contract stands out to me.

Typically they watch TV downstairs after dinner but they both had a taxing day and so they decided to go upstairs. Again, a red flag to me that all was not the norm that night. They are off their usual schedule.

He helped her with the plates. Reeva asked him if he wanted anything else to drink, a coffee or a tea, and he said yes. This was a really odd tidbit that he threw in here. Why even mention this detail? The only thing I can think of is there was an empty coffee cup on the left hand side of the bed and according to Oscar’s version of events, he slept on the left side of the bed that night, not the right where he typically sleeps. This detail feels very well placed to me. Oscar went upstairs and Reeva joined him a few minutes later.

Around 8pm, Oscar opened the balcony doors in his bedroom because it was a very humid evening. Contractors had been working on his house for some time. His air conditioning was not working and it was one of the things on their list. He has two fans; a silver tripod fan and a small plastic fan. He placed the back leg of the tripod fan out on the balcony and the other two legs just inside the sliding door. The small fan was placed in between the legs of the tripod fan below it. (So he never went out on the balcony as was stated in his bail affidavit)

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He closed the doors up to the edge of the fans. There are insects outside so he was trying to minimize the open space for them to fly in. He drew the curtains so that they were draped around the side of the standing fan, again to try to seal off as much open air as possible. They are black-out curtains. When they are drawn, it’s virtually pitch-black even during the day.

At this time, one of the lights in the room was on. Reeva came in to the room. He took his drink and put it on the bedside table (there’s that coffee cup again that is so important to mention!)

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He closed the bedroom door behind Reeva and locked it as he does every night. He also put the cricket between his sunglass display cabinet and the door. The bat fits that space fairly perfectly. The lock mechanism on his door is not very strong. So he uses this bat for extra security up against the door.

The house has an alarm system. It does not have door monitors but it has outside sensors. The sensors are battery operated, not wired. When his house was painted in 2010, they had taken all of the eyes off of the outside walls. His house was currently in the process of being re-painted and he was having troubles with the sensors. He goes on to explain how if you take one of the sensors off the wall before you activate it, it doesn’t have a memory to remember what was in its scope the previous time it was activated. It was another confusing explanation that felt very forced.

But nevertheless, he did put his alarm on every night and activated it with the remote on his house keys. He pushed the button every night.

So if we take a tally… the air conditioning is broken so he must use fans on the balcony, the bedroom door locks are not good so he has to wedge a cricket bat in at night, his alarm system is unreliable yet he still activates it every night but it probably won’t work. There are a lot of coincidences brewing.

He then takes his legs off at the bottom of the bed to give them some air. He put them next to the bed and climbed in to the bed, and Reeva got in to bed as well. The TV was on and he was texting with his cousin in Port Elizabeth.

Reeva was on her phone on social media, occasionally showing him pictures of cars and interior decorating, things that she liked. He very specifically added “things that she liked”. The iPads are going to come up in cross-examination. Just wait. He is going to try to pin something on that iPad to her.

Since he and his cousin were continually texting back and forth, he figured he’d just call him at that point. His cousin’s name is Graham. He was coming out for a business engagement. They were chatting about cars, a mutual interest.

While Oscar is on the phone, Reeva got out of bed and was doing yoga stretches on the floor. He had the phone on speaker. Every now and again Reeva would lean up and give him a kiss. He talked to his cousin for a half hour. When the hung up, Reeva got up and walked to the bathroom.

While Reeva was in the bathroom she called Oscar to come brush his teeth. This really struck me as odd. I don’t know anybody who tells a grown man to come brush his teeth. He walked to the bathroom without his legs on and brushed his teeth. While he was doing that, she went back to the bedroom. When he went back in the bedroom, she was in bed and he walked to the closest side of the bed (the left side) and got in.

He explains that earlier in the evening when he got home, he put his gun under the bed next to the attached pedestal (nightstand). When he got in to bed that night, he got in on the left side, the same side where his gun was. He didn’t usually sleep on the left but because of his shoulder injury he couldn’t sleep on his right side. He had been sleeping on the left side for a few weeks.

Shortly after, he started falling asleep. It was very warm in the room. Reeva was sitting up with her back against the headboard. He was lying with his head on her stomach watching TV. She would show him photos every now and again. He was getting increasingly tired. He asked her if she would bring in the fans, close the curtains and lock the door when she was getting ready to sleep, and she said she would.

Roux stops him there and wants to talk about Valentine’s Day, which would be the next day. He asks Oscar if there was a gift for him.

I think Oscar misunderstood the question because he then talked about what he got Reeva. He says in pretty much this exact order… he bought her a bracelet from a designer that she really liked earlier in the year. He hadn’t made any plans for Reeva for Valentine’s Day. He had a dentist appointment the next morning. Reeva wasn’t supposed to stay at his house on the 13th. So the plan was to meet her in Johannesburg at this jewelry store. The bracelet had a couple of charms on it. There were two bracelets he bought her. They had an agreement that they would not make a big deal out of Valentine’s Day. They were just going to have dinner. That was a nice evening for them to just be alone at home.

My opinion here again is that his answer made no sense at all and he was greatly fumbling all over the place. It felt like he couldn’t remember his script and was just blurting out words.
What does a dentist appointment have to do with anything?

The question was whether or not there was a gift. Why is the bracelet still at the jewelry store? Why did he say he bought it earlier in the year? It’s only February… that would have just been a few weeks ago. Why did he suddenly say there were two bracelets? I’m really scratching my head to understand his answer. The only way I can process this is that it’s not genuine.

Roux then asks him specifically if she bought him something. He says there was a wrapped present with a card that said Ozzy on the kitchen counter when he got home that night.

present

He was going to open it but Reeva told him that he wasn’t allowed to open it until the next day. He goes on to say that on August 8th of last year, on Reeva’s birthday, he opened it. It was a photo frame that had 4 photos of the two of them. It was pointed out on Twitter today that Reeva’s birthday is actually August 19th, not August 8th.

Back to that night… he is in bed without his prosthetics. Roux asks him what he was wearing. He says he was wearing basketball shorts and a grey vest (t-shirt). He then says to climb in to bed he took off his grey t-shirt and put it on top of his prosthetic legs. So he only slept in his shorts.

They take a 5 minute adjournment for Oscar to go change clothes. He is going to do a demonstration for the court (off camera).

He comes back wearing casual clothes. Roux has him stand next to the door with his prosthetics on. He then has him take them off and stand next to the door again.

Back to the timeline. When asked when he fell asleep he first says just after 9pm. Then he says between 9pm and 10pm.

He woke up in the early morning hours of February 14th. It was extremely warm in his room. He sat up in bed. He noticed that the fans were still running and the door was still open. The lights had been switched off. He then says “Reeva was still awake, she was obviously not sleeping.” He again fumbled a bit here and then said Reeva rolled over to him and said “can’t you sleep my baba”. He said no he can’t.

He got out of his side of the bed, walked around the foot of the bed holding on with his left hand. He got to the fans and brought the small one in first. Placed it just inside the room. Then moved the larger fan to further in the room. The fans were still running at the time.

He proceeded to close the sliding doors, he locked them, then drew the curtains. Roux asks him about the blinds. And he says he can’t remember, he probably grabbed them. He just remembers closing the curtains.

The only light in the room at that point was a little LED light on his amplifier. He saw Reeva’s jeans on the floor.

dresser and stereo in bedroom

duvet and jeans found on bedroom floor

view from balcony looking toward bedroom door on left and hallway to bathroom on right

bedroom view of bed and balcony door

He picked them up and was going to place them over the LED light. At this point, he heard a window open in the bathroom. It sounded like it was sliding open and he heard it hit the frame like it couldn’t slide open any further. It has a wood frame.

bathroom window

Oscar then says “My Lady, that’s the moment that everything changed”. He thought a burglar had gained entry to his home. Initially he just froze. There is no barrier between the bedroom and the bathroom. He immediately thought that if they were inside they could get to the bedroom at any moment. He immediately thought he needed to arm himself to protect he and Reeva.

He was scared that people were going to come out so he rushed as fast as he could. He couldn’t see anything. He ran with his hand out in front of him, at times touching the floor as well.

When he got to the bed, he ran his hand along the side of his bed. He grabbed the gun from underneath the bed and took the holster off.

He wanted to get to the bathroom passageway so he could put himself in between the person who had gotten in to the house and Reeva.

When he got just before the passage wall, he remembers slowing down because he was worried that this person may have already gotten in to the passage way in the time it took him to get from the amplifier to the bed. So he slowed down and he had his firearm in front of him.

Oscar then says just as I left my bed, I whispered for Reeva to get down and phone the police. When he entered the passageway to the bathroom, he became overcome with fear and just started screaming and shouting for the intruders to get out of his house.

passageway to bathroom

He shouted for Reeva to get on the floor, and also for her to call the police. He didn’t have his legs on and he was constantly aware that this person or these people could come after him.

Just before he got to the tiles at the beginning of the bathroom, he stopped shouting because he didn’t want the intruders to know where he was. He heard a door slam, which could only have been the toilet door. He couldn’t see in the bathroom, but he did hear the door slam which confirmed for him that somebody was in there.

He was certain at this point that the intruders were going to come out. He peered his way in to the bathroom at the entry point.

entry to tiled bathroom

His mobility is not as good on tiled surfaces. He kept his left arm behind him, his shoulder against the wall and his pistol raised. He was continuously watching the corner of the bathroom.

bathroom entry focus point

There was no light on in the bathroom. He could see that the window was open. His back was up against the wall at this point balancing himself, along the left hand side wall. He didn’t know where exactly the people were at this point. He peered around the corner to look toward the shower.

inside bathroom

He saw there was nobody in there. The toilet door was closed and the window was open. Once he saw that there wasn’t anybody in there he retreated a step or two back. He balanced against the wall.

He started screaming again at this point for Reeva to call the police. He wasn’t sure where to point the firearm. He had it pointed at the toilet but his eyes were going between the window and the toilet. He stood there for some time, not sure how long.

He didn’t know if somebody was going to come out of the toilet and attack him, or possibly somebody would come up a ladder outside and point a gun in the window and start shooting. So he stayed where he was and screamed some more. He then heard a noise in the toilet room. He perceived that somebody was coming out.

Before he knew it, he fired four shots at the door.

His ears were ringing and he couldn’t hear anything. He kept screaming for Reeva to call the police. He didn’t know if somebody was going to come in the window, he didn’t know if somebody was in the toilet.

At some point he walked back to the room. He couldn’t hear anything. He didn’t have a phone on him. He walked with his hand along the left side cupboards in the passageway. His pistol was still raised. He was still shouting for Reeva. At this point it hadn’t occurred to him that it could be Reeva. He still thought that there could possibly be intruders coming in.

At that point he made his way to the bed and got on top of it. He reached his hand over to the right side of the bed. He didn’t feel her there and he thought maybe she had gotten down on the floor.

At that point he started to think that maybe it was her in the toilet. He ran over to where the curtains are and ran his hand along them to see if she was hiding.

He couldn’t see much in the room but he could see where the passage was and he felt around and made his way back over to the passageway.

He still had his firearm in front of him. At this point he was mixed with emotions. He didn’t want to believe that it could be her inside of there. He still thought it could be an intruder.

He made his way in to the bathroom, grabbled the handle and tried to push the door in but it was locked. I’m not sure why he said push the door in because that door opens out.

He ran back to the room and opened the curtains and shouted for help from the balcony. He put his prosthetic legs on.

He ran back in to the bathroom and tried to kick the door but nothing happened. He was panicked at this point.

He ran back to the bedroom and got the cricket bat from the floor in front of the bedroom door. He was crying and screaming, crying out for Reeva, crying out for the Lord to help him. He says he doesn’t think he’s ever cried like that before.

He takes a very long pause here. Roux looks on concerned.

Roux watching intently

He ran straight back to the bathroom door. He put his gun down in the bathroom at this point. So he must have been carrying the cricket bat in one hand and the gun in the other hand. I don’t know why he wouldn’t have just left the gun on the bedroom floor when he grabbed the cricket bat. That seems odd to me.

Roux asks him if the light was on or off at this point. He doesn’t remember switching it on, he just remembers it being on when he kicked the door.

He started hitting the door, he thinks he hit it three times. The first swing hit the frame of the door and he got a shock in his hands. So he hit it again and a small piece opened. He then hit the door again and he ripped a big plank out and threw it out in to the bathroom.

He tried to grab the key to the door but it wasn’t there so he leaned over the partition and saw the key on the floor. He leaned in and grabbed it, he unlocked the door and threw it open.

He sat over Reeva and he cried. He doesn’t know how long he was there for. He then begins to sob loudly and says “she was everything”… As he’s sobbing loudly, court adjourns for the day.

Oscar Trial – Day 16, April 7 Dr BOTHA, OSCAR

oscar day 16

Day 16 is the beginning of the Defense case. Roux begins by telling the Court that he will be introducing the following evidence on behalf of the accused:

Wound ballistics, urine content and gastric emptying, evidence of merits, cricket bat damage to the toilet door, sound, prosthetic marking, lighting, visibility, evidence relevant to the events on Feb 14, evidence relevant to vulnerability. About 14-17 witnesses will testify for their presentation.

The first witness is Dr. Jan Botha. He has been a pathologist since 1975. He has testified in trials on thousands of occasions and has done about 25,000 autopsies. He states he has experience with wound ballistics which is the study of the effects of the projectile on human tissue.

At this point they introduce in to evidence some publications regarding gastric emptying. Botha states that the modern consensus is that it’s highly controversial and an inexact science. There are many variances that affect this process including the type of meal, the calorie content of the meal, the volume, and psychological factors and indications of the person are important as well.

He states “while yes there are general trends, to extrapolate those general trends to a specific case is very hazardous. One cannot be adamant about something which is actually in the realms of speculation.”

Roux wants to know how often a pathologist is given specific details of the deceased such as time of last meal. Botha states he can’t remember ever being approached by an investigator with those details and being asked to take that in to consideration in his post-mortem examination. Also, he typically does not get other details such as volume of the last meal, the person’s neurological, emotional or hormonal interactions. He may on occasion get information about medication that the person had been taking, or perhaps that the person had been involved in some type of argument or altercation but that is the exception.

Roux then asks if there would have been anything in toxicology that could have assisted Botha and he states no. It routinely takes 1-2 years to get toxicology reports back therefore it would not have come back in time for trial. As an aside, that’s a pretty shocking detail.

Wrapping up the gastric emptying portion of his questioning, he wants to know if it is possible that the deceased could have eaten an hour or two prior to death and he replies that it could have been, or it could have been considerably longer. He cannot determine that with any degree of accuracy.

They move on to wound ballistics. Botha was asked to review Mangena’s testimony in court, as well as the post-mortem photographs. He wants to know if he was able to form any opinions about the sequence of the wounding of the deceased. Botha believes he has a reasonably accurate idea about what happened based on the bullet holes in the door, the location of the injuries to the deceased, the possible effects of those injuries and photographs of the toilet area.

His theory is that the first shot that struck the deceased was the hip shot. He believes she was standing with her body slightly flexed forward because of the collar of abrasion.

She was fairly close to the door due to the splinter injuries on the arm.

The right hip joint would have become totally instable due to the injury there and would have resulted in the deceased falling down, possibly a reflex reaction.

The second shot was the one that hit her arm, also causing the abrasions on her chest. He believes the secondary wounds indicate she was close to the door.

He also suspects that the third shot was the one that injured her left hand and hit the toilet wall ricocheting off the tiles. By this time she had dropped considerably and her left hand was over her head. The bullet missed her torso and her head but did hit the webbing of her fingers.

She then fell down against the magazine rack (did not fall on top of it) and while she was falling down she incurred the shot to the head.

Botha does not think that Reeva was sitting on top of the rack because she would have been too high and he would have expected blood spatters on the tiles above the rack. He states there is no blood in that position nor is there blood in the magazine rack. There was some on the front of the rack however.

For the arm, he thinks she would have been too far back against the wall to receive the splinter injuries. Also, she would not have been able to lift her arm to protect herself because the arm injury was so severe that he would equate it to an amputation.

In regards to the two injuries on her lower back, he does not believe they are consistent with what a black talon bullet fragment would cause. He then talks about the striations that are seen on top of the injury. He is very certain that a bullet would not cause those striations. They do correlate though with the wood grain on the scalloped edges of the magazine rack.

Mangena had some pretty funny facial expressions listening to Botha testify. He clearly is not buying what Botha’s selling.

mangena making face

Mangena making face2

Mangena making face3

Botha states that he’s not sure how much pain she would have felt, certainly shock and instability. He believes she would have fallen slightly to the right and had complete non-function to the right arm.

The head wound would have been totally incapacitating and she would not have survived long after. There were multiple fractures at the base of her skull but very little blood in her respiratory tract which indicates that she didn’t live long enough for blood to seep down in there. Death happened fairly quickly after sustaining the head injury.

As for the noises (screaming), Botha believes that two factors are important:

1. The sequence of the shots. If he is wrong about the sequencing and she was shot in the head first then she would not have been able to make any sound at all. In the event of rapid succession gunfire, if the shots hit her within maybe 4 seconds, then it is highly unlikely she could have called out. She would be going through shock, panic, fear and possibly pain and before she could process any of that, the head shot would have come last and it would be too late to scream. If there was a longer pause in between shots then yes it would have been possible to scream, but not during rapid succession gunfire.

2. Movement. Due to the severe nature of her injuries, movement would have been reflexive (involuntary). She may have doubled over after being shot in the head but it would not have been a conscious move.

Now they are talking about urine in her bladder. On average, the body produces 60ml of urine per hour. If there is virtually no urine in her bladder than he believes she must have voided her bladder very shortly before she died.

Roux rests and Nel is up to cross-examine.

Nel asks Botha if he knows Dr. Perumal. He says yes. He was the doctor who was at the post-mortem for the defense. Botha was not present for that. Nel wants to know if Botha consulted with him and he says no but he did review his report. Botha states he did not use his report in coming to his conclusions, he primarily used Saayman’s report. Nel suggests to Botha that he discarded Perumal’s report because it was wrong. Botha states no, he used Saayman’s report because it was far more detailed. Remember, Saayman is the medical examiner for the State.

Nel then asks Botha if Saayman would have a better idea of Reeva’s stomach contents since Saayman was there conducting the autopsy and he (Botha) only looked at pictures. He agrees, he would.

Nel then asks him if he is drawing any conclusions about the hip wound based on the collar. Botha says that he believes that Reeva was not erect when that bullet struck otherwise the collar would have been concentric. It was eccentric.

hip wound

Nel challenges him to bring any literature that exists that supports giving any conclusion about the collar of abrasion after the bullet has gone through a solid object such as a door. Botha states that he’s not thinking away the door. He is using his experience in wound ballistics to come up with this conclusion – the wound itself from the bullet is concentric but the collar is eccentric and that is a sign that the bullet hit at an angle. Botha states he does not know of any publication he could reference. This is just basic wound ballistics.

