The stunning development was
revealed as Judge Thokozile Masipa read her summation of the evidence
Thursday in front of a packed courthouse in Pretoria, South Africa, and a
worldwide television audience.
Masipa has yet to hand down her
final decision, which is expected later today. Pistorious could still be
found guilty of culpable homicide, a conviction that comes with no
mandatory jail time.
But a murder charge is out, for
the time being. The prosecution can appeal the decision and, if they do,
Pistorius could still be convicted of murder, according to legal
experts contacted by Yahoo Sports.
The prosecution, Masipa said, "failed to show requisite intention to kill the deceased, let alone premeditation."
All along, the prosecution
pressed for a conviction for cold-blooded murder. But the Blade Runner
has always maintained it was a tragic accident, that he shot his
girlfriend in the pre-dawn hours of Valentine's morning last year in a
moment of terror, believing that he was protecting them both from an
intruder locked behind a bathroom door.
Masipa called Pistorius a "very
poor witness," saying he was "evasive" in the face of prosecution
questioning. Still, in her opinion that did not warrant a guilty verdict
on the charge of premeditated murder, or even dolus eventualis – the grey area between premeditated murder and culpable homicide.
Under dolus eventualis, if
Pistorius should have foreseen that his actions could result in death,
yet recklessly proceeded anyway, it still would have been considered
murder in South African law. That would have come with a minimum
sentence of 15 years.
• Witness testimony that
Pistorius and Steenkamp were heard arguing prior to the shooting was not
supported by the established timeline.
• Pistorius relayed his version
of events – that he thought an intruder had entered his home – minutes
after the shooting took place, and that his version did not waiver later
in questioning. Masipa agreed with the defense that it would be "highly
improbable" for Pistorius to have made up this story so quickly, and
that his version would have remained unwaivered throughout questioning
even without access to his original statement and evidence from the
scene.
Masipa determined that Pistorius
did not subjectively foresee killing whoever was behind the locked
bathroom door, and that it is clear to her that he genuinely believed
Steenkamp to be in bed, not in the toilet.
"To
find otherwise would be tantamount to saying that the accused's
reaction after he realized that he shot the deceased was fake, that he
was play acting merely to delude the onlookers at the time," Masipa
said.
Pistorius could still be convicted of murder if the prosecution chooses to appeal. credit- yahoo news
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