Prosecutor Gerrie Nel said he had
no further questions after presenting the prosecution's case that
Pistorius is lying in his account of mistakenly shooting Reeva Steenkamp
through a toilet cubicle door. Nel said the double-amputee runner
killed her intentionally after a late night fight.
In
the adjournment after his cross-examination, Pistorius rubbed his eyes
and briefly sank his head into the shoulder of a man sitting with his
family. He took a tissue from his sister Aimee, who squeezed his arm
reassuringly. Shortly afterward, he listened attentively as Barry Roux,
his chief lawyer, spoke to him in a low voice.
Throughout
the grueling questioning, Nel accused Pistorius of "tailoring" evidence
and "concocting" a story that he shot out of fear of an intruder in the
toilet cubicle in his bathroom in the pre-dawn hours of Feb. 14, 2013.
"Unfortunately I have to put it to you that it's getting more and more improbable," Nel said of the story to Pistorius.
Nel
asserted that the couple fought during the night and Steenkamp wanted
to leave, then fled to the bathroom screaming before Pistorius shot her
through the door with his 9 mm pistol. Pistorius said he never heard
Steenkamp scream, or say anything in the minutes before he shot her.
The prosecutor even charged
that Pistorius fired the four shots from about three meters (yards)
away from Steenkamp as he was talking and arguing with Steenkamp, and
changed his aim with later shots to ensure that he hit her as she fell
back. Nel's unrelenting questioning and accusations provoked many
denials by Pistorius and caused the athlete to break down in sobs on
numerous occasions.
Pistorius
says that he thought Steenkamp was an intruder about to come out of the
toilet to attack him. He faces 25 years to life in prison if convicted
of premeditated murder.
Over
the past week, Pistorius came under intense pressure from Nel who
accused the world-famous disabled runner of lying in the witness box.
Pistorius has struggled at times to explain alleged inconsistencies
during his testimony.
Nel
closed his cross-examination by inviting Pistorius to take the blame for
shooting Steenkamp, but he steered away from a direct response, saying
only that he opened fire because he believed his life was under threat.
That remark drew barbed follow-up questions from the prosecutor.
"We
should blame somebody ... Should we blame Reeva?" asked Nel, who has
harshly criticized Pistorius as someone who is unwilling to take
responsibility.
"No, my lady," Pistorius replied, addressing the judge in line with court custom.
"She never told you she was going to the toilet," Nel said. Then he asked: "Should we blame the government?"When Pistorius responded with another reference to a perceived attacker in his toilet, Nel asked: "Who should we blame for the Black Talon rounds that ripped through her body?"
He
abandoned his line of questioning soon after the judge questioned
whether he was asking the same thing in a different way. Nel summed up
by saying Pistorius intentionally killed Steenkamp.
Pistorius
remained in the witness box while Roux asked him a series of follow-up
questions after the recess, with his lawyer attempting to reinforce the
account of a mistaken killing. Roux asked Pistorius to describe his
thoughts and emotions in the seconds before he shot at the door.
"I
was terrified. I feared for my life. I was just scared," Pistorius
said. "I was thinking about what could happen to me, to Reeva. I was
just extremely fearful."
During
cross-examination, Pistorius gave a sometimes muddled account of the
shooting, saying he feared for his life but also didn't intentionally
shoot at anyone. He also told Roux he didn't consciously pull the
trigger on his gun and said it happened "before I could think."
Following Pistorius' testimony, the defense called Roger Dixon, a forensic expert and former policeman.
Dixon
said he conducted light tests in Pistorius' bedroom on a "moonless
night" — as he said the night of the shooting was — and they showed it
was almost completely dark in the bedroom. Dixon also went back to the
house on Monday, he testified, and tested for light again with
Pistorius' music system and one of its small blue lights on, which
Pistorius testified was the case on the night of the shooting.
"With
your back to the light I couldn't see into the darker areas of the
room," Dixon said, apparently supporting Pistorius' testimony that he
could not see Steenkamp leave the bed to go to the bathroom, and so
didn't know it was her in the toilet cubicle.
The
defense also played recordings in court from noise tests they conducted
at a shooting range on a replica door being hit with a bat and being
shot at. The sounds were similar. Pistorius' team was attempting to
reinforce its argument that neighbors who say Steenkamp screamed before
the gunshots confused the gunshots with the sounds of Pistorius hitting
the door with a cricket bat, and were actually hearing Pistorius scream
as he tried to break the door down to help Steenkamp.
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