They go around a few times on what could cause the bullet to be at an angle. Botha believes it’s because Reeva is slightly bent over and Nel believes that the bullet would not be stable after going through the door.

They now talk about Saayman’s findings about the gastric content. Botha agrees that Saayman estimated that Reeva ate within two hours of her death. Saayman also stated in his report that it was not an exact science and Botha agrees. Saayman stated that there may be inter and intra individual factors to take in to account. But there have been fairly good timelines established from a physiological standpoint based on the need to know when it would be safe to administer anesthetics and when to operate on a person. One would have to take in to account the type of food and the volume of food. Saayman also said that at the time of death the physical process of digestion does not stop. Botha does not necessarily agree with this, he has read differing opinions on this. Overall, Botha cannot say whether Saayman is right or wrong on this.

a b c d on door reconstructed in courtroom

Next, they discuss the sequence of shots. Nel shows Botha the door in court and asks him if he has worked out which shot (A, B, C or D) was the hip shot and he says that no, he has not. He is not in a position to say with any certainty which shot in the door caused which injury. Nel is on fire now. He wants to know how he could show up as an expert at court and give testimony about the sequence of wounds and not relate them to the holes in the door. Botha gets very defense and states to the Judge that he is not a ballistician. Yet, several minutes ago he was testifying to the order of the shots through the door. So he is contradicting himself.

He then tries to explain to the court how he came up with his theories, since he obviously didn’t use the door as he previously stated. He states that the hip, arm and head wound are all at different levels of the body so she obviously wasn’t standing in the same position when she was hit. This is what Mangena testified. But somehow he is trying to be more creative, he’s trying to get her right up against that door so that all injuries happen immediately so the succession of shots can be as quick as possible, so there can be no screaming. But essentially he is saying that he’s “trying” to figure this out on his own without applying the physical evidence at the scene which is a grave error. This doctor should not be testifying about this because he obviously is not a ballistician and does not know what he’s talking about. The defense looked very foolish with this testimony, in my opinion.

Now that he has painted himself in to this corner, Nel is going to put his testimony to the test. He walks him through each of the holes in the door along with the wounds.

They first talk about how Reeva’s body likely would have moved after it was hit by the shots. Since the right hip joint was shattered and instable, Botha believes she would have fallen slightly to the right. Nel points out to him that bullet hole A is likely the entry point for the bullet that hit the hip and considering that, where would she likely fall if it hit her from that location. Botha then states she would probably fall backwards. Exactly what Mangena said.

Botha adds there may have been a slight rotational movement of the body to the right, but ultimately it would be a backwards fall.

Nel now wants to know which bullet hole would have then caused the arm wound. Botha is not sure and explains that he can’t answer because shootings and body movements are dynamic. Nel reminds him that he came there and gave evidence and he is now testing it. He needs to support his evidence.

Nel then states he understands they can’t say with complete certainty exactly what happened, but they certainly can ascertain what is probable, and Botha agrees.

Nel asks Botha to accept that B missed Reeva and hit the tiles, and that leaves C and D as the holes for the arm wound and the head wound. Botha accepts this.

They discuss the right arm wound. It had an entrance and exit and there were also injuries to the torso just below the right breast. The injuries on the torso suggested that there was not a short exit, meaning the arm was being held away from the body in an upward fashion. Botha agrees.

But Botha believes it happened while she was falling. Nel reminds him that they agreed that she was falling after the hip wound. So if she’s falling backwards and gets hit while falling, she is not right up against the door like they were trying to state earlier. Botha now tries to say that he believes she was in “reasonable proximity” to the door and Nel wants to know if the toilet would be considered reasonable proximity. Botha can’t say, and challenges the State to test because he doesn’t believe that anybody has. This makes Nel pause, and Mangena grin in the background. Mangena did test the door.

Nel moves on to the head wound. He wants to know if the head was close to the door when it was hit. Botha is not aware of any findings that suggest that and is not aware of any wood fragments to the head or the face, so he assumes the head was not close to the door.

Nel asks if he were able to show Botha that there was blood spatter on the wall behind the magazine rack and the toilet, and broken hair with tissue on the toilet lid would he be able to say that the head was at toilet level when shot. Botha is not sure, he wants to see the photos.

spatter on toilet wall

spatter on toilet wall2

toilet lid

As soon as Botha sees the image of the toilet lid he agrees that the head must have been very close to that area when it was hit.

He then shows him a pic of the toilet seat and points out that there is blood on the toilet and a separate pool on the ground but it’s not overflowing from the toilet, so can it be assumed that there were two different wounds resting in this location.

toilet

Botha states that he would assume the blood in the toilet is from the head and the blood on the floor is from the right arm. Again, exactly what Mangena said.

They move on to the two small wounds on her lower back. Nel wants to make sure that he understands… Botha is saying that striations from wood grain caused the marking on Reeva’s back. He says yes. Not impressions, but actual striations caused by wood grain? He says yes. So they look at the injury together.

wounds on back

close up of back wound

In order for there to be a pattern like that there needs to be an edge like that on the magazine rack, not just a striation pattern in the wood grain. It doesn’t make sense what the doctor is alleging.

Nel points out that the hair is still intact on the skin in that area and Botha says that it would not necessarily be removed by that abrasion. But it was a friction wound, according to the doctor, so Nel again asks wouldn’t it be likely that the friction would have removed the hair? Botha states it’s possible. Nel says “forget possible, isn’t it likely?” After Botha goes around and around with him a few times he concedes, yes it’s likely. Nel says “gooood”. And then he says why do we have to struggle so much to get answers? Botha was not too pleased with this comment and says to My Lady that he’s just trying to be as accurate as possible. Nel reminds him that he (Botha) is the one that gave the evidence and he is only testing it. Botha agrees. I have to admit, it was a funny exchange.

They break for tea so Nel can consult with Saayman.

They are back and again talking about the striations in the back wound. Nel points out that it’s very unusual to find perfectly symmetrical striations in wood, and the striations seen here look very symmetrical.

They then look at a close up of the tank top that Reeva was wearing and look at the striation/pattern on the shirt.

close up of tank top

close up of back wound

Nel asks if it’s possible that the shirt that she was wearing could cause those striations in between the skin and whatever hit her. He does not believe that the surface of the shirt is firm enough to cause that. He believes it would have to be something hard. Nel starts to interrupt him and Roux objects, and they let Botha finish his answer. He refers to the pattern as “tram track” and he believes that a rigid surface would have to cause it. He does not think that a shirt could leave any markings.

Nel revisits the gastric emptying one last time. He asks Botha if he agrees that every day thousands and thousands of surgical and endoscopic procedures are performed on patients on the basis that complete gastric emptying had taken place within 4-6 hours. Otherwise, the patient’s safety would be compromised. Botha agrees that in most patients it will occur within 4-6 hours.

Nel asks Botha if he knows of any reason why it would be different in this case. He says no. He is not aware of any physiological or other factors. Nel then refers to the Knight’s Forensic Pathology book and cites “even if one accepts gastric transit time of an average meal is 2-3 hours, the assumption that death took place within this time could only be valid if the death was sudden and unexpected.” Botha agrees that her death was sudden and unexpected. Therefore it’s not illogical to make the assertion that she ate approximately two hours prior to death.

During this time the court flashes some images of Reeva’s head. This image is briefly seen.

head 2

Nel wants to go back to the hip wound now.

hip wound

Nel establishes with Botha that this is an atypical wound. They talk again about the bullet passing through the door and he asks Botha what would likely happen to that bullet. Botha answers it could possibly either become unstable or slightly deformed. Nel states that based on this, the doctor can’t really say that it was bending over that caused that bruising. He again challenges him to find any literature that supports his theory.

Nel now wants to discuss Oscar’s double tap story. He asks Botha if he is aware that Oscar claimed to do two double taps and he says yes, he did hear that.

So they look back at the door and Nel asks him if hole A was the first shot, then which shot came next. Botha can’t answer, he doesn’t know. Nel reminds him that when he started his testimony he stated “My Lady, in all probability the sequence was…” implying that he understood the sequence of shots. Nel is proving that he does not.

Botha states that he does not think that one can tell much from the door because of the relatively close grouping of the holes but clarifies that he only took in to account the height of the holes and the number of holes, nothing else about the door.

Nel asks him if he took in to account the heights, what did he think hole B hit? He says he’s not sure. Nel tells him that he can assume that hole B was the missed shot and Botha says that he’s still not convinced that shot B missed her. What?? That was a really silly answer because hole B was a definitive test done by Mangena showing that bullet went straight through and hit the wall (proven by laser pointers.) Botha supposedly reviewed Mangena’s testimony but obviously not closely enough.

They do agree though that the head wound in all probability was the last wound that occurred due to the fact that none of the bullet holes have an appropriate height to hit her head standing up and it would have immediately incapacitated her making the other wounds impossible where they hit.

Nel challenges Botha on the screaming. Nel states that Saayman testified that he would have been surprised if she didn’t scream. Nel wants to know if Saayman was wrong. Botha doesn’t come out and say he’s wrong, he just states that screaming depends on the timeframe of the shots. If the shots happened quickly within 4 seconds or so that she very likely was in a state of shock and panic and wouldn’t have had enough time to react before the last shot hit her head. But, he continues, if there was an interval of several seconds between the shots then he believes she could very well have cried out.

Nel says there is one other thing to consider… if while in the toilet she was in mortal fear and a shot then rang out, wouldn’t you expect her to scream. Botha says “I would”. Because then it wouldn’t be a shock and a surprise. Nel informs Botha that both the State’s and the Defense’s version is that she was primed. And boy, did the defense lawyers sit up at attention when they heard this.

shocked look on defense

Nel wants to know if Botha took that in to account, he states he didn’t because he wasn’t aware she was primed.

In the accused’s version, Oscar is yelling to Reeva that there’s an intruder, call the police, telling the intruder to get out… so she was primed and likely fearful, if we are to believe their version. Under those circumstances, Nel asks Botha, would you have expected her to scream and he says yes.

As far as the bladder is concerned, Botha restates that an average person accumulates 60ml of urine per hour. Having found 5ml of urine in the bladder, Nel wants to know if he can rule out that Reeva had gone to the bathroom 15 minutes before her death and he says no.

Nel rests.

Roux has one item to correct the court on. He acknowledges that during his cross-examination of Mangena that he put on record there was a double tap shooting. But directly after adjournment he was informed that he had gotten the version incorrect, it wasn’t double tap it was actually rapid succession. Roux says to put this on him, it was his mistake. All the while Nel is shaking his head. That’s a pretty big “oops”.

Roux also wants to clear up that Reeva never heard that she was going to be shot that night. She heard Oscar say to call the police, etc. but nothing about being shot, according to their version.

With the four shots coming suddenly, Roux wants to know from Botha what a normal reaction would be when one is shot unexpectedly. Botha then goes back to his original answer, he thinks the person would be in shock and wouldn’t have time to respond especially if the shots were rapid succession.

Roux also wants to mention that when Reeva fell on the magazine rack, it’s possible that her shirt moved up at the time, which means that the shirt may not have been a possible cause for the striations. Plus, there were also holes in the back of the shirt. So he is trying to throw out the Defense assertion that the shirt could have caused that pattern.

Roux wants to address the wounds on Reeva’s chest now.

chest injury

Botha notes that there are several small punctuate wounds, there is another wound which shows a break in the skin, two small triangular bruises and one large dark bruise. These are the types of wounds he would expect to see when the black talon jacket hits the skin. He does not feel the wounds on the back are similar to this.

Roux rests.

Nel gets up and says that he is totally surprised by what Roux had to say about the double tap. Roux had previously stated that was Oscar’s version when Mangena was up and there have been several witnesses since, and this is the first that the State is hearing about their change in versions.

Nel had just cross-examined Botha on the double-tap version and now that the Defense is changing their version, he wants to be able to cross-examine Botha on the new rapid succession version.

So Nel looks at the door… again… with Botha and asks him in light of the shots being rapid succession, knowing that A was the hip shot and B missed her, how can he explain the C and D shots and where they hit her.

Botha actually laughed at this question and Nel says he also feels like laughing.

Botha answers that if somebody fires in rapid succession, unless you are a skilled marksman, the gun can move around. Using their theory, if A hit her and she was bent over, and the shots were rapid succession, wouldn’t C and/or D have hit her right next to the door. But Botha states she would have been falling backwards. Nel tries to work out a few scenarios but can’t make it work and it appears to me that Botha is just trying to make it fit and pretty much winging it at this point.

Nel concludes “Professor, on rapid shots, your version makes less sense.”

Nel rests and no further questions from Roux.

Next witness on the stand… Oscar Pistorius.

Oscar walking to stand

oscar walking to stand2

There is something that Oscar wants to do first. He wants to apologize to Reeva’s family and friends.

Steenkamps

Steenkamps2

He assures them that he was trying to protect Reeva and that night when she went to bed she felt loved. He has tried to put his words on paper many, many times but no words could ever suffice.

Roux then asks him if he is on medication. He states that yes he is and lists what he is on. Primarily anti-depressants and sleeping pills. He is afraid to sleep and wakes up terrified. He states that he doesn’t ever want to be around or handle a firearm again. He has a guard that stands outside of his door and often phones his sister in the middle of the night to come and sit with him.

Roux then takes Oscar through his family situation. He states he has a brother and a sister and they grew up in a loving home.

Pistorius family2

Pistorius family3

His Dad always worked away from home so their Mom primarily raised them. His parents divorced when he was 6 and his Mom got remarried when he was 14. She passed away when he was 15.

Next, Oscar is asked to explain the difficulty with his legs. Oscar doesn’t like to refer to it as a difficulty, he states he has prosthetics to help him overcome the challenge. But when his legs are off he has a hard time balancing and limited mobility. He explains that he was born with a birth defect, he did not have fibulas. His parents consulted with doctors and they decided the best course of action was to amputate. That happened at 11 months old and he got his first prosthetics at 13 months. He had to have new prosthetics made regularly as he grew and the technology back then was not great, so his legs changed a lot.

He was raised by his Mom to not be any different. She didn’t want the disability to hold him back and encouraged him to play sports and he did play many sports. She treated him exactly the same as she treated his brother and sister.

He did have a few occasions in school where he was bullied but his parents encouraged him to stand up for himself. He got in trouble once for getting in a physical altercation when standing up for himself but his Mom came to school and explained to them that she told Oscar to stand up for himself and that is what he did.

His mother had a lot of security concerns, especially since his Dad wasn’t around much. She carried a pistol and would often call the police at night when scared. There was often crime in the area. There were a few break-ins at their home. She kept her firearm under her pillow in a padded leather bag.

He went to boarding school for high school, Pretoria High. This was Oscar’s choice. His brother switched schools and went there with him as well. He fit in well and played rugby and water polo. He later moved over to athletics (running).

While playing rugby, Oscar had a knee injury and was receiving sport rehabilitation. It was recommended that he get a coach to help with his fitness. This was in Sept of 2003. In January 2004 he started training with his coach. He asked him to participate in a disabled athletics meeting in March of that year. He was hesitant at first because he didn’t see himself as disabled. But then the opportunity came up to go to America for the Paralympics and everything took off from there. He never returned to any other sports, just focused on running.

Roux then wants to discuss Oscar’s Mom again. He asks him how his Mom’s death affected him. He states she was very important to him and his siblings. Her passing was unexpected. Afterwards, the kids stayed at their Aunt’s house as well as at other family or friend’s homes. Some holidays were spent with their father but they didn’t see him very often.

Oscar became seriously involved with athletics his first year at University. He had a hard time balancing school and running so he made the decision to try to turn professional at that point. It was a struggle financially at first as there was not much money in Paralympic athletics. So he competed in mostly able-bodied events on a local and regional level. In 2007, he had his first opportunity to run able-bodied races internationally. In 2009, he began to really excel in his sport.

He talked about the testing he had to go through to be qualified to run in the Olympics. After this time he was really focused on ways to improve himself to be better, faster and stronger.

Roux then asks if he experienced any physical difficulties in his athletic career. He says yes he has had fatigue of certain muscle groups and skin irritation inside of the prosthetics. He would often run with bloodied stumps and would just have to wrap them and keep running. He has dealt with blood clotting on some long airplane flights.

He does not have balance on his stumps nor can he stand still on his stumps. He keeps his prosthetic legs right next to his bed when he takes them off at night and when he gets up he puts them back on. He seldom has times where he goes without them unless he is in his room and needs to grab something close by or just wants to stretch. But he reiterates that he doesn’t have good balance on his stumps.

When Oscar first had his legs amputated, they put his heel pads on the bottom of the stumps. But as his bones grew the heel pad on his left leg has rotated to the back of the leg. He has spoken with his surgeon over the last few years about having his left stump revised but has not had time to do it due to his career. He can’t put full weight on his left stump so he has to rotate his left leg out when he walks on his stumps. He doesn’t have balance so if he’s not holding on to something, he has to move around continuously.

He then talks about the charitable work that he has done.

Oscar also talked about having less time to spend with friends. He traveled frequently and was rarely home. Having money changed the dynamics of his relationships.

Roux next wants to talk about Oscar’s boating accident in 2009. He and a friend went to the Vaal River one weekend afternoon and took a boat out around 6pm. While coming back in on the boat that night there were a few friends who were in a rush to get back to the house to cook dinner. His cousin was on another boat and he suggested that they go with his cousin, as he and his friend John wanted to have a leisurely cruise.

They were just moving along talking and at one point his friend stood up to light a cigarette and started shouting. Oscar couldn’t see anything because the sun was setting in front of them. A few seconds later he heard the sound of the propeller going in to the air and the sound of the engine. His face felt very hot and the boat was half full with water. His friend John was in the boat picking up belongings and as he asked Oscar if he was okay, he turned around and had a look of shock on his face when he looked at Oscar.

Oscar felt his face at that point and his face had been smashed in from the nose down. Oscar phoned his cousin and his uncle for help. The boat sank and they floated in the water until help came. Oscar was dragged on to his cousin’s boat, people were screaming. He walked from the boat to the car but doesn’t remember the drive. He then got in to an ambulance and almost drowned on the blood that was accumulating in his mouth. He was in an induced coma for several days and he woke up in the hospital.

According to Oscar, there was a massive impact on him after this accident. He was a lot more vigilant after almost losing his life. He became fearful and withdrawn. He read in the media that he had been drinking and people were making fun of him, but he states it was not funny, he almost lost his life. And he denies drinking that night.

Roux wants to know how Oscar treats his prosthetic legs at night. Oscar likes to air them out at night. He typically leaves his pants on his legs. He pulls them down to the ankle, removes the legs and leaves the pants on them. They are usually always close by to him. At the track, he typically puts his bag or belongings on top of them. He considers them an extension of his body so he doesn’t just leave them lying around. He also rarely likes to be seen without them on. Roux takes the lunch break.

They return and Roux wants to know how being away from home so frequently affects him. He states being away from home so much, being in different time zones and schedules constantly changing make it very difficult.

The Judge has pretty much just been watching him intently through his testimony. She takes some notes but far fewer than usual.

Judge

Roux wants to discuss Oscar’s use of alcohol and drugs. Oscar states that he does drink. Every year pre-season training starts in November and goes through Christmas and he does not drink during that time. Over Christmas and New Years he typically goes away with friends and family and he will have alcohol during that time. From January through September he does not consume any alcohol. September and October is his off period and he will socially drink during this timeframe as well, sometimes excessively. Roux asks him again if he had any drinks on the day of the boating accident in 2009 and he states he only had one drink that day.

As for drugs, he does not use drugs. The only time he ever did was on the day his mother passed when he was 15, he smoked weed with a friend. He has never taken any illegal sports-enhancing drugs. He only takes supplements that he knows are safe and not prohibited in his sport.

Roux asks him if he has ever been exposed to crime. Oscar states that pretty much anybody who lives in South Africa has experienced crime. As a child he experienced a break-in at his Dad’s where they ransacked the whole home. His Mom was broken in to on several occasions. They stole electronic equipment. His Dad has also been hijacked twice. His brother was a victim of hijacking and other family members have been victims of violent crime as well.

In 2005, Oscar’s home was broken in to once while he was away at an event. He received a call from a neighbor who notified him. He could not make it back home at the time and came home a week later to see that a TV and laptop had been taken. His car roof had been cut with a knife as well.

Another night there was a person out in his garden and they kicked and injured his dog.

He also states that he has been followed home late at night more than once. Because the media has been to his home many times for interviews, people know where he lives. He has also been shot at on the highway.

One night while driving home from an interview in Johannesburg, a car came up behind him, slowed down in front of him and he saw a muzzle flash and heard a bang. He drove across 3 lanes and exited the highway and looped around to get to a busy area. He stayed there for a while and phoned a friend to come and take him home.

He also recounts the same story that Samantha Taylor testified about. In his version of the story, he called security to report he was being followed. He sped up just as they neared the gate, pulled over and jumped out of the car with his hand on his gun. He backed away from the car and the two men in the other car drove off.

One time Oscar assisted somebody else who was a victim of a crime. A woman was being assaulted in a parking lot by two gentlemen. Oscar pulled up and got out of his car and told them to back up and leave her. There was a police car patrolling in the area and a bystander called them over.

Another time in Jan 2013, near his home he was coming home from a training session. He was parked at a light and a Corolla ran the light and then a taxi ran the light and smashed in to the Corolla running it off the road. They then started throwing bricks out of the window. The people inside the taxi started smashing the windows of the other car and dragged the guy out in to the street and were beating him.

At that point, Oscar ran the light and drove up to the cars. He drew his gun and pointed it at the 3 people and they jumped in their taxi and sped off. The man who had been beaten was very bloody and kept falling every time he tried to get up. So Oscar grabbed him by the collar and leg of his pants and dragged him to the side of the road and told him he needed to sit down. He called Netcare and the police and by this time about 30 people had come up from the shopping center to help. Oscar gave him a towel from his car. Once the situation was contained, he got in his car and left.

In Dec 2012, he was assaulted at a party after he had received threats from a person (he doesn’t say who). This man introduced himself and said he should be afraid because his name was being mentioned in his circles and he wanted to give him the heads up. Oscar thanked him and terminated the conversation.

Later in the evening he went to the bathroom and he heard the same man talking on his cell phone outside, and he was clearly talking to the man who was threatening Oscar. So he went out there and asked to speak to the man. Oscar states he was then verbally assaulted for 10 minutes. He put down the phone to terminate the conversation and shortly after he got hit in the head and needed stitches in the back of his head. He also had a black eye. Two days later he reported the incident to the Hawks. They scheduled a meeting with Oscar and the involved party and they got it on record. But he did not want it to get out to the media so they left it at that.

Oscar moved in to his home in Silverwoods Estate in 2008. There were only 27 lots developed at the time and there was constantly building the entire time he lived there. He has not been back to his home since the shooting.

He was aware that the building contractor who was working on his house, Mr. Menolo, had been victim of crime in their estate where somebody used a ladder to gain access to the second floor of his home.

He was also aware of a housekeeper being tied up in 2012.

On the night of February 13th, Oscar was talking to his cousin on the phone and his cousin was telling him that he was driving up from Port Elizabeth in a new company car, a GTi Gulf. Oscar told him not to drive up in his new car because cars can easily get hijacked.

In December 2012, Oscar had gone to look at a property in Johannesburg. He was really falling for Reeva and wanted to ask her to move in with him. He put in an offer on the property which was accepted, but realized that he had to fix up some things at his current home before he could sell it. There were some damp issues, the house needed to be painted, the broken window downstairs, some carpentry issues, etc. He hired a contractor in January and February to work on the home.

Roux asks him how the downstairs window was broken. Oscar says that he was playing with his dog in the garden and he threw a cricket ball and it went through the window accidentally. It was scheduled to be fixed on Feb 14th or 15th. The glass was already purchased and at the home, just waiting to be fitted. The contractor is his friend Mr. Menolo.

Oscar got his first dog when he bought his first townhouse in 2005. It was a jack russell. Two years later he got a bull terrier because he wanted a better watch dog. Three years later he rescued an American pit bull. His dogs are not aggressive, they are very friendly. He selected them because he thought they would make good security dogs but in actuality they turned out to be pretty docile.
He no longer has the jack russell, he passed away in 2011.

Religion is important to Oscar. His speaks of his Mom’s faith and her role in the church. When his Mom passed away he struggled a bit with faith but it is again a part of his life. In 2012, he put a lot of faith in the Lord to help him get to where he wanted to be. And when he met Reeva he considered it to be a blessing. He liked that she was a strong Christian. She would pray for him at night, they would pray before they ate.

Religion has helped him get through this past year, he has struggled a lot. Roux asks him if he slept last night and he says no sir. Oscar states he’s very tired and there are a lot of things going through his mind. The weight of this is extremely overbearing. Roux calls for an early adjournment. Nel does not object as long as it’s not a daily occurance. The Judge states Oscar does look exhausted and calls it a day.

Oscar Trial – Day 15, March 25 – State Rests MOLLER, MARITZ, VERMEULEN

Moller is back on the stand. He is talking about Oscar’s phones.

Oscar’s phone number ending in 4949 is the one that was seized at the scene.

Oscar’s phone number ending in 0020 is the one that was turned in by the Defense on Feb 26, 2013. This is the one that was primarily used by Oscar on February 13 and 14.

Moller verifies he used XRY software to do the data extraction on the phone that was seized on the scene.

For the other phone that was turned in later, there were 3 types of extractions completed – one with Cellebrite software, one done by Apple in the US, and one completed on an updated version of the XRY software on March 5 of this year.

The paper and electronic downloads of these devices were given to the Defense.

The communication analysis that he did, based on the records provided from the service provider, not only included details about the communication but also about movement.

These phone records can show you phone calls, text messages and GPRS activity. GPRS is all of the internet activity (social media, WhatsApp chat, etc). The cell towers that were used for each action are noted on these phone records as well. This is how they are able to track movement.

Rather than bringing large paper reports to court to show what was found, Moller compiled all of the data in to charts so the information could be visualized. It is much easier to understand both content and movement when put in to chart format.

The first chart compiled was for Reeva’s communication and movement.

diagram of Reevas calls

The following is a list of her communications for February 13:

12:11:50 – GPRS connection – 17 seconds

13:02:52 – Incoming voice call from 4949 (Oscar) – 241 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s house

13:07 to 13:40 – 4 more GPRS connections. The last internet connection lasted for 7,340 seconds (roughly 2 hours).

MTSMS – incoming text message from unknown number

15:41:54 – Incoming voice call from 4949 (Oscar) – 93 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s house.

15:54:27 – Incoming voice call from 0020 (Oscar) – 113 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s house.

17:12:57 – Incoming voice call from 0020 (Oscar) – 63 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s house.

Some more GPRS activity

17:44:54 – Outgoing call to 0020 (Oscar) – 144 seconds – she had moved, different tower now.

For the remainder of the day there were only GPRS connections made by the device.

20:04:00 – GPRS – 17 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s.

20:04:17 – The last GPRS of the day – 41,029 seconds (over 11 hours) – tower closest to Oscar’s.

Moller reminds the Judge that if she would like to see the content of those GPRS connections (potentially WhatsApp chats) she could look back at the data downloads that he provided yesterday to see what the specific content was for those times. Nel had Moller point this out right after he spoke about the GPRS that started at 20:04:00.

The next chart is for Oscar and it includes both of his phone numbers.

diagram of Oscars calls

They first look at the information for the 4949 device.

4949 Number

February 13

17:15 to midnight – only 5 GPRS connections made. No phone calls made.

February 14

Incoming text messages were received on this phone.

One incoming voice call was relayed to the voice mailbox center. The tower was listed as “no cell ID in ticket”. This means that the cell phone was switched off during that time and the messages would be delivered once the phone was turned on.

0020 Number

February 13

17:30:46 – GPRS – 254 seconds – Mitrand Gardens tower

As Oscar made more GPRS connections during this time frame, the towers indicated that he was moving closer towards his home.

17:44:54 – Incoming call from Reeva – 144 seconds – The Mint NGA tower

17:56:51 – Incoming call from 7775 – 307 seconds – Mustek George Rd tower

18:07:22 – Outgoing call to 5937 – 522 seconds – Volpatron CelC NGA tower

18:47:59 – Outgoing call to 7775 – 56 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s

20:25:07 – Outgoing call to 3964 – 1,757 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s. This was the last voice call made prior to the shooting.

4 GPRS connections made by the device for the remainder of the night.

February 14

01:48:48 – GPRS – 309 seconds – tower closest to Oscar’s (the remaining are all on the same tower as well)

03:18:45 – GPRS – 75 seconds

03:19:03 – Outgoing call to 2251 (Johan Stander) – 24 seconds

03:20:02 – GPRS – 79 seconds

03:20:05 – Outgoing call to 082911 (ambulance service) – 66 seconds

03:21:22 – GPRS – 61 seconds

03:21:33 – Outgoing call to 6797 (Baba, security) – 9 seconds

03:21:47 – Outgoing call to 121 (voicemail) – 7 seconds

03:22:05 – Incoming call from 6797 (Baba, security)

03:55:02 – Outgoing call to 8888 (Justin Devaris) – 123 seconds

Another GPRS for 83 seconds

04:01:38 – Outgoing call to 7775 (Deco – Heinrich Pistorius) – 54 seconds

2 more GPRS connections

04:09:03 – Outgoing call to 6940 (Peet Van Zyl) – 11 seconds

04:09:42 – Outgoing call to 6940 (Peet Van Zyl) – 13 seconds

04:10:21 – Outgoing call to 6940 (Peet Van Zyl) – 3 seconds

04:11:25 – Incoming call from 6940 (Peet Van Zyl) – 49 seconds

A few more GPRS connections

Then after this time, all incoming calls were diverted to the voice mailbox center. No outgoing calls were made.

The phone was pinging to the tower closest to Oscar’s up until 8:00am and then it left the location (meaning that somebody took it with them when they left Oscar’s house and it wasn’t the police)

That’s all for Nel. Roux is up to cross-examine.

Roux asks Moller how it would be possible for Reeva’s phone to still have active GPRS activity after her death. In particular the GPRS connection that started on Feb 13, at 20:04:17 (while she was alive) and lasted for 41,029 seconds (11+ hrs), ending after her death.

He explains that one of the applications on the device was still open and connected to the network. I wonder if we’ll find out more about this. This is where Moller reminded the Judge that she could go back to the data report and find out specifically what Reeva was doing on her phone at the time.

He testifies there are also other reasons why smart phones connect to GPRS networks such as email updates, automatic cell phone updates, etc. It doesn’t necessarily require human interaction to activate GPRS. From billing records alone, you cannot specify human interaction. (But again, you can also look back to the data reports to find out if there was human interaction.)

Roux then reviews the security call logs from February 14, 2013.
These are the calls that security guard Baba received:

Incoming call at 03:15:51 – 16 seconds (Stipp)

Incoming call at 03:16:15 – 0 seconds, not answered (Nhlengethwa)

Incoming call at 03:16:36 – 44 seconds (Nhlengethwa)

Incoming call at 03:21:33 – 9 seconds (Oscar)

Then Baba’s outgoing call to Oscar was after this and lasted for 12 seconds. This is the “everything is fine” call.

Incoming call at 03:27 – 0 seconds, not answered (Stipp)

Roux points out that Oscar called his voicemail in between the time that he called Baba at 3:21:33 and when Baba called back at 3:22:05. The voicemail call was at 03:21:47 and lasted 7 seconds. He asks Moller if he is aware that on iPhones the voicemail button at the bottom can easily be pushed by accident when trying to dial a number. Moller agrees that he has heard this. Roux suggests that Oscar did not intentionally call his voicemail at that time, it was an accident.

Roux then asks Moller if he knows who was using Oscar’s phone at the time the calls were made (and then answered) to Peet Van Zyl between 4:09:03 and 4:11:25. And he says no, he does not. It’s Oscar’s phone but he does not know who was using it at the time.

Roux focuses next on the text messages between Oscar and Reeva on WhatsApp. Out of the approximate 1,700 messages between them, only 4 were chosen to be read in court by the State. Roux wants to know why only these 5 were relevant.

Moller explains that he was looking for ones that stood out from their normal, ordinary conversations. Roux pointedly asks him if he was looking for arguments and he agrees he was. Moller clarifies that it wasn’t just 4 text messages it was 4 conversations (that lasted over several texts.)

Roux also wants to address the message that was read regarding the Tashas shooting incident. Roux asks Moller if he could find a message where Oscar says he asked Darren to take the blame for him. He says no he could not. The only message relating to that incident that they could find was the one read yesterday.

Roux now spends a lot of time going through the more loving messages exchanged between Oscar and Reeva. He also points out that some of the arguments that were noted yesterday were over somewhat quickly. This is evidenced by text messages the next day using words like baby and showing kiss symbols like XX.

For the record… listening to Roux read flirty text messages and say “kiss, kiss” repeatedly in court may require me to seek therapy at some point. 🙂

Reeva text pic

RS: You like it?
OP: I love it
RS: XX

RS: Morning Ozzy
OP: Morning Baba

He is also pointing out a number of other texts that relate to various aspects of the case:

On January 23, 2013, there was a text from Oscar to Reeva.
OP: I’m just in the physio baba

This pertains to Oscar needing therapy for an injured shoulder. This will be relevant to what side of the bed Oscar was sleeping on the night of the shooting.

Then another text message from Feb 11, 2013, there was another message about his shoulder.

OP: I’m not going, my shoulder is stuffed.

Roux also wants to show that Reeva had an interest in cars, along with Oscar. This is evidenced by her webpage browsing history.
They review a number of text messages between Oscar and Reeva discussing cars and sharing pictures. Extracted from Reeva’s emails, there was also content about motor vehicles.

I think this is important because when Nel was presenting the iPad evidence, one of the links that came up in Oscar’s browsing history had to do with cars. Oscar’s expression in the dock was very peculiar. Nel was very vague and Roux barely wanted to cross examine on this – his only question to the expert, Michael Sales, was whether or not he knew who was using the iPad at the time. Go back to my Day 13 blog to see the exchange I am referring to. I think we are going to hear more about this when Oscar is on the stand!

Some emails were also uncovered about Reeva looking at property and wanting to relocate.

They next look at CCTV footage from a local store taken on February 4, showing Oscar and Reeva together acting in a loving nature towards each other.

cctv of RS and OP in store

cctv of RS and OP in store 2

Then more flirty messages are read:

RS to OP: You are a very special person u deserve to be looked after

OP: Will you please let me know you are safe
RS: I’m home boo…

RS: Are you up and going boo?
RS: Good luck with everything today rock star
OP: My angel X
RS: Booooo X

OP: Can’t wait to see you. Would you like me to pick you up?
RS: I really can’t wait to see you boo.
RS: I would love that angel.

OP: Good luck for your meeting beautiful X
RS: Its just an appointment baba OK XX
RS: My angel, I just had a slice of fish, I’m not hungry, I’m falling asleep. Can’t wait to see you XX

RS: Can I wear my leopard dress boo? I wore it to two private functions only, nothing media related.
OP: I hope you enjoy tonight my angel, I’m thinking of you
OP: Yea, I love that and you look amazing in it.

OP: I’m going to turn in wish you were here. Please send me a message to let me know you’re safe.
RS: Ok angel, sweetest of dreams. I’ll message you when I get home XXX

OP: Good morning angel. I hope you slept well. Off to the gym X
RS: Good morning boo. I eventually did. Enjoy gym XXX

RS: Truth is I miss you
OP: I’m missing you so so much!!

RS: If you want to go chill with him that’s cool angel 
RS: I can come to you whenever
OP: No baba we want to chill with you, I miss you
RS: I miss you too bub

RS: Baby I love spending time with you and sleeping next to you. I just don’t ever want to cramp your style or not give you space if you need it. Promise me you will always let me know when you need some Oscar time.
OP: I love having you sleep next to me too baba. You never cramp my style. I have some work I need to get through tonight and have an early start. I promise baba and likewise XX

RS: I’m always on your side. I’m pro you and pro your career, but mostly pro us and the health of our relationship

RS: We are important to me

RS: Lots of hugs. I hope you have a super blessed day. I have said a small prayer for both of us XXX
OP: Thank you so much for being strong my angel. That message meant a lot to me. I am taking your advice. Just sent a host of emails and trying to take control of my admin. Miss you X

OP: Come visit me
RS: If I knew you were just chilling I would have gone to you hours ago

And now we are getting down to the last few days before the shooting.

February 11…

RS: Baby can I cook for you on Thursday? (this would have been Feb 14)
RS: What can you eat this week?
OP: I’d love that

OP: My angel, thinking of you XX
OP: I wish you were here cuddling me
OP: I miss you so
RS: I’m sorry I’m not there angel 
RS: I’ll be there in my heart and mind XXX

February 12…

RS: Seeee your woman told u that u looking good
OP: I’m missing her today, she makes my heart happy
RS: You make her everything happy

RS: I know Warren wanted to have coffee today so we could catch up and I can get my post, etc from him, but I can see him another day
OP: Yea I will baba, I have a dentist’s appt at 12:30. Maybe go see him and come through when you’re done. XXX
OP: I will do baba. The physio didn’t have needles so I’ll go back after the dentist.

February 13…

12:12pm
RS: Baba I hope you don’t mind but I came back to the house to work and do some washing. It will help me a lot to get stuff done and relieve some stress. I’ll go through to Jo’burg at like 3pm. XXX

13:10pm
RS: It’s a difficult thing to try to console you baba because it’s a shitty thing and you’re a nice guy. I guess these things happen and we can just hope they work out for the best. You are an amazing person with so many blessings and you are more than cared for. Your health and future monetary blessings far outweigh this hurdle I can promise you that 
OP: Thank you so much my angel you don’t have to. X Stay tonight if you would like.

15:21pm
OP: I’m just finishing off at Ryan(?)
RS: Thank you baba let me know if you’d like to spend time with him or Carl. I’m sure you maybe feel like some family tonight.

15:46
RS: Angel I’m going to go home at like 6pm. Please stay and do whatever it was you were gonna do

Some thoughts about February 13 and what was going on with these two. Oscar called Reeva around 1:02pm and they spoke for 4 minutes or so. She then sends the text message to him about trying to console him. Something obviously happened to him that day that he was upset about.

Then, she had GPRS activity from 13:07 to 13:40 with that last connection lasting for 2 hours. We don’t know who she was chatting/texting/communicating with during this GPRS session. Unfortunately, the records that Moller addressed in court for Oscar only started around 5pm that night, so I can’t match up his calls to hers from earlier in the day.

Around 3:30pm Oscar seems to be finishing up wherever he is. She suggests that he spend the night with family and then a little while after that states that she is going home around 6pm

The next call I can see is from Oscar who called her at 5:12pm and they talked for one minute. She was still at his house according to the tower. Remember she was planning to leave close to 6pm.

There was some GPRS activity after this, although no additional text messages were mentioned in testimony so not sure if there was any more text communication between the two.

Reeva then calls Oscar at 5:44pm and speaks to him for 2 and half minutes. Her phone is now pinging from a different tower which means she has left his home.

There are no more calls after this, only GPRS activity. Again, no text messages read in testimony so not sure if they are texting each other.

But she was seen coming back thru the Silver Woods security gate some time close to 6pm that night (seen by Baba and seen on CCTV pics) so something made her come back. Oscar arrived home approximately 10 minutes after her. It is not clear if he was expecting her or not based on their exchanges.

So this really has me thinking about how the evening started for them. She may have surprised him or maybe he convinced her to come back. We’ll have to wait and see.

Oscar says to her earlier in the day to stay tonight if she likes and her response was that she was going home at 6pm, please stay (where he was) and do whatever it was he was going to do.

Based on these messages, it sounds like she was not planning on spending the evening with him, sounds more like he wanted to spend it with her.

Yet, in his bail affidavit he stated that Reeva called him and suggested they have dinner at home and he agreed. Something is not matching up here.

Sooo… if there was some back and forth that night about whether or not she was going to stay, and he was already dealing with some bad news from earlier in the day, maybe things were tense. We saw a neatly packed bag on the sofa in his bedroom. And we saw jeans on the ground outside just below the bathroom window. Maybe he did throw those out the window in anger because she wanted to leave. No doubt these messages and times will be dug in to deeper during cross-examination with him.

Nel is back up and reminds the court that Moller has read all of the WhatsApp messages. We have just heard the Defense read a handful of loving messages but wants to know how many of the total messages are long messages saying how much they are in love with each other.

Moller’s response is that the majority of the communication is very short, one line messages. Boo, baby and angel were used a lot but there were no long messages discussing their relationship or how in love they were.

Nel also points out that in some of the exchanges that Roux had read, parts of the exchange were left out. They were not reading full conversations so it’s hard to get the full context of what each side meant with their responses.

Nel now wants to look at the long message where Reeva discusses her feelings (read in court yesterday) and brings to the court’s attention that after Reeva sent that email, Oscar responded back “baba”. So clearly that word baba was used quite frequently, whether mad or not. It doesn’t necessarily indicate love as Roux would like to show.

Moller is excused.

Next witness up is Warrant Officer Adriaan Maritz. He has 24 years of experience as a police officer.

Nel asks him if there is any record in the police system of Oscar having been a victim of crime. He answers no.

They then look at a map of the Silverlakes community. Nel wants to know the crime statistics for the last few years. The map shows January 2011 through April 2013.

map of silverlakes crime

diagram of local crime

Summary of incidents:
1 murder on Bushwillow
1 theft on Bushwillow
1 house robbery on Wildwood Way in 2011

Not exactly a neighborhood teeming with crime.

Roux gets up to cross-examine. He asks Maritz if his only source of crime information was the computer. Does he know about any crimes that have not been reported? He answers that he can only give crime information for what has been recorded in their system.

He also asks Maritz if he is aware that the police that arrived at Oscar’s on February 14, had just come from a house robbery elsewhere. Yes he is aware of that.

He also points out that just because someone may stay in a secured estate there is no guarantee that they will be secure against house robberies and other serious crime. Maritz agrees with this statement.

Roux then states that Mr. Pistorius has been a victim of crime on many occasions.

Nel counters and asks Maritz if Mr. Pistorius had reported these many crimes to police, would it have shown up in their system? Maritz answers that there is always the possibility that a name or ID number could be misspelled or typed in incorrectly, in which case they might not find it right away.

Nel then asks, if Mr. Pistorius gave you the date or other pertinent information about the crimes, could they find them that way, and Maritz says yes.

Maritz is excused.

Vermeulen (now known as bat man) is back on the stand as the last witness for the State. He was called back at the request of Roux.

Vermeulen explains that he came back to court on the morning of March 18, to look at the mark that the Defense wanted him to investigate. Vermeulen basically says he wasn’t shown specifically where this mark was and he didn’t see anything new that wasn’t there before. He states that nobody was there that morning to point out to him what they wanted done therefore he didn’t investigate anything new (much to the annoyance of the Defense).

He reiterates that when he did his investigation there were only two marks on the door that he could relate to the cricket bat, as stated in his affidavit.

The mark is then pointed out to Vermeulen by the Defense.

defense mark on door

Roux is now pressing him on why he didn’t spend more time trying to fit the cricket bat in to the other marks of the door. Vermeulen states that his job on this case was to determine if the cricket bat was used to break down the door so that is what he did. He identified the marks that would have broken the door.

Roux wants to know if the pictures that were taken during Vermeulen’s investigation show him trying to match the bat up to the mark in question, and Vermeulen states that there are not pictures of that.

Roux shows him pictures that illustrate he did actually try to fit the bat in to the additional mark that they are asking about. Vermeulen says he has not looked at his photos since his last testimony. After viewing them he says he honestly forgot about them but would still like to maintain that he could not match the bat with that mark.

defense mark on door 3

defense mark on door 2

The reason why this is important is because the State’s position is that Oscar was on his stumps when he hit the door with the bat, the Defense says he was on his prosthetics. This mark is higher up so both sides want their interpretation of it to be correct.

Roux is “putting it” to Vermeulen that the State specifically tried to hide these photos by not putting them in their album. Vermeulen’s position is that he went in to this investigation with no idea that the height of the person was of concern. He investigated with an open mind and this is what he found.

Vermeulen is excused.

Nel concludes “this is the State’s case”

Roux requests two days adjournment to prepare his witnesses. Court will resume on Friday.

UPDATE: The trial has been postponed due to one of the assessors falling ill. The trial will resume on Monday, April 7.

Oscar Trial – Day 14, March 24 ANNETTE STIPP, MOLLER

Annette Stipp is the next witness on the stand. She is the wife of Dr. Johan Stipp. She is an Occupational Therapist.

On the night of February 13, 2013, she was at home with her husband, three kids and domestic worker. They went to bed around 10-10:30pm.

That night she was slightly flu-ish so was awakened by coughing. She was contemplating whether or not to get up for some water. She looked over at the clock radio and it said 3:02am. Typically that clock is about 3-4 minutes fast. She decided she would get up for a drink and just as she was about to sit up, she heard what sounded like 3 gunshots. She asked her husband if he had heard that and he said yes. She asked him what it was and he said gunshots. She sat up on the edge of the bed and could see the lights on at the two houses that are in view from her bedroom window.

This is her view from her side of the bed – she is closest to the small balcony window which is seen here.

view outside window from Mrs Stipp side of bed

And Mr. Stipp would be on the other side of the bed – this is a view from his side (although the photographer is standing up while taking this)

bedroom with curtain held back

Her husband jumped out of bed to go to the balcony. While his wife was expressing to him that maybe he shouldn’t go out there, they heard the screams of a female. The whole sequence happened very rapidly. Shots, then immediate screams. They both went out on the small balcony to see where the screams were coming from but they couldn’t tell. They could only see the two houses with their lights on.

They then moved to the larger balcony, as there is a better view from there. The large balcony has a white circle around it. The small balcony is the one that is just above the garage.

large balcony from outside circled in white

The screaming continued for several minutes, it was constant. She described them as the terrified screams of a woman. Mrs. Stipp then stated at one point, it sounded as if the screaming was coming closer. She said to her husband “is there somebody coming down the street screaming?” But they didn’t see anybody. They were out on the balcony for several minutes trying to figure out what was going on and where it was coming from. Dr. Stipp stated “well there was a man moving in the house on the left hand side.” She said to her husband “it sounds to me like there’s a family murder.” He then said he was going over there to help because there could be children involved. Dr. Stipp went back inside.

He walked in and dialed 10111 and could not get through. Mrs. Stipp then decided that she should go inside and help to make calls since her husband was trying to get dressed and call at the same time. As she turned to go inside, she again looked at the clock radio and it said 3:17am (again, typically runs 3-4 minutes fast). At that moment, she then heard 3 more shots. Her husband then yelled at her to get away from the windows.

They quickly obtained another security number and called it. A very short period after that, security arrived at their house. Mrs. Stipp then moved over to the small balcony (which overlooks the driveway) and told them that theirs was not the house that the sounds were coming from. She told them the sounds were coming from the house with the lights on, on the left side. They must please phone police since they were unable to get through and there were already 6 shots fired. That’s when security left and headed to Oscar’s house.

The screaming they had heard earlier continued all the way up thru the very last shot. She testified that they also heard a man screaming. She stated to her husband “there is also now a man screaming.” She could not hear what he was screaming, she could not make out words, but it was a definite male voice. After the second set of shots, it just became quiet. She heard no more screaming, neither male nor female.

Nel asks her if she also saw the man walking in the house, just as her husband did, but she did not. She is aware that in her statement she originally said she did but after really thinking about it, she did not, so she had them change it.

Mrs. Stipp also stated the house that they saw to the right of Oscar’s from their bedroom balcony had all of their lights on in the top story of the home. The house on the left (Oscar’s) has two sets of windows (one is the toilet room window and the other is the larger bathroom window) and one of the windows was open.

Here is an aerial view of Oscar’s bathroom windows. The toilet room window is on the left (the smaller one). The bathroom window is on the right. The white circle indicates the portion of the window that was open.

outside bathroom windows white circle indicates open window

According to Mrs. Stipp, the light remained on the entire time.

On February 21st of this year, she and her husband woke up during the night from what sounded like people arguing. She asked her husband if he heard it and he said yes. She then said “there’s no way we are getting up this time, we’re staying where we are, they must sort it out.” Her dog started barking loudly then so they just closed their balcony doors and went back to bed.

The next morning their neighbors came over to see if they could hear the commotion the previous night and they said they could but they chose to ignore it. The neighbors then said that there were people in their garden on the grass. They pretty much realized at that time the sounds were likely sound testing being done in relation to the trial.

And then again, on March 17, just last week, they were awoken again in the middle of the night to screaming. They could tell it was a man who was screaming at a higher pitch and then again at a lower pitch. Mrs. Stipp was completely annoyed because it was again 3:30am in the morning. She said to her husband that she’s sure it’s sound testing again, so she went out on the balcony and saw 2 males standing in their garden. She made some comment to them and then went back in to the house. These screams that she heard were nothing like the screams she heard on the morning of February 14, 2013. During the original incident it was continuous screaming and it was absolutely female. This was not.

She states she does not know Mr. Pistorius, nor did she know that he lived in that home on the night of the shooting. When they first moved in to the estate, the estate agent had told them that Mr. Pistorius lived there but she wasn’t sure exactly which house. The house that the agent pointed out to them turned out to be a different house.

Dr. Stipp went to the Pistorius house that night and came back home around 4:20am. Mrs. Stipp asked him what had happened. He wasn’t very talkative and looked upset. He said it was a man that had killed his girlfriend. She asked him what he looked like and he said he was very muscular and had tattoos on his back. But he didn’t pay as much attention to the male as his main concern was the female.

They were not able to sleep at all that night. Then at about 4:40am, they received a call from Mr. Stander to make sure he had the right telephone number and to let Dr. Stipp know that he would be contacted by Oscar’s lawyer. At this time, they still had not put two and two together. They did not know it was Oscar Pistorius.

The next morning, Mrs. Stipp was chatting online on her WhatsApp chat group, discussing what their husbands or boyfriends had done for them for Valentine’s Day. Her response to the group was that they had a very crappy start to their day because their neighbor had killed his girlfriend.

Everybody responded saying that’s terrible. She wrote to them that the thing she’ll never forget was the terrible screaming.

They then got the children ready for school, her husband left for work and she opened the back door for her domestic worker at around 7:45am. The domestic worker asked Mrs. Stipp what happened the previous night. She had heard the noises. She is usually awake at around 3am and was talking to her husband when they heard a female start screaming. She at first thought it was a baby but then went outside and realized it was a woman. Mrs. Stipp relayed to her that there had been an incident across the road.

At around 8:15am, Mrs. Stipp received a call from her friend. The friend asked her if she had seen the news that morning and she replied no, she hadn’t. Her friend told her she was sure that the neighbor she was talking about was Oscar Pistorius. This is when she found out for the first time who lived in that house.

Since the time of the incident, two houses have been built on the lot in between Oscar’s house and theirs. This is important because any sound or sight testing that they are doing now would not match the conditions of the area on February 14, 2013.

You can see the lot as it was in February 2013, wide open.

aerial view of homes

Nel concludes verifying that Mrs. Stipp did not know the van der Mewres, Michelle Burger or Charl Johnson before this incident.

Oldwage (not Roux) gets up to cross examine. This guy makes Roux look like a teddy bear!

Oldwage

He wants to know how closely she has followed the coverage of this case in the media and if she has discussed it with her husband. She states that yes she has discussed it with her husband, naturally, and she said it’s impossible not to see it in the media because of the amount of coverage. But she has not sat down and watched it. Oldwage is proposing that her memory is somehow damaged by what she has heard by others. Clearly she must have been influenced. The defense uses this tactic on every single witness.

He then goes through her exact movements that morning. He also tries to evaluate her level of alertness from 3:02 to 3:17. She states it was the same throughout. He pesters her around and around what she and her husband discussed about this event, insinuating that they have colluded on their statements. She gave no indication that was the case.

He actually went so far as to ask her exactly how she was lying on the bed, if her feet were touching the ground when she sat up, etc. He’s just trying to trip her up on any detail to try to prove that she didn’t hear or see what she thought she did. She stands firm.

He then asks her if she heard muffled screaming when it first began and she said no, it was loud and clear screaming. I get where he is going with this. Reeva, presumably is in the toilet room at this time because the Defense maintains that the first round of shots heard are the shots that killed Reeva (right around 3am) and that she never screamed. The only person who screamed that night was Oscar. If it’s muffled screaming then maybe that would leave open the possibility that it’s Reeva screaming in the closed toilet room. But if it’s loud and clear screaming, then they propose it is Oscar who is in the main portion of the bathroom near the open window.

They then discuss when she sits up in bed, where exactly on the bed she is sitting. He says she is in the middle, she says no that she is a shorter person so she would typically be sitting higher up to the top of the bed when she sits on the edge. Now this is why it’s relevant. They examine a photograph that was taken in their bedroom. It is taken from the far side of the bed (the side that her husband sleeps on.)

bedroom with curtain held back

She sleeps on the side that is closest to the small balcony over the garage and when sitting down (not standing up as this photographer is), she has a clear view of the homes across the open lot.

Oldwage has an issue with the fact that the curtain is being held open by a hand. He states that it is to give a better view of the homes, which it is, but putting in to question whether or not she can actually see out this window which is a fair question.

But she points out that when that curtain is tied normally by a decorative rope and she is laying or sitting in bed on her side, she does have a direct view of the homes.

The argument went on for a while about the positioning of this curtain but whenever the Defense is this desperate to argue every minute detail, it tells me that they need this witness’s testimony to go away. It’s obviously very damning and the fact that she saw a light on at the same time that the female was screaming for almost 15 minutes, prior to the last round of shots, is obviously a huge problem for Oscar.

Oldwage made 2 or 3 different arguments during his cross examination with Mrs. Stipp that were stopped by the Judge. The Judge was seemingly very aggravated with him. At times he was badgering the witness and asking questions that were not appropriate for this portion of testimony. So she reprimanded him a few times. He definitely does not have the same finesse as Roux.

Nel wraps it up by showing this picture to Mrs. Stipp.

small balcony from outside

From this picture, you can see the lamp and the edge of the bed in the window. That is where her head would be. When the curtain is normally tied back with the decorative rope, which it was on the night in question, you can tell that she has clear sight out of that window.

Mrs. Stipp is excused.

Next witness up is Francois Moller. He is a Captain in the South African police service, stationed at the technology investigation support center for detective services. Colonel Michael Sales, who testified last week about the iPads, is his commanding officer.

He received 4 cell phones (2 iPhones, 2 Blackberries), 2 iPads and a MacBook computer from Hilton Botha (the original investigator) on February 15, 2013, all seized at the scene.

He explains in great detail the process that he took to identify which devices belonged to whom. Bear with me and pay attention because it gets a little technical here…

He removed the sim cards from the smart phone (iPhone) devices to ensure that there was no tampering or communication with any devices from the time he started his investigation to the time he finished.

With the sim cards out, there is no exact way to determine the phone numbers for the devices. So he started with the device that was marked as Oscar’s device, went in to his last contacts on the phone, and established the number for Reeva.

He then did the same to establish Oscar’s number, by looking at Reeva’s phone. He was under the impression that Oscar had only one phone.

He then applied for data records from the network service providers based on the phone numbers that had been allocated for each phone, per above.

From this, he was able to establish that the number he believed was for Oscar’s device was in fact not the right number. This device that was seized at the scene and marked as Oscar’s actually had a different phone number.

Meaning… there was another phone out there that Oscar was using (that Reeva had recently called) that had not been seized at the scene.

That phone was later turned in to the police by the Defense on February 26, 2013, after Oscar’s bail hearing.

It was established that the two Blackberries found on the scene were last used in late 2012, two to three months prior to the date of the incident.

Oscar had done a sim swap with the Blackberry service provider to get sim cards that would fit in to his new iPhones. He turned in the old larger sims from the Blackberries, got new smaller sims that would fit in the iPhones and was able to keep his same phone number and data. The new sim cards in the iPhones would have different serial numbers than the ones he originally had in his Blackberries.

Therefore, when Moller turned all of this information in to get reports, he received data records back for only 3 phone numbers. Those phone numbers were for Reeva’s one iPhone and Oscar’s two iPhones.

Are you still with me? 🙂

In addition to obtaining data records, he also did downloads/extractions of the devices via linking the devices with a computer, utilizing forensic software.

There are two types of data extractions. The first is “logical” extraction which is all of the data that the user can see on their device. For Reeva’s device, the logical extraction report was 2,600 pages.

The other type is called a “jail break”. With jail breaking you can install any 3rd party applications to the device, which they did, and receive even more data including deleted data. The print out from this extraction was over 35,000 pages.

The investigators then read through all of the chat messages on the phone, including text messages and messages from the WhatsApp app, which totaled 2,731 messages.

They did find messages that they felt were applicable to this case and they printed extractions from that to bring to court.

They were also able to pull off two email addresses for Reeva from her phone, one was a webmail account and the other was a gmail account.

Moller then proceeded to read through only the relevant messages, at Nel’s prompting, that gave a glimpse in to some potential relationship problems that Oscar and Reeva were having. Moller did make note that 90% of the communication between Oscar and Reeva was normal and loving. And the rest of it showed some potential issues.

The text messages read in court can be found here at this link:

http://www.cnn.com/2014/03/24/world/oscar-pistorius-trial-whatsapp-messages/

Court adjourned for the day. Moller will be back on the stand tomorrow.

Oscar Trial – Days 12 and 13, March 18 & 19 VAN STADEN, MANGENA, VAN DER NEST, SALES

Day 12

June Steenkamp returned to court this week. She has not been present since the first day of trial. Oscar greeted her as he entered court for the day and Aimee Pistorius, Oscar’s sister, also took the opportunity to say hello and presumably offer condolences.

Aimee and June

Van Staden is back on the stand. Roux is cross-examining.
Roux reviews some photos of the cricket bat and the gun on the shower mat and points out that the items are lying in different positions from photo to photo, yet these are supposed to be images of how the scene was found (album 1).

He also introduces photos to Van Staden that were taken by another investigator (Motha) on the scene. These images appear to have time stamps that are similar or the same as the time stamps on Van Staden’s photos, therefore indicating that they were both in the same rooms together. Yet, Van Staden had stated that he was photographing alone. He claims to not have seen Motha in these rooms at the same time that he was photographing which seems like it would be impossible. Roux is trying to illustrate that the integrity of the scene may have been jeopardized if multiple people were photographing and moving items.

Nel then counters to save Van Staden on a few points. He did bring up that Motha is not seen in any of Van Staden’s photos. And Van Staden is not seen in any of Motha’s photos. Although, there was one photo that Roux pointed out did have a hand in it, but it was not Van Staden’s photo so he couldn’t confirm whose hand it was.

hand seen in photo

Nel also revisited the images of the cricket bat that were shown and insinuated had been moved. Upon second look, Nel pointed out that the bat actually was in the same position; it was merely the two differing angles of each photo that created the illusion it had been moved. These are the two photos. Using the blood droplet at the top left of the bat (circled) as your fixed point you can see that the bat is in the same position for both photos.

position of bat 1

position of bat 2

Overall, it seems as if Van Staden has delivered albums containing quite a bit of detailed information but the question that Roux raises is what elements of that information have been compromised. The early police investigation at the direction of Botha certainly was not as tight as we all would like to have seen. This is a hurdle that the State will have to continue to get past and Roux is doing a good job of making their missteps known. Van Staden is excused.

Next up on the stand is Police Captain Christian Mangena. He has 20 years of experience with the police and 19 years in ballistics. He is qualified as an expert.

On March 7, 2013, he was assigned the Pistorius case after Botha had been dismissed. He was first tasked with examining the door. He received the door evidence sealed in a body bag the same day and began his investigation. He observed 4 bullet holes on the door and marked them A, B, C and D on the side where the bullet perforated the door. The following is an image of the reconstructed door in court.

a b c d on door reconstructed in courtroom

On March 8, he went to the Pistorius home to recreate the scene. Van Staden was there to photograph and several experts from both the State and the Defense were there that day as well.

The door was reassembled and the same exact screws that originally held the door in place were used to reattach the door. Measurements were then taken. The heights of the bullet holes from the floor are as follows:

A was 93.5cm
B was 104.3cm
C was 99.4cm
D was 97.3cm

Inside the toilet room, the mark E represents a bullet that directly impacted the wall and ricocheted to the other wall at mark F. This bullet did not directly hit Reeva.

E was 89cm from the floor
F was 87.5cm from the floor

E is the mark that is circled on the photo, the damage that can be seen right in the corner of the wall. The other damage is mark F, the ricochet.

60

61

62

There were also traces of lead on the tile that were marked as G. This would have been left from a projectile that has fractured and has lost most of its force therefore leaving a mark on the tile rather than breaking it.

Metal rods were inserted in to the bullet holes from the front of the door where the bullets entered to illustrate the angle and trajectory of the bullets.

a b c d on door

door with markers

Out of the 4 shots, only 1 hit the wall directly and the other 3 disappeared, meaning they hit the person in the room. In order to determine the angle of the shots, Mangena used that 1 direct bullet mark to line up the appropriate hole on the door. The angle was determined to be 5-6% downward. Bullet hole B was in alignment with the hole marked E on the wall.

He also used a laser beam on a tripod to back up his findings from the metal rods. Laser beams cannot bend so they provide a more exact science. He sent the laser beam through the hole applying the same degree of angle that was determined using the rods, and when he did this he got an exact match of bullet hole B in the door and mark E on the wall.

laser pointer 2

laser pointer showing trajectory of bullet b

The height of the laser on the tripod was 130cm, with a 5-6% angle downward. The distance from the door to the tripod was 220cm.

Mangena did review the photos of the initial crime scene to understand how everything appeared on that night.

When he arrived at the crime scene on March 8, the magazine rack was not in the toilet room, it had been moved. But by reviewing the crime scene photos, he could see the position of the rack at the time. Fragments of bullet were found directly below the magazine rack.

He also reviewed the photos of the deceased to understand the injuries and the locations of the injuries.

He looked at images of the clothing worn by the deceased. The black tank top had bullet fragment holes in the upper right area surrounded by pieces of tissue and bone.

black tank top

Nel then asks him if he was interested in seeing the position of the “5” cartridge cases on the scene, and he says yes that’s correct. There were only 4 bullet holes so why 5 cartridges? I wonder if Nel just misspoke or if there is something more we are yet to find out?

Mangena was present at Economics Technologies when Oscar was measured by a doctor. Mangena was aware of Oscar’s version of events, and that Oscar stated he was not wearing his prosthetics at the time of the shooting. Therefore, Mangena had measurements taken to see if he could either confirm or deny this.

With his prosthetics on from head to floor, he is 184cm.
Without prosthetics on from head to floor, he is 155cm.

His shoulder level with prosthetics is 156cm.
His shoulder level without prosthetics is 123cm.

Elbow level with prosthetics is 126cm.
Elbow level without prosthetics is 96cm.

His arm length stretched out with hand gripped as if holding a gun is 66cm.

The prosthetics themselves are 62cm.

The conclusions from this testimony will be presented by Nel tomorrow.

Day 13

Mangena is back on the stand. He states his opinion is there were 4 shots fired at the crime scene. All 4 bullets perforated the door to the toilet room.

He always relates the body to the crime scene since the crime scene can’t change position, but the body can. He first tried to place Reeva on the toilet seat at the time of the shooting but the wound on her hip did not match up in that position.

He is of the belief that she was in a standing position facing the door, somewhere in between the door and the toilet when she was shot in the hip. This would have been the first shot. He believes bullet hole A is the bullet that entered her hip. The height of bullet A was 93.5cm. The measurement from Reeva’s heel to the wound area on the hip was 93cm. The 5% downward angle could make up for the .5cm difference.

After review of the medical examination, seeing that the hip bone was shattered by this bullet, Reeva would not have been able to stand after that. She would have fallen down. Mangena does not believe that she fell straight down to the flat surface of the ground because the other bullets would have been too high to reach her arm and head. He believes that she fell backwards and landed on top of the magazine rack, and rested on top of the rack.

toilet and area in front of toilet

view in to the toilet showing magazine rack 2

Bullet B was likely the one that missed her and hit the area marked E on the inside of the toilet room wall, and ricocheted to the mark F on the other side of the wall and broke in to fragments. Those fragments hit Reeva’s back and created the scratches that were found on her back.

He was not able to say if bullet C or bullet D came next. But based on the wounds he could make conclusions about the position of her arms for both shots. Her right arm was raised at the time that it was hit based on the entrance and exit wounds, and the fragment holes and tissue found on her tank top. There was a very large exit wound out the back of the arm that caused the tissue to spatter on the top right of her shirt. It also likely caused the bruising found on her right nipple and abrasions on her torso.

Approximate point for the entry wound on the arm

Mangena showing position of arm entry wound

Approximate point for the exit wound on the arm

Mangena showing position of arm exit wound

The area where bullet fragments, bone and tissue would have damaged the tank top and caused abrasions the deceased.

Mangena showing where projectiles and tissue came out of exit wound on arm and sprayed the right chest area

With the head wound, her hands were very likely held up across her head in a defensive position, as there was a bullet wound in between her pointer and middle finger on her left hand.

Mangena demonstrates the likely position.

Mangena showing position of arms during head wound

And this is Mangena showing the approximate location where the bullet entered her head (his pointer finger) and exited her head (his thumb)

Mangena showing position of entry & exit on head

The bullet that entered her head broke in to two fragments. One piece was removed during the autopsy and the other piece exited the back of the head and left the mark on the wall, noted as G.

He believes that when the bullet hit the head she would have immediately fell to the right and landed on top of the toilet seat. A large amount of blood and brain tissue was found on and in the toilet, and a large pool of blood was also found just to the left of the toilet near the magazine rack.

Her upper body was likely located between the toilet and the magazine rack, and her lower body was on top of the magazine rack.

He also testified that he examined the door for propellant particles to determine the distance that the shots were fired from. Based on his testing he concluded that Oscar could have been anywhere from 60cm (the length of the muzzle) to the back wall (3 meters from door). He was not able to determine an exact distance.

As for the position of the cartridge cases, he was not able to tell exactly where Oscar was standing for each shot because they were so scattered at the scene. Based on the fact that there was a lot of movement in the bathroom after the shooting, they were likely kicked around.

He also tested for deflection of the bullets as they penetrated through the door, using Black Talon bullets for his testing. He determined that there was very minimal deflection.

The Black Talon bullet will not open up when it hits a hard target. It requires a moist target such as human tissue in order for it to expand. A normal bullet such as a full metal jacket can easily hit multiple targets. It can go through a person and hit something or someone else. But the Black Talon is designed to expand with sharp edges inside of the target. It enters in a spinning motion and the sharp talons cut through tissue and bone, also causing fragmentation, and the bullet then loses most of its force inside of the body.

Based on the measurements that were taken of the bullet holes in the door compared to the measurements of Oscar with and without his prosthetics (provided above), he was able to conclude that Oscar was likely on his stumps, not his prosthetics, at the time of the shooting.

Mangena also testified to how a Glock pistol works. He stated that all calibers of Glock work the same. There is a built in safety mechanism with the Glock and it will not fire just by simply touching the trigger. There are a few different things that you need to do first (i.e. pull slide back and then bring it all the way back forward) before it will shoot. This relates to the shooting at Tashas. Nel is again demonstrating that Oscar should have known how that gun worked and there should not have been that accident.

Next, Mangena talks about how dangerous it is to fire a bullet up in to the air, relating to the sunroof shooting charge that Oscar has against him. He explained how with the force of gravity, and depending on what angle you shoot it up, in almost all instances it will come back down with a force great enough to penetrate and kill a human.

Roux cross-examines Mangena and states that Oscar’s position is that he did 2 double tap shots with his gun on February 14. Not 4 separate shots, but 2 double taps. This is when you tap the trigger twice in close succession. Per Mangena, this is not something that everyone can do. A skilled shooter such as himself, who shoots competitively, is able to do a double tap but he’s not so sure that Oscar could.

Based on Reeva’s wounds, Mangena testifies that double taps would be impossible. All of her wounds would have been in one vicinity of the body based on how quickly those bullets would have been fired. She would not have had the single hip wound and then subsequent wounds in different locations from different angles. So there must have been a pause in between that first shot and the series of the next 3 shots. This aligns with the ear witnesses Burger and Johnson who heard an initial gunshot, then a pause, and then 3 more shots.

Roux revisits the hip and arm wounds and seems to be suggesting that the Defense’s position will be that Reeva was bending over when she was shot in the hip and her arm was very close to the door, due to the splinters that were found lodged in her arm. Mangena strongly disagrees, feels the splinters would still be there if she was further back against the toilet room wall. He also does not agree that she was bent over.

One final point that Roux makes; the Defense found one spent bullet inside of the toilet and two bullet fragments inside the magazine rack that the initial investigators on the scene did not find. Mangena is aware of this.

Mangena is excused.

The next witness is Colonel van der Nest. He is stationed at the Forensic Science Laboratory – Victim Identification Center. Previously he worked at the Biology Unit responsible for crime scene investigation, including blood spatter analysis. He has 20 years of experience at the Forensic Science Laboratory and has completed over 1,300 investigations.

He was instructed by his commander on February 14, to attend an autopsy for Reeva on the following day. He was requested to assist in measuring the wounds at the autopsy and evaluate for any potential blunt force trauma. His assignment at the crime scene was also to investigate the possibility of blunt force trauma to the victim based on the extensive staining at the scene and the cricket bat evidence.

He was present for the autopsy on February 15, and he also attended the crime scene that same day. He used blue post-it style labels at the crime scene to indicate areas of interest to him. He uses these because they stand out from the typical white crime scene markers.

blue markers used by van der nest

The blood spatter that can be seen in this image in the various labeled areas are a combination of arterial spurting, drip staining and contact staining.

staircase with blue markers

The main contributor to the drip trail that was seen on the stairs and throughout the hallways was her blood soaked shorts and her blood soaked long hair. The arterial spurts could have come from two of the wounds – either the head or the arm, or both.

Next he discusses the findings in the toilet room. Based on the blood spatter on the toilet seat and the particulate of blood, tissue and broken hair on the lid of the toilet seat, he concludes that there was a significant event that occurred to the head in the immediate vicinity of the toilet, with the head coming in contact with the toilet.

The particulate would move in the direction of the force, so for it to land on the toilet seat lid the shot would likely have hit the head in that immediate vicinity. The broken hair is significant because it had some type of force applied to it to cause the breakage and subsequent attachment to the lid, along with the tissue.

toilet close up with UU marker

toilet hair broken hair and particulate

toilet lid particulate

toilet seat close up

He believes that the heavy blood stain pattern on the ground directly next to the toilet is from the arm wound. And the blood and staining on the toilet is from the head. So this aligns with the belief that her head was resting on the toilet and her upper body was resting just along the left side of the toilet. The streaking of the blood on and in the toilet are very consistent with blood soaked hair staining.

Nel wants to know if van der Nest found this type of staining or arterial spurting in any other parts of the toilet room, in particular anything higher than the toilet, and he did not.

There were no foot or shoe marks found inside the toilet room. This is an interesting point. Oscar claims that he had put on his prosthetic legs before he broke down the door to pull Reeva out. How could there be no foot marks found? When I look back at the images of Oscar in his prosthetic legs, I see blood stains on the top of the socks but I do not see stains on the bottom of the socks (at least from the photos that we’ve seen).

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When the cricket bat evidence was introduced by Vermeulen, they went to great lengths to demonstrate how Oscar was on his stumps, not his prosthetics, at the time he broke down the door. I’m just not sure how this aids the State or the Defense, other than to discredit Oscar’s story that he put them on after the shooting. We’ll have to wait and see if this comes up again. There surely must be a reason why each side has their stance on this.

Van der Nest’s conclusion on the blunt force trauma is that there were no wounds consistent with it, nor were there blood stains consistent with it in the areas that he investigated.

NOTE: van der Nest did not testify about the blood spatter found on the duvet or the bedroom wall. I’m guessing somebody else will cover that at another time.

On the shorts that Reeva was wearing, there was a defect (hole) in the elastic area of the shorts that was consistent with the hip wound which allows him to conclude that the shorts were in the normal wearing position at the time of the shot. (They were not down around her knees or ankles where they would likely be if she were going to the bathroom.)

There was a transient area of blood in the bathroom outside the toilet room. There was likely a combination of lifting and dragging type movement to move the body from the toilet room out in to the bathroom. She would have been in an intermediate position on the floor of the bathroom for some timeframe long enough to cause the large blood staining seen in the bathroom area – the pool of blood next to the shower mat, the pool of blood next to the towels and the arterial spurting next to the cricket bat.

bathroom floor

She then was picked up in the bathroom and carried the rest of the way downstairs.

The blood spatters that were seen on the furniture in the downstairs lounge were a result of arterial spurting that would have occurred from the middle landing of the staircase that looks down on to the lounge area.

arterial spurt on downstairs lounge furniture

Roux cross-examines and reads from van der Nest’s report – “no significant spatter or spurt can be seen on the walls above the toilet which suggests that the deceased was in a low body position and was situated in the vicinity of the toilet bowl in receiving the injuries.” Roux wants to know if van der Nest still confirms that position and he says he does.

Roux also asks him if he is familiar with the term “cast off”… for instance if you have blood on your hands and you move your hands, it can cast off to another location. He says yes, he is familiar with cast off.

Roux then has van der Nest read another excerpt from his statement where he says he has read Oscar’s bail affidavit and agrees that Oscar’s explanation of events is consistent with the blood stain patterns. It is his opinion that those events are the most probable and possible explanation for the observed bloodshed. Roux asks him if this is still his position and he says yes.

No more questions, van der Nest is excused.

The next witness is Colonial Michael Sales. He works at the technological investigation support center of the detective service. He downloads data from phones and other similar devices that are a part of an investigation.

He received an iPad3 on February 18, 2013, in relation to this case and he downloaded the data using a cable as a direct link. He used a forensic tool called XRY. This is a non-destructive process. He does not have the ability to change data that is downloaded. For the purposes of this case, he focused on the web browsing history and the bookmarks. He made a print out of what was found.

iPad 3 history data

ipad3 contents close up

iPad3 browser site visited

The history on this iPad3 began on 6:29pm on February 13, 2013. Therefore, all other web browsing history prior to that day and time was erased by the owner.

According to the history, the last time of use for this iPad was at 9:19pm on February 13. Mr. Sales confirms, by Nel’s prompting, that even though he is focusing on the browsing history and bookmarks, everything from this iPad has been downloaded. He also confirmed that he gave all of the information to the defense, as well as gave the iPad3 device over to the defense when he was done. (I am going to take these bolded statements as a hint of what is to come!)

He next confirms that he also received an iPad2 to process and he downloaded all of the information on that device too. The defense also received a copy of the report for this device, as well as received the actual iPad 2 device.

There were commonalities found on each of these devices meaning that they were accessing some of the same websites on the same days and times. Nel has no more questions.

Roux is taken off guard; he was not expecting this witness and asks for a 5 minute recess. They come back and Roux’s only question is whether or not Mr. Sales can testify as to who was looking at these devices on the date in question, and he agrees that he cannot confirm who the user(s) were. No further questions and the witness is excused.

Nel is definitely up to something. He was extremely vague with this witness and Roux didn’t seem to want to touch him with a ten foot pole.

Nel then makes an argument to the court to request that they break until Monday. Court was due to be dark on Friday anyway for a long holiday weekend, but he’d like to add an extra day to that due to the fact that they are wrapping up their case. They expect to call 4 or 5 more witnesses before turning the case over to the Defense. Now that he has been privy to some of the Defense’s case, and he is nearing his close, he feels it is important to take this time to consult with his remaining witnesses. Roux does not object and the Judge grants his request.

I have a feeling that these next 4 to 5 witnesses are going to be game changers. They really have to be in order to go all the way for premeditation. I believe that the State has started to build a foundation toward premeditation with the following items, but they are not quite there yet:

1. Four separate ear witnesses heard female screams before the gunshots. Three of them heard female screams during the shots.

2. The neighbor, Mrs. van der Mewre, heard arguing starting around 1:56am that night and lasting an hour.

3. Dr. Stipp saw the bathroom light on during the screaming and prior to the last round of gunshots.

4. The Medical Examiner testified to Reeva having eaten 2 hours prior to her death which contradicts the time they reportedly went to bed, 10pm.

5. Mangena’s strong testimony about the order and timing of the gunshots. The hip being first, then a missed shot and then 2 more injuries, showing there was surely time to scream in pain and in fear.

These witnesses, if believed, could illustrate that Oscar and Reeva were up later than Oscar stated, they could have potentially been arguing, that it wasn’t as pitch black as Oscar said it was, that Reeva was not shot in the head on the first shot therefore would have very likely been screaming, and the screams were blood-curdling which completely goes against Oscar’s story about a silent person being in the toilet room.

But… even though this may illustrate that Oscar is lying about his story, it’s still not solid proof that he intended to kill her that night. Look at Casey Anthony’s case. She was proven to have told numerous, grandiose lies during her trial and now she is sipping coffee at Starbucks somewhere out in the world, free as a bird. Being proven a liar in court does not always equal conviction.

Motives don’t have to be proven in murder cases in order to get a conviction, but in some cases they are very necessary to really tell the story. This is one of those cases. There are some elements of Oscar’s story that line up with the physical evidence, which means there could be reasonable doubt as to whether or not premeditated murder actually occurred.

With the absence of any indication that there were problems in their relationship, or the absence of a specific problem that they were having on that night, it is a real stretch to just assume that he killed her in cold blood. Just the same way that the jurors in the Anthony case could not connect Anthony’s wild behavior after Caylee’s death with her intentions on the actual day of the murder.

Now, with that said… there have been teasers throughout the State’s presentation that there was a fight or altercation that evening. They have shown glimpses of blood spatter in locations that are not consistent with the path that Oscar carried the body, they have shown damage to the bedroom door that does not make sense within Oscar’s story, we heard one witness talk about a loud argument starting at 1:56am that night AND we have the iPad and phone data that has yet to be fully explored.

I have to believe for Nel to be so utterly confident in his case for premeditation all along, he has some things that are brewing that he’s ready to reveal next week. He also likely has some goodies for when the Defense is giving their presentation and he can cross-examine their witnesses. We may even see Oscar on the stand as early as next week. One thing is for certain… next week will be a good week to tune in!

Oscar Trial – Day 11, March 17 RENS, VAN STADEN

Next on the witness stand is Sean Rens. He is the Manager of the International Firearm Training Academy. He met Oscar in May 2012, through their mutual friend, Justin Devaris. Oscar had a great “love and enthusiasm” for guns, per Rens, and was looking to acquire more guns which he would be able to assist him with.

There was a particular gun that Oscar wanted, a Smith & Wesson 500 revolver. In addition there were five other guns he had ordered from Mr. Rens: .38 caliber Smith & Wesson, civilian version of a Vector .223 caliber assault rifle and three shotguns – a Mossberg, a Maverick, and a Winchester.

Here is a copy of the invoice that was created for these weapons in June of 2012.

invoice for guns

Oscar needed a special collector’s license to own this many weapons and applied for licenses to own these guns on January 22, 2013. His applications were cancelled 4 days after he killed Reeva.

At the time of Reeva’s killing, Oscar was only licensed for one gun and owned one gun – a 9mm Taurus pistol.

Oscar was required to complete testing for gun competency and safety. Mr. Rens has the test with him in court and reads through the questions and Oscar’s subsequent answers.

The test gives many examples of what to do if an intruder enters your property, enters your home, steals your property, etc. all within your plain sight, and in all scenarios, unless the intruder has a weapon and is directly coming at you to attack you, you cannot use lethal force.

The answers that Oscar provided all clearly indicated that up until the time an intruder comes at you directly with a weapon, a person is not to use lethal force.

One specific example of the questions on the exam: “explain the legal requirements when using lethal force for private or self defense.” The answer: “the attack must be against you, it must be unlawful and it must be against a person”

And then the question that raises no doubt whatsoever that Oscar deliberately ignored everything he had been taught (if you are to believe his story): “list the 4 safety rules in order of importance”. The answer: “always point in a safe direction, always keep your finger off the trigger, always treat a firearm as if it’s loaded, and always know your target and what lies beyond

In some additional questions on the test it was illustrated again how Oscar was aware of the following gun rules: “security in a holster, unloaded when in storage, do not handle unnecessarily, never fire in to the air, use only the correct ammunition, know your target”. In court thus far, there has been testimony to prove that Oscar had broken every one of these safety rules on various occasions. One could make the assumption from this that he has no regard for safety or for the law.

Oscar and Mr. Rens saw each other approximately 10-12 times from 2012-2013, and they would often shoot together at the range. Mr. Rens was aware of Oscar’s shooting competency.

Mr. Rens relayed a story that Oscar shared with him about how one day he came home and heard the clothes dryer making a noise and he thought it was somebody in the house. He stated he went in to “recon” mode, which is where you take your gun out and go from room to room clearing each room until he was able to identify the noise in the laundry room.

Mr. Rens explained that this is what any person would do in this situation – investigate each room to make sure they know what the situation was. Not just start firing off rounds at unidentified noises.

Mr. Rens also testified that Oscar was very busy so any paperwork that they needed to complete would often be done at various locations. He recalls that Darren Fresco accompanied him on a few occasions, including the time he went to the home of John Bay (unsure of last name). This is the time that Oscar was with Darren and Samantha coming back from the Vaal River, for which he is facing a gun charge for shooting out of the sunroof. Nel is working to solidify Darren’s and Samantha’s testimonies about what happened that day. Roux has insinuated in his cross-exams that Oscar is going to deny this incident completely.

Roux’s cross-examination was extremely brief. He asks Mr. Rens if Oscar would have had the ability to aim higher up at a target from a short shooting distance, for instance to aim at a head. Mr. Rens says absolutely. He is aware of Oscar’s abilities and yes he could do that. My guess is that Roux is going to imply later in the defense presentation that Oscar’s bullets were fired low to aim away from any vital areas.

Roux also wants to know if in Mr. Rens’ opinion, are firearms collectors seen to be upstanding people or reckless people. Mr. Rens believes that they are typically upstanding people. There is no correlation in people who own many guns to being reckless, it’s usually the opposite.

In my opinion, this goes against Oscar. If Oscar is perceived as somebody who is fully trained on his weapons, knows how to use them and understands what they can do, then the incident in his house that night was not just sheer recklessness but rather something that was done deliberately. As I mentioned earlier, I am getting the impression that Oscar has very little regard for the law and does what he feels he wants to do, and believes he can get away with it.

Next up is warrant officer Bennie Van Staden. He is a police photographer. He has 8 years of experience as a photographer and 12 years in total at the local criminal center.

On February 14, 2013, he was on standby to photograph any crime scenes that needed photographing. He was at a different scene initially that night and got called off to go over to the Pistorius home. He arrived at 4:50am.

He explains how he first walked through the entirety of the home to get a feel for the scene. He then went in to the garage to take photos of Oscar. Oscar had washed his hands and face, therefore he was not able to do gun residue testing on the hands, only on the arms above the hands.

Van Staden took pics of Oscar’s body and his prosthetics, revealing some damage on the legs.

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He then went outside to photograph the front of the home around 5:15am, and then back inside to begin photographing the inside scene and the deceased.

Most of the pics that I am posting here are in addition to the images that I posted from day 10 of the trial. Nel is noting the time that each photo was taken as they walk through the series of images together.

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More images of the damage to the bedroom door.

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Sunglasses display case and contents of the lower portion of the display. Air gun and baseball bat standing next to the display.

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Blood on the carpet near the entrance to the bedroom.

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The right side of the bed. The bullet magazine and it’s holder were found in the drawer of the nightstand on the right side of the bed. On the floor you can see a fan, a grey t-shirt, an iPad, and an additional iPad was found underneath the bed on this side. It also appears that one of the iPad covers was detached from the iPad seen in this photo. The bullet magazine and the holder were removed from the drawer for photographing.

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There was some very early speculation after February 14, that steroids may have been involved due to some items found at the scene. Those items were later determined to be herbal supplements called Coenzyme Compositum. In these images, you can see pouches of syringes and supplements found on top of the dresser in the bedroom.

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The duvet was found crumpled up on the floor in front of the bed when Van Staden began to photograph. He spotted a few drops of blood spatter on the duvet, which he took a photo of. He then spread out the duvet and found more droplets on the inside of the duvet.

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There was also blood spatter found on the bedroom wall behind the bed. It was located on the left hand side just slightly above the head rest. You can see a white circle added in the photo to indicate the location. Ironically, or not, this is the same area where the gun holster was found. Why is there blood spatter on the duvet and next to the bed on the wall? According to Oscar’s story, he pulled Reeva out of the toilet room and carried her from the bathroom, out the bedroom door and down the stairs. These blood spatters are in locations that are not in that path. This has yet to be explained by the State.

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We saw more images of the blood spatter and toilet door pieces throughout the bathroom.

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The bullets had fragmented and particles went through the body. Since the body of Reeva was dragged out of the toilet room, it is likely that some of these particles were dragged along with her. One particle had hair entangled in it.

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More images of the cricket bat, both front and back. You can see the notches on the end of the bat that were caused by hitting the door.

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He next focused on the door and the toilet room, and the blood stains and bullet fragments found inside there. You can see two areas of the bathroom wall that were damaged by bullets. One by a direct hit (missed shot) and one caused by ricochet.

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Photos of the outside backyard were taken. You can see Oscar’s two dogs outside where they were found on the morning of February 14.

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These photos show the bathroom window as you look up from the back yard. You’ll notice Oscar’s dog standing just below. Right behind where the dog is standing is a pair of blue jeans that were found on the ground. These have not been explained to us yet. They look like a woman’s pair of jeans and you can see a thin white belt through the loops. Interesting that they were found just below the bathroom windows.

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Ladders were found below the bedroom balcony.

ladders seen from bedroom balcony

They also discovered that there was a broken window pane in one of the downstairs windows. This is the window to the downstairs lounge area and it’s located to the bottom left of the bathroom windows. The hole in the window is indicated by a red circle on the photo. No broken glass was found at the scene, which indicates that this window had been broken at an earlier time. If Oscar was so concerned about security, wouldn’t this broken window have caused enough concern for him to repair it immediately, or at least board it up? Especially since it’s located on the ground floor.

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Nel and Van Staden spent more time reviewing how the scene was preserved as the processing was taking place. When items needed to be moved, they were first measured and then marked. Roux spent a lot of time on his cross-examination bringing up the fact that other people were on the scene photographing while Van Staden is there. He wants to introduce doubt that the scene was handled with integrity.

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Regarding the safe that was mentioned in earlier testimony, it was located in one of the wardrobes in the upstairs hallway to the bathroom. Van Staden was present when Oscar’s brother Carl and lawyer Oldwage opened the safe. The items inside were taken out, photographed, and given to Oldwage. The safe contained a box of .38 Special ammunition, some other personal items and medals. There also was another safe downstairs in the kitchen. A locksmith was called out to help them open that safe and they did remove contents from there as well.

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In total, 15 albums were created. Album 1 shows the scene exactly as it was found upon arrival.

Albums 2-15 depict the scene in various stages of processing, as well as contain autopsy photos and additional evidence added by Vermeulen and Mangena.

It was revealed that Oscar does have an alarm system for his home which does include beams that detect movement outside.

Van Staden also took various photos to depict the lighting conditions both inside and outside the house from numerous different vantage points. Photos of the security system and the lamp posts outside the home were taken as well and included in the albums.

Van Staden confirms that he was on the scene photographing on February 14, 15, 16, 17, and on March 8, when they did the scene reconstruction.

Numerous measurements were taken at the crime scene. And measurements of Oscar (with and without his prosthetics) were also taken by a doctor. Van Staden was present when these measurements were taken and these photos have been included in the albums.

Photos of the neighborhood including aerials, depicting witness vantage points were taken and included in the albums.

Van Staden was also present for the autopsy and the post mortem/autopsy photos were included in the albums.

And then for the other gun-related charges against Oscar, Van Staden photographed Tashas Restaurant. He also took photos with Darren Fresco to depict the location where Oscar shot out of the sunroof of the car.

Court adjourned for the day.

Oscar Trial – Days 9 and 10, March 13 and 14 – Crime Scene Photos VAN RENSBURG

Lt Colonel Van Rensburg is called to the stand. He is the former Boschkop Police Station Commander. He resigned in December of last year after 29 years of service.

He arrived at the scene at 3:55am on February 14, 2013. An ambulance was already there with it’s rear doors open. Lying on the floor near the stairs was the body of Reeva covered in towels and plastic bags. The paramedic had informed him that the person was dead upon their arrival (According to Dr. Stipp who was there prior to the paramedic, she was already dead when he got there too.) He and the paramedic removed the towels and the paramedic pointed out the injuries.

Oscar was found in the kitchen, very emotional. Van Rensburg asked him what happened. Oscar did not respond. He then requested fingerprint, forensic and photographer personnel to come to the scene. Ms. Stander (the daughter of Mr. Johan Stander) was there talking to Oscar and consoling him. Ms. Stander told Van Rensburg that Oscar asked her father to use his car to take the deceased to the hospital, but he refused. Mr. Stander suggested that an ambulance be called.

Ms. Stander told Van Rensburg that she and Oscar retrieved towels and black plastic bags to try to stop the bleeding. Ms. Stander also told Van Rensburg that when she arrived, Oscar had told her that he believed Reeva was an intruder. At this time, Oscar was pacing back and forth.

Van Rensburg ordered someone to control any access to the scene. Hilton Botha, another police officer, arrived and he showed him the body. They both went upstairs together and followed the blood trail.

The following are the crime scene photos that were shown to the court. These photos are not released to the public, so the only way we can see them is on the video monitors at court. The quality is poor, and you will not be able to see a lot of the smaller blood spatter but you will get the jist of the layout and the scene as it was found.

This is the front of Oscar’s house. The main door is seen in the middle with police tape and the garage doors are off to the right.

Oscar Pistorius house 5

This is the view that you see as you enter through the front door in to the foyer. If you were to walk down those stairs and keep walking straight, you would be in the kitchen, so the kitchen is off to the left (not seen on this photo).

view from front door

This picture was taken inside the foyer. From this vantage point, the front door is off to the right and directly in front is the door that leads to the garage.

view as walking in front door

Inside the main foyer, standing near where the body was found at the bottom of the stairs. Looking straight ahead, you can see a small lounge area that is below/behind the staircase.

view as you walk in to foyer - body was laying right where they are taking picture from

Closer view of small lounge area.

downstairs lounge

Blood spatter was found on the arm of the chair on the right side of the room.

chair to right in lounge

And spatter was also found on the chair on the left side of the room.

chair to left in lounge

Blood spatter on floor near the rug in the lounge area.

blood spatter on floor near rug in lounge

Looking up the stairs from the bottom.

looking up the stairs

Blood spatter on the stairs.

blood spatter on stairs

Blood spatter was found along the walls at various points of the staircase. I was not able to screen grab any photos where you can clearly see the blood. But there were quite a few spatters.

The staircase railing at the bending point of the landing shows blood smears. (the downstairs lounge can be seen in the background)

stairway railing at the bend in the stairs with blood swipes

At the top of the stairs, looking to the left. Blood spatter was found on that left wall. The door that is just beyond that wall leads to a roof area above the garage where there is a Jacuzzi. The door was locked, but Van Rensburg was able to open it with a key. He inspected that area and there was no blood so he closed the door and locked it.

top of stairs looking left

At the top of the stairs looking down.

top of stairs looking down

At the top of the stairs, looking to the right.

top of stairs looking right

Upstairs hallway around the bend of the railing. The wooden cabinets on the left are the linen cabinets. A blue towel can be seen on the floor just below. The door with the white circle on it leads to a spare bedroom. The wall that is on the right hand side, just past the end of the silver railing, also had blood spatter on it.

door to spare bedroom circled in white

Small lounge area upstairs outside of Oscar’s bedroom.

small upstairs lounge area

Sofa in small lounge area.

sofa in upstairs lounge area

From inside the lounge area, looking out into the hallway.

inside the upstairs lounge area looking out to hall

Looking down the hallway toward Oscar’s bedroom (lounge area would be off to the right).

view down hall in to bedroom

Blood spatter on the hallway wall leading to bedroom.

blood spatter on hallway wall

Blood spatter on the hallway floor near bedroom entrance.

blood spatter on hallway floor

The entrance to Oscar’s bedroom – note the air gun located on the right hand side leaning against the wall.

door to bedroom

Damage to bedroom door – see yellow circle. Van Rensburg testified that there was a hole through the door.

hole in bedroom door 1

Hole in the bedroom door.

hole in bedroom door 2

Hole in the bedroom door from the other side.

hole in bedroom door 3

Damage found on the bottom edge of the bedroom door.

damage to bottom edge of bedroom door

Damage was also found on the side of the bedroom door above the door handle.

damage to side of bedroom door above handle

Another view of the damage to the bedroom door.

more damage in bedroom

NOTE: This is the first we are hearing of any damage to the bedroom door. The focus has always been on the bathroom but now we find out there was damage in other areas of the bedroom as well, which is huge! The State has not yet addressed the cause of this damage during trial. I will be very anxious to hear their conclusions.

Air gun and blue baseball bat found leaning against wall near bedroom entrance.

air gun and baseball bat next to it leaning against bedroom wall

First view inside the bedroom – view of the right side of the bed and the balcony doors. This is exactly how police found the room.

first view in to bedroom

The right side of the bed and floor. You can also see the fan that Oscar states he had retrieved off the balcony, according to the bail application.

right side of bed

The duvet and a pair of blue jeans were found on the floor.

duvet and jeans found on bedroom floor

A dresser with a stereo system on top. Two Blackberry phones were found on top of the stereo system. A watch case can be seen on top of the right side speaker. Another smaller fan can be seen on the floor to the left, unplugged.

dresser and stereo in bedroom

The case holding the watches. Blood spatter can be seen on the top of the case.

watch case in bedroom with blood smears on top

The left side of the bed. On top of the brown sofa is Reeva’s overnight bag. Her sandals/slippers can also be seen on the floor between the sofa and the bed.

bedroom left side of bed

Reeva’s overnight bag, packed neatly.

reeva bag

Switch to the thermometer (AC) in the bedroom. It was in the “off” position. There was a spatter of blood near this switch.

switch for thermometer in bedroom switched off

Lamp next to the left side of the bed – the gun holster was found in between the lamp and the edge of the bed. Also seen are a coffee cup on top of a few magazines.

lamp on left side of bed - holster seen to the right of it

Close up of the holster.

gun holster seen in between lamp on left and bed on right

Standing near the balcony door, this is the view of the room – the bedroom door is on the left and the entrance to the bathroom hallway is on the right.

view from balcony looking toward bedroom door on left and hallway to bathroom on right

The entrance to the hallway leading to the bathroom.

looking from bed to bathroom hallway

The hallway to the bathroom.

hallway from bedroom to bathroom

Bullet cartridge found in hallway to the bathroom.

bullet casing found in hallway to bathroom

Close up of the cartridge found in hallway to the bathroom.

close up of bullet casing in hallway to bathroom

The tiled entrance to the bathroom. The bath tub can be seen at the top of the photo. There was blood spatter found on the floor and wall, another cartridge found on the left side of the entrance and wood splinters from the toilet room door.

entrance to bathroom blood spatter bullet casing and wood splinters found

Close up of the cartridge found in the tiled entrance to the bathroom, near left wall.

bullet casing in entrance to bathroom

Blood spatter in entrance to the bathroom.

blood spatter in entrance to bathroom

Wood splinters and blood spatter in entrance to the bathroom.

close up of entrance to bathroom floor

The white circle depicts where a third cartridge was found. And a close up of that cartridge.

third cartridge near tub white circle

cartridge near tub close up

The three cones identify the location of the three bullet cartridges found in the bathroom.

cones indicating 3 cartridges

Bloody towels and wood panel found near bath tub.

beginning of bathroom - edge of bathtub at top

Sink basins located on the right side of the bathroom – large blood spatter on the wall to the right of the sinks

sink basins on right side of bathroom

Another view of the sinks which are on the right hand side of the bathroom. Blood spatter was found on the edge of the white counter.

sinks

The floor of the bathroom – bloody towels, blood spatter, wood splinters from the door, a bloody cricket bat, the gun on top of the shower mat and a cell phone peeking out from underneath the shower mat can all be seen.

bathroom floor

Bloody towels and the bloody cricket bat used to break down the toilet room door.

bloody towels and cricket bat

Bloody cricket bat and blood spatter. The fourth cartridge is seen on the right in this photo.

cricket bat spatter and cartridge on right

The gun on the shower mat, a cell phone (with the cover knocked off of it) and more blood spatter can be seen.

gun and phone

A close up of the gun. It was found cocked and ready to fire.

close up of cocked gun

A bullet that was removed from the gun.

bullet removed from gun

The black cell phone (Reeva’s) that was found peeking out from underneath the shower mat.

phone found under bathmat near gun

The cell phone case that was found knocked off of the phone underneath the shower mat.

phone case of phone found under bathmat near gun

An additional white cell phone (later determined to be Oscar’s, phone number 4949) was found in the bathroom underneath the bloody towels. Van Staden found the phone and photographed it. He then put the bloody towels in the tub and photographed them again while he continued his investigation.

another phone found at crime scene

towels put in tub by van staden

Damaged metal plate on the front of the bath tub.

damaged metal plate on side of bath tub

The windows on the left side of the bathroom. Oscar claims that hearing a noise in the bathroom and seeing this open window was the reason for his sudden terror and belief that an intruder was in the toilet room. Van Rensburg investigated this window and there was no sign of break in, nor were there ladders down below that would have been needed for somebody to gain entry. If Oscar had simply looked out that window, he would have realized that.

open window

This is a view of the bathroom window from the outside. Notice there is no ladder in this photo.

view of the upstairs bathroom windows from the outside

In the bathroom, looking toward the toilet room. To the left of the door on the ground are some white items. One of those items is a bathroom scale. But harder to see are a bunch of broken bath tiles. Several tiles where broken off of the wall and lay on the ground. It has not been discussed in testimony yet as to how they believe those tiles were broken.

tub on left toilet on right

The toilet room door with the panel broken out. Only a small portion of the wood panel remains on the left side.

toilet door as found with panel out

The front of the toilet room door (facing bathroom). There is a key with a green keychain inside of that lock.

outside of toilet door with green key

Looking inside the toilet room. The toilet is to the left and wall to the right. Broken pieces of the door and blood spatter can be seen on the floor, on the wall, on the toilet and in the toilet. There was also damage done to the wall from the bullet fragments but it cannot be seen in these photos.

NOTE: the long thin panel of wood seen inside the toilet room appears to be placed there (by Oscar, not police, as the police found it this way) after he dragged Reeva out. You can see blood smears underneath the panel, but in addition… Van Rensburg testified that there was human tissue (possibly from the head) that was found on the underside of that panel. Why was that panel moved in to that toilet room after Reeva was taken out?

looking inside the toilet room

looking in to toilet room wood pieces from door on floor

door pieces and blood in toilet room - toilet to the left

blood spatter in the toilet room

more blood spatter in the toilet room

blood spatter on the wall inside the toilet room

blood in toilet

And again… here is a photo of the toilet room door reassembled in the courtroom that shows the 4 bullet holes and damage done by the cricket bat.

door 2

door

Oscar was kept outside in the garage, being guarded by police. A few photographs were taken in the garage that show large blood stains on the right side of his shorts and body. In this photo it initially appears as if he does not have prosthetics on but if you look closer he does. His left side was photographed as well. Oddly, he seems to be missing blood on his chest and shoulders. It almost looks like he was wearing a shirt and then took it off.

Oscar with blood stains on right side of shorts and on prosthetics

blood on OP right prosthetic and sock

Oscar left side

Van Rensburg testified that Oscar was found shirtless and in shorts when he arrived on the scene. The amount of blood on the front of his body and the back appears to be about the same.

After Van Rensburg was done inspecting the upstairs, he came back down to the kitchen and asked Oscar if they were alone inside the house (meaning, were he and Reeva alone that night). Oscar responded, yes.

Van Rensburg let him know that he viewed him as a suspect and informed him of his rights, however he was not arresting him at that stage. He says he did this because there was still some information that needed to be followed up on first before he could make the arrest.

He did request Oscar to remain present at all times at the scene and they moved him to the garage.

Carl (his brother) must have already arrived by this stage because Van Rensburg testifies that he was unsure if Oscar or his brother called the lawyer (Oldwage).

At some point very shortly after that, Oldwage arrived. The people who STILL HAD ACCESS TO OSCAR at this stage were: Mr. Stander, Ms. Stander, Carl and his lawyer Oldwage.

Van Staden was the official photographer of the scene. Van Rensburg and Hilton Botha had already completed their observation of the upstairs when Van Staden arrived. Oscar was now in the garage. They first showed the deceased to Van Staden and he took photos. Hilton and Van Rensburg turned her over and Van Staden took more photos of her injuries.

The three of them (Van Rensburg, Botha, Van Staden) then went upstairs together. They pointed out elements of the scene that they wanted Van Staden to focus on, and gave him the order to take photos. The two of them went back downstairs while Van Staden photographed alone.

Van Rensburg says he and Hilton did go back upstairs one additional time while Van Staden was up there to make sure they had all the evidence that needed to be gathered.

During the time that Van Staden was photographing, no forensic members or family members were present upstairs. At a later stage, after all photos were taken, Aimee Pistorius requested to go upstairs and fetch clothes. He sent Van Staden to accompany Aimee and see what she took, and where she took it from. He requested that whatever she took be documented or photographed.

Nel addressed two issues that occurred on the scene during the investigation.

First, while Van Rensburg was in the bathroom working on the scene, one of the forensics people (Motha) picked up the gun without his gloves and took the magazine out. Van Rensburg immediately reprimanded him for doing this. Motha put the magazine back in, put the gun down and put his gloves on. He then proceeded to pick up the gun and make it safe.

The second issue involved a missing watch. There were 8 watches in the box in Oscar’s bedroom upon arrival at the scene. One watch was taken by Aimee when she came to retrieve clothing for Oscar. But a second watch then went missing after Van Rensburg informed his forensics people to be very cautious about expensive property. As soon as he realized it was missing, he ordered all of his people downstairs in to the garage where they were body searched and their bags were searched. They never found the watch. A report was opened by Van Rensburg to investigate the situation. Oscar had already been arrested and taken to the hospital/police station when this happened so he was not in the house at the time.

On the first day of the investigation, there was not a formal inventory of all items removed. Each individual forensics person keeps their own notes and reports and that is what they use to document the items.

As for how the house was guarded on the morning of February 14: Van Rensburg, and the constable that he arrived with that night, first enacted a security barrier at the scene.

When they moved Oscar to the garage, a barrier was put in place that closed off most portions of the house, but allowed some access to the garage (since Oscar was being held there.) At the entrance of the garage door was a police officer, as well as another police officer at the front door to the house.

As the morning progressed, they also set up barriers outside. And then eventually had controls set up at the main gate to Silverwoods where everybody had to be cleared before they could drive up to the scene. This helped to keep the media out.

front of OP house

Van Rensburg testified to being furious about the missing watch situation, so as of the next day on the scene, he enforced a stricter rule that everybody had to sign in when entering and then sign out when exiting. All exhibits that were taken out were sealed and documented.

Nobody called Reeva’s family from the scene that night. They were informed of Reeva’s death by the police later that morning.

One other note… A locksmith was called to the home so that Oscar and his lawyer could access items from his safe downstairs. It was not mentioned what they took from the safe.

It’s concerning to me that up until the time that he was formally arrested on scene, there were a fair amount of friends/family members with access to him. Not to mention that his lawyer was on the scene asap as well.

Roux spent his cross-examination questioning Van Rensburg about errors made by the investigators on this case, which is to be expected, as well as accusing the police of moving items at the scene. Van Rensburg does admit there were some errors which they covered in detail on his direct examination but as far as moving items, he was very adamant that the scene was documented as it was originally found.

It’s standard defense 101 to bring out police errors and make their work look sloppy. You see that in almost every trial. The difference in this trial is that it’s not a jury who will decide Oscar’s fate, it’s a very experienced Judge who understands what level of error is acceptable and what level is not. She also has probably seen every Defense trick in the book. She can tell which issues are of legitimate concern and which are just a diversion.

Van Rensburg explains to Roux that when an investigator first views a scene, there are items that he will make a mental note of. He will typically notice several other things later on, but there are always those first impression items. These are the items that he noticed when he first walked in to Oscar’s bedroom:

• Pellet gun (air gun)
• Cabinet with sunglasses
• Watches
• Hi-fi system
• Bed with no duvet
• Duvet and jeans lying on floor
• Sandals on the left side of the bed
• The bag that was on the sofa
The light was on in the bedroom
• The metallic fan standing in front of the balcony door
• The curtains were open

OP bedroom

He did not walk over to the right side of the bedroom at that point. He went to the left and continued to follow the blood trail.

He and Hilton Botha moved in to the bathroom and were there for a while. They did not touch or move anything. They observed what they saw and pointed things out to each other.

Since Van Rensburg had been told (by Ms. Stander) that Oscar stated he thought Reeva was an intruder, his intention was to determine if there was in fact an intruder who may have gained access to the house. So after leaving the bathroom he went past the bed and out on to the balcony to see if there was anything suspicious. Looking over the left side of the balcony, he noticed ladders stacked flat on the ground. He then went back in to the bedroom. Hilton was still in the bathroom at that time.

right side of bed

He next noticed the cables (cords) laying on the right side of the bed. And he also focused again on the sandals on the left side of the bed. That is when he saw the holster on the left side nightstand.

He left the bedroom and went to observe the spare bedroom right next door. Hilton was still not with him. He checked the windows which were locked and the door was also locked with a key that was in the keyhole.

This is the second door that has been mentioned that was locked with a key in the keyhole. (The first was the door at the top of the stairs that leads to the Jacuzzi) If it is standard practice that some or maybe even most of the doors in this house always have their keys in them, perhaps the keys that were seen on the outside of the toilet room door were always there?

He then went in to the second spare bedroom, again on his own. He entered the bedroom and went in to the bathroom area and noticed a toothbrush and toothpaste that had been used. There were signs that somebody had been staying in that room. No further details were given during testimony and Roux didn’t ask him anything about this.

After he was finished inspecting the upstairs, he went back down to the kitchen where Oscar was. This is when he notified him that he was a suspect.

Van Rensburg now moves on to when Van Staden arrived and explains their investigative process to Roux. He states that when the three of them went upstairs, he and Hilton were pointing out the blood trail to Van Staden and Van Staden was taking photographs. He photographed everything as it was found first before anything was touched. After the initial scene was documented, they then began to investigate items meaning that they did have to touch and move things.

A few of the items he mentioned were the spreading open of the duvet on the floor due to the blood droplets that were found, turning over the panel in the toilet room where human tissue was found on the underside of the panel, and looking under the bloody towels in the bathroom and finding the white phone.

Nobody else was allowed upstairs while Van Staden was photographing. When forensics personnel arrived at the house, they had to check in with the guards at the front door. Van Rensburg would instruct them when it was ok for them to come upstairs. The ballistics person that arrived was Motha. (He was the one who handled the gun without gloves, as mentioned by Van Rensburg on direct).

Van Rensburg left the scene around 2:00pm on February 14. They sealed the scene by locking all the windows and the doors, including the main door. They kept the keys at the police station.

Since there were two dogs on the property, they had the gardener take out some food for the dogs so they could be fed. Van Rensburg states “he (the gardener) was staying on the right hand corner (of the house) but he didn’t have access to the house.” They took his keys away to make sure he couldn’t access anything.

By looking at the photo of Oscar’s house at the very top of this post, I believe the gardener’s quarters are to the left front (the section that has the square pattern on it). Van Rensburg describes it as being on the right hand corner of the house, but I think he means the right hand corner if you were looking from the inside, not the outside. I could be wrong about this. I have heard it reported that the gardener’s quarters are off of the kitchen, so if that is the case, it would have to be the left side of the house (if you are looking at it from the front street).

They then placed a seal at the front door. Photos were taken of the seal. After that time, everybody who entered and exited the home was added to a list.

OP front door

front of OP house3

front of OP house4

Roux reads through the statements of a few different officers who were on the scene that early morning and some of the officers are claiming to have either arrived first and/or gone upstairs. Roux also challenges Van Rensburg with Hilton Botha’s statement which claims that Oscar was already in the garage when he arrived. He also claimed that Oscar was wearing a bloody shirt.

Botha’s statement does not match the timeframe that Van Rensburg is giving in court. According to Van Rensburg, Oscar was still in the kitchen when he and Botha first went upstairs. Van Rensburg strongly denies those statements made by the two police officers, and also does not agree with Botha’s statement of Oscar being in the garage (when Hilton arrived) with a bloody shirt on. He says that Oscar was shirtless the whole time.

Van Rensburg again tells the court that he was the first on the scene (along with the constable that came with him). Hilton Botha then arrived and the two of them went upstairs together for the first time. Oscar was still in the kitchen at this time. He also says that each police vehicle has an AVL system. It captures timeframes when police vehicles are moving about. He says the court is more than welcome to have access to that evidence (which can prove that he was there first).

Roux shows Van Rensburg some photos and is continuously insinuating that he and his police team have “disturbed” the evidence but Van Rensburg keeps explaining to him that the house was first documented as it was found and THEN they started investigating. Nothing was moved prior to those first photos.

Roux’s arguments here seem like a big smoke screen to me. Obviously investigators have to touch and move things at some point to investigate the scene. It seems to me that they took careful measures to document everything, including the items that they later moved.

To illustrate how he believes the scene was disturbed, Roux shows some photos of Reeva’s overnight bag and the sandals in various positions, the duvet moved to a different position on the floor and the curtains closed while Van Rensburg was handling some the cords on the ground.

bag on sofa and sandals

sandals

bag and sandal on floor

darkened bedroom

Roux tells Van Rensburg that when Oscar brought the fans in that morning, they were operating and on. Roux wants to know who interfered with the fans. Van Rensburg tells him that the silver metallic fan was not on and the other black fan that was in the corner was not plugged in. That is how they were found when they arrived. Van Rensburg states that the photo where the room is darkened (and the fan has been moved) was taken later on in their investigation. Again, reiterating that this does not depict the original scene.

Nel on reexamination establishes that all photos have meta data which confirm the dates and times of all official photos taken at the scene. He asks Van Staden to retrieve the meta data for the photograph of the darkened bedroom with curtains closed.

It is determined that the date on the photo is not the correct year. This was not from the official photographer’s camera, therefore Nel will not even proceed with it because it’s of no value. It was a trick by the Defense. That photo was clearly not from the original scene, but of the scene taken much later by somebody else’s camera, likely another officer (as these are photos that were provided by the police).

Court is adjourned and Van Rensburg is excused.

Oscar Trial – Day 8, March 12 FRESCO, VERMEULEN

Darren Fresco is back on the stand. Nel has more questions for him.

When they were driving to the Vaal River, where did Oscar keep his gun? Darren said between his legs on the seat, no holster.
Nel also wants to know if Oscar ever asked Darren to slow down during that trip. Darren states no, he didn’t. He never complained about the speed.

Then he asks Darren if he had taken any pictures of a speedometer that day and Darren says he took a picture of the speedometer when Oscar was driving to the Vaal. He was driving very fast, over the 250kph mark (150mph).

As for the tickets that they received from the police that day, did Oscar offer to pay? He said no.

In Tasha’s Restaurant, why did you pass your gun to accused?
Darren says because Oscar asked to see it. There would have been no other reason to give it to him. And the gun did not fall out of his shorts. He only told that story to cover for Oscar.

He was then asked if he had any contact with Samantha Taylor since the shooting on February 14, 2013. He states that he has not seen her since that date up until two days ago when he saw her in the witness room.

Roux is up. He presents to the court a photograph of the speedometer that was taken at 16:41 (4:41pm) on the day of the Vaal trip and it’s a picture that Darren took of the speedometer while he was driving on the way home. He texted this picture to Oscar. Therefore, he states that Darren was lying when he said that Oscar was driving 150mph, it was actually Darren and he photographed himself doing that speed. Darren basically just says that he doesn’t remember that but if they have a picture then ok.

Darren is excused.

The next witness up is Lt Colonel Vermeulen. His career in forensics started in 1992.

Vermeulen was sent to Oscar’s house to investigate on March 8, 2013, along with other experts. He was specifically requested to perform testing on the cricket bat and the toilet room door. He also was asked if he could ascertain the cause of the bending of the metal plate on the outside of the bathtub.

When they arrived at Oscar’s house the door was not in the frame. The door was brought to the scene by one of the investigators and they attached it back to the doorframe and glued the broken out panels in to place.

Vermeulen wants to clarify that on March 8th, his purpose for being there was to accustom himself to the scene. He did not do his own testing at the scene. He did it at a later time in the laboratory.

On April 26, 2013, he received the metal plate from the bathroom tub and the cricket bat (both in sealed packages) from the forensics laboratory. He examined the metal plate first. His conclusion was that the plate became bent as a result of either being hit or something falling on it. It had to be a hard enough object to cause a scratch in the metal. The scratch was in a vertical direction. They were never able to ascertain the object that hit it.

silver-plate-in-bathroom

Vermeulen also had an opportunity to do testing on the door at the laboratory along with the cricket bat.

door at laboratory

This image shows one of the cricket bat strikes that hit the outside frame of the door – the white marker is directly to the right of the mark

door with white marker

The next images show how the bat hit that mark

bat hitting the first spot

The marks are located 1400-1530mm (approximately 5 feet) up from the ground. The investigation revealed that the cricket bat made a definitive match with the dent in the door.

Vermeulen first demonstrates where the bat hit while standing. Looking at that image, you can see how he would most likely have to crouch to hit that spot. So he then demonstrates what it looks like to hit that spot from his knees (simulating being on stumps) and it was a very natural swing that hit that spot.

Vermeulen does not believe that Oscar was wearing prosthetics when he used the bat. He believes he was on stumps. In Oscar’s testimony he states that after he shot Reeva (from his stumps) that he put on his prosthetics before he broke the door with the cricket bat. This is inconsistent with what the investigator is concluding.

The next bat strike was right next to the other one but landed right on the edge of the door panel, and went thru the door. There are marks and coloration on the bat that support the bat went thru the door at that location. The bat was then twisted back and forth while in the door to break out the panel.

bat hitting second spot

close up of second bat strike

another close up of bat strike

Roux cross-examines. He wants to know if Vermeulen is a certified tool mark examiner. He states no, but the technique that he used was that of a physical match which is very similar to a tool mark examination.

Roux asks him if he is of the opinion that Oscar was on his stumps at the time of the bullets being shot and Vermeulen testifies, yes, that he was there when ballistics tests were done, and he agrees that Oscar was on his stumps at the time of the shooting.

Roux going back to the cricket bat again asks Vermeulen to get on his knees and lift his feet while he swings the bat and while Vermeulen does this, he is off balance. Roux wants to demonstrate that it would be difficult for Oscar to swing that bat while on stumps as he would not be able to adequately keep himself upright.

Vermeulen counters that if he had enough balance to fire a gun while on stumps then he would likely have enough balance to hit the door with the bat on stumps.

They now review the forensic evidence collection and storage procedures. The rubber handle that was originally on the cricket bat is not on the bat in court, and Roux wants to know where it is. Vermeulen cannot testify to that. He received it from the laboratory without the rubber handle. He believes it was removed to be finger printed.

It was then revealed that the investigator who had custody of the door from the date of the crime up until March 8 (when they brought it back to the scene) kept the door in his office. It was not properly wrapped for storage. Roux states that he has compared the door to the photos from the crime scene and there are now new marks on the door and he wants to identify where they came from.

Vermeulen did not compare the door to crime scene photos when he examined and tested it. It is then pointed out by Roux that pieces of the door are missing and Vermeulen testifies that most likely pieces were left behind at the crime scene. Vermeulen states he wasn’t there at the crime scene when the door was collected so he cannot explain why pieces are missing. Roux wants to know if he ever asked anybody for the missing pieces and Vermeulen did not.

It sure does seem like the handling of this door was not done well by the investigators and Roux is doing an excellent job at attacking their work.

Roux now disputes that Oscar had to be on his stumps at the time of swinging the bat. Again, this point is important because Oscar’s statement says he was on his prosthetics. He has Vermeulen try out a few different stances so they can achieve the same mark on the door.

Roux positioning for bat strike

Vermeulen states that he’s in an unnatural position when he hits it. He does not think that somebody would stand like this. Roux says it may be uncomfortable for him but perhaps it wasn’t an uncomfortable stance for Oscar.

Roux asks Vermeulen, “when was the door hit with the cricket bat, before or after the gunshots?”

Vermeulen answers, “after the shots, or at least some part of it broke after the shots.” He came to this conclusion because one of the broken pieces of the door panel had a crack straight through a bullet hole. The way the crack ran through the hole would make it impossible for the shot to go through after.

Roux now points out another mark on the door that is not a bullet shot or a cricket bat strike and he wants to know if they investigated it to see what caused it.

Vermeulen says they noticed it but they did not investigate it. He was only asked to investigate the cricket bat marks.

Vermeulen suggests that Oscar may have stepped on that panel when he was pulling Reeva out of the toilet room and moving through the bathroom.

Roux states that they tested the wood and there are fibers from Oscar’s sock embedded in that wood. There is also door varnish on the prosthesis. He believes this will prove that Oscar used his prosthetics to try to knock the door down (prior to the cricket bat) as he stated in his affidavit.

Vermeulen states again that it may be possible that there are traces of prosthetic on the door but he cannot prove when that would have happened in relation to all of the events.

Roux seems pretty ticked that the police did not investigate the possibility that the prosthetic caused this mark, but Vermeulen states that his responsibility was to investigate the cricket bat. He had not reviewed Oscar’s statement prior to any testing so he did not know that Oscar claimed to use his prosthetic leg to kick in the door.

I will say, just because the accused gives a statement, the police are not obligated to try to make his statement fit the crime scene. Their job is to investigate the crime scene to see what the evidence tells them. Not what the accused tells them. If the defense wants to introduce this theory, they need to do their own testing and bring it to trial, which they have done. I do get though why Roux is criticizing Vermeulen for this. It’s a good tactic for a jury trial. Jurors would likely think that is poor police work. But in this case, the Judge is deciding the verdict so I would think this particular argument is falling on deaf ears. She understands how investigators do their work.

Back to the handling of the door again. Roux is really hammering this home. There are pieces that are missing from it while it is here in court today that were not missing before.. Roux would like to know what happened to those pieces. Also, there are pretty distinct marks just to the left of the door handle that were not on there on March 8. Vermeulen is really stumbling here. He can’t answer these questions. On these points, he is making the police work very sloppy. It’s unfortunate because this door is such an important piece of the story.

He will be back on the stand tomorrow. NOTE: the ballistics evidence for the four bullet holes that are seen in the door has not been introduced at trial yet.

door 2

Below is a replica of the toilet room as seen in court

door 3

Oscar Trial – Day 7, March 11 – Med Examiner SAAYMAN, FRESCO

Dr. Saayman, the Medical Examiner, is back on the stand.

The Judge starts the day by announcing that live tweets are now allowed. They are still going to black out the video and audio testimony, but journalists inside the court can live tweet.

Roux is setting up a defense that Oscar shot Reeva in quick succession rendering her unable to scream out before the head shot left her incapacitated. This would explain why according to Oscar’s version of the story, Reeva never made any noise at all that night.

However Saayman does not think this is possible. The following are points from his testimony that have been compiled from various reporters in the courtroom:

In the immediate seconds after being shot, mental incapacitation would be minimal, that comes later. The shot to the brain however would cause immediate incapacitation.

Screaming is still possible even after cognitive dysfunction, it would be normal.
By cognitive dysfunction, I refer to higher mental capacity. Screaming is not higher mental capacity.

If someone knows their life is in danger, the stress response, or fight or flight, starts to kick in. In a scenario like this, before somebody is about to sustain a gunshot wound, adrenaline and other kinds of hormones would kick in.

Saayman: “I think it would be abnormal if one did not scream after sustaining an injury of this nature.”

Another item that was hotly discussed prior to trial is whether or not Reeva had urine in her bladder when examined. The defense theory is that if the bladder is empty, she was just using the bathroom to relieve herself that night.

There was a small amount of urine found in her bladder.
It was murky, which is a result of cells becoming loose from the bladder.

Even if Reeva had urinated an hour before her death, her bladder could still have been empty. Many factors contribute to this including how well hydrated the person was.

As for stomach contents, her last meal consisted of vegetables and a small amount of white substance that looked like cheese.

Most meals will be digested in four hours. (1-3 hours for small/average meal, 3-5 for medium meal, 5-8 for large meal, according to medical journals.)

Based on what was found in her stomach and quantity, doctor estimates that she ate approximately 2 hours prior to death. Her death was estimated around 3:15am-3:20am. Therefore, she would have likely eaten after midnight. Oscar claims in his statement that they went to sleep at 10pm.

The defense argument from Roux is that this is an imperfect science. There is no definitive way to say for sure. Dr. Saayman states that although he is not an expert in the digestion field, he has done 10-15,000 autopsies and has read numerous medical journals on this subject. Clearly he has the experience to accurately approximate these details.

The doctor’s testimony today appeared to be strong for the Prosecution. They were able to establish that screaming from Reeva was possible during the shots, Reeva may have urinated up to one hour before death (not immediately before death), and that she ate 2 hours before death (meaning she may not have gone to bed at 10pm as Oscar states).

Dr. Saayman is excused.

The next witness is Darren Fresco.
Darren is the friend who was with Oscar when his gun accidentally went off in Tashas Restaurant and when Oscar allegedly shot his gun out of the car sunroof.

The Judge addresses Darren and warns him that he only gets immunity if he does not lie to the court. Darren does not face any serious charges, just a charge of not reporting the incidents with the firearms. But if he honestly testifies today, he can avoid any trouble.

Darren and Oscar were friends and have known each other for seven years. He knows Samantha Taylor, Oscar’s ex-girlfriend, through Oscar.

Nel inquires about the incident that happened after the Vaal River trip when he, Oscar and Samantha were in the car together. Darren states he was pulled over for speeding by metro police. He was asked to step out of the vehicle. While Darren was talking to police, Oscar decides to exit the vehicle to inquire about what is taking so long. Samantha is in the back seat.

Meanwhile, another metro police officer drives up, looks into the car and picks up Oscar’s gun which was on the seat. Oscar then has a verbal altercation with the officer. Oscar tells the officer that you can’t touch another man’s gun. The original officer attempts to diffuse the situation.

The officer had cleared the chamber of the gun and the bullets fell out in to the car.

Oscar is still arguing with the officer and tells the officer that his fingerprints are now on the gun and he will be liable for whatever happens with it.

The officers ask for Oscar’s drivers license. Darrin goes around to the other side of the car, scratches around in the back seat, finds the bullet and gives it back to Oscar.
Darren assumes that Oscar puts the bullet back in the gun, although he does not see him do it.

More officers now arrive on the scene. They had been chasing Darren since the toll plaza. Darren is issued with a speeding ticket and they leave. I have to wonder, how did they not get in trouble, or even arrested, for their behavior? I somehow get the feeling that we are not hearing the entire story on this. It will be interesting to see if the officers who wrote the ticket will testify about the incident.

Darren states that Oscar was furious that the officer had touched his gun.

They proceed to a house per Oscar’s request so they can handle some matter with a firearm, something about paperwork or license. He’s not sure exactly what Oscar needed to do there nor did he know the people who owned the house. After they are done there, something happens on the next part of the drive.

Without warning, Oscar fires his gun thru the sunroof, just a whisker from Darren’s left ear. (Darren is driving, the steering wheel is on the right side of the car.) Instinctively he pulls his body to the right and ducks down. It happened very rapidly and without warning.

Darren apologizes in advance to the Judge for his language and states that he yelled at Oscar “are you fucking mad?”

Darren states it felt like his ear was bleeding. He had a constant ringing in his ear. Oscar just laughed about what had happened. Afterwards they just kept driving but they didn’t discuss it. This seems highly odd to me. How could they not discuss that?

Darren confirms the location that this happened on an aerial photo. And then on to the next gun incident.

Darren states that he, Oscar, Kevin Lerena and Martin Rooney all go out to lunch at Tashas Restaurant on a Friday afternoon in January 2013. He is shown a photo and establishes where everybody was seated at the table. Oscar and Martin are on one side of the booth and Kevin and Darren are on the other side. Oscar is sitting diagonal from Darren.

Oscar asks Darren to pass him his firearm. It is a Glock 27, 40 caliber. Darren doesn’t know why he asked to see it. Darren takes the gun out from its carrying position, leans forward to get closer to Oscar and then hands him the gun under the table. Knowing that Oscar was competent with guns, he simply says “it’s one up”, meaning that there is one bullet in the chamber.

Darren had been to the shooting range with Oscar and knew that he had a “deep love” for guns (quote from Darren). So he reiterates that he did not question his competency.

At that point, he saw a shoulder movement from Oscar that he thought was taking the bullet out of the chamber. He could not see what Oscar was doing under the table, but that’s what he assumed he was doing at the time.

Instantly, the gun goes off and the deepest silence ensues after this very loud sound. No one knew where the bullet went. They were all frightened out of their minds. They decide to just carry on like nothing has happened, hoping that people will think it’s something else like a gas explosion. My own interjection here, these guys sound like a bunch of totally immature and reckless idiots!

Oscar then passes the weapon back to Darren and instantly asks Darren to take the rap for it since he has too much media attention around him. Darren says he will, being a friend.

The owner’s wife storms up and asks what happened. Darren tells her he made a mistake and apologizes. Says his gun fell out of his shorts. He says the same thing to the male owner when he comes to the table.

The stories from Kevin Lerena and Darren largely match each other. They are inconsistent on who came over to the table first, the husband owner or the wife owner. Also, Darren never mentions anything about Oscar apologizing to all of the guys at the table, asking them if they were all ok. According to Darren, Oscar gives no explanation at all. Other than that, the majority of the story matches Kevin Lerena’s account.

Shrapnel hit Kevin Lerena either on the foot or the shin, he wasn’t sure exactly where, and there were a few drops of blood that he could see. Darren told him to keep his foot down and not draw attention to it.

Darren states that he is the one who offered to pay for the damage that was caused by the bullet (not Oscar).

Roux now cross-examines.

They discuss that Darrin had sought legal advice over this situation. Darren admits he did not want to get in trouble so he had a lawyer help him with his statement, knowing that it would be used against Oscar in his trial.

According to Darren, Oscar did say “I’m sorry” on the way out of the restaurant but didn’t say anything else to the owners.

Roux is making a big deal over who came to the table first, the husband or the wife, to show that Darren’s story is not accurate but it’s somewhat of an irrelevant point. Darren is sticking to his version.

Roux now wants Darren to consider that Oscar may not have heard Darren tell him it was one up. Darren doubts this. He acknowledges that it was a noisy restaurant but he also heard Oscar say “ok” in response. Interestingly enough, Kevin Lerena heard him say “one up”, so why wouldn’t Oscar hear him?

Back to the Vaal River trip. Darren explains that they were actually stopped on two occasions that day. The first time was for some time of number/tag violation after they left the river. He did get a ticket for this incident as well and the fine has been paid by the dealership.

Roux wants to know why the dealership is paying these fines for him and Darren can’t answer his question. Upon prompting, Darren states that Justin Devaris is the owner of the dealership. (Justin is one of Oscar and Darren’s buddies. And I too wonder why Darren would give him the tickets to pay?) Roux then insinuates that these fines actually have not been paid and the topic is dropped. It doesn’t really have much relevance but it does dig in to Darren’s credibility.

Roux asks Darren if he was doing 250kph that day? (which is roughly 150mph on an American speedometer.) Darren says he can’t remember. Roux then says, so you can’t deny it? And Darren says how can I deny it if I can’t remember? Then Roux counters back, surely you would remember if you were doing 150mph. Darren again says he can’t remember. It’s very obvious here (at least to me) that he’s not being truthful about that. Best way to get out of something in court is to just say you don’t remember.

At Roux’s request, Darren then clarifies that the sunroof gun shooting incident happened after the 2nd time that they were stopped, which was much later in their ride home, after they had stopped at that house to get Oscar’s gun papers.

They went to the Gourmet Garage for dinner afterwards. Oscar discussed golf with two elderly people in the restaurant. Then they left in the same car they arrived in. Darren doesn’t remember anything else after this. This is important to Roux because early the next day, Oscar was in Scotland playing golf. The fact that both Samantha Taylor and Darren can’t fully remember what happened later that night is raised as a red flag to this incident. Why can’t anybody remember what they did that night after dinner? It is an interesting point.

Roux points out the discrepancies between he and Samantha’s testimony: Samantha did not mention that they were stopped twice, she said Oscar was told to get out of the vehicle by the officers (not that he got out on his own), she claimed that Oscar said he was going to shoot a robot and both he and Darren laughed and that the shot happened shortly after they were stopped (not after they went to the house about the gun papers.) Darren doesn’t recall the incident this way.

Roux tells Darren that Oscar denies he fired a shot and Darren tells the Judge that is incorrect.

Overall, the Defense did well with this witness. Roux drew out a lot of inconsistencies and Darren came across pretty smug. It’s hard to tell if the inconsistencies are because he has a bone to pick with Oscar (whom he is no longer friends with), or if because Samantha is lying (she also has a bone to pick), or if he is trying to save his own backside from some of the stupid things that they have all done together. My take is that these gun incidents did probably happen but elements of them are either being embellished or suppressed because they all acted foolishly and don’t want to get in trouble or make themselves look bad.

This witness doesn’t have a direct effect on the premeditated murder charge, only the other gun related charges which he is accused of.

Court is adjourned for the day.