Oscar Pistorius trial Day 4: Blade Runner covers his ears as chilling details emerge in girlfriend's final minutes
Oscar Pistorius trial Day 4:
PRETORIA, South Africa – It is the date inscribed on his bicep in black ink: March 6.
Twelve years ago, Oscar Pistorius
lost his mother. Today, he covered his ears in the dock, trying to
block out the words of the man who tried to save his girlfriend's life,
as he described her injuries in court.
"I tried to assist, to look for
signs of life," radiologist Johan Stipp recounted, describing what
happened after arriving at Pistorius' door in the pre-dawn hours of
Valentine's Day last year where he saw Reeva Steenkamp laying on the
floor. "There was no pulse in the neck, no peripheral pulse, no
breathing movements. … She was clenching down on Oscar's fingers as he
tried to open her airway."
Assessing her wounds – in her right thigh, her right upper arm and a terrible head injury – Stipp says he realized she was "mortally wounded" and that he could do nothing to help her. It was a matter-of-fact, but graphic description, and it reduced the Blade Runner to tears.
"He [Oscar] was crying all the
time, praying for her to live," Stipp told the court. "He said he would
dedicate his life and her life to God, if only she would live and not
die that night."
Stipp says Pistorius stayed by his model girlfriend's side, except
when he briefly left to go up stairs, a moment when Stipp said he was
concerned that the distraught Paralympian might try to hurt himself with
the gun that had not yet been recovered."I shot her. I thought she was a burglar and I shot her," Stipp recalled Pistorius saying as he tried to attend to Steenkamp, lying on her back at the bottom of the stairs.
"He definitely wanted her to live," Stipp said, when questioned by defense attorney Barry Roux in cross-examination.
Pistorius remained bowed in the dock, even when a member of his defense team reached over and touched his head to reassure him.
After four days of testimony, a
central question has emerged: What was heard when, a distinction that
could ultimately decide the Blade Runner's fate.
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel has begun laying out the State's case, which
paints a picture of a man who shot his girlfriend, despite her screams.[Pistorius Trial: Witness timeline could cast doubt over prosecution's case]
In his testimony, prosecution witness Stipp, who lives in the same luxury estate subdivision as Pistorius, says he was awakened by three loud bangs in rapid succession, and when he ran onto the balcony, which has direct line of sight to Pistorius' bathroom window, he heard the screams of what sounded like a woman "scared out of her mind."
Stipp also said he noticed the bathroom light was on, a distinction that contradicts Pistorius' account.
While he was attempting to contact the estate's security (which did not answer his calls) and then South Africa's national emergency hotline (which appeared to be out of order), he heard another three loud bangs, at 3:17 a.m., according to his phone log.
Stipp, who has received weapons training with a 9mm pistol in the army, says he believes both sets of noises to have been gunshots, and so he consulted with security before approaching the house to see if he could offer medical assistance.
During the subsequent arguments in court, with Nel and Roux seemingly unable to agree on the number of shots, the exchange between the two attorneys became increasingly exasperated.
Pistorius looked confused, furrowing his brow.
It has forced both sides to lay out their cases.
Roux, in his cross-examinations of witnesses so far, has suggested
that the first set of "bangs" – the ones that woke Stipp – are the
gunshots that struck Reeva Steenkamp, causing such extensive brain
damage that she would have subsequently been unable to scream. He says
it therefore follows that the later screams, which witnesses thought to
be female, must have been a distressed Pistorius after he realized his
mistake.
The defense insists that the
second set of "bangs" – which several neighbors heard at 3:17 a.m. – was
the noise of the cricket bat Pistorius used to break down the locked
toilet door.
However, the prosecution insists the "bangs" at 3:17 a.m. are the
shots that struck Steenkamp. "She was alive and screaming [before]," Nel
contends, and only then did Pistorius open fire, fully aware Steenkamp
was behind the locked door, not an intruder.
Gerrie Nel looks on during the fourth day of the trial of track star Oscar Pistorius. (REUTERS)
It is on these points that defense attorney Roux is trying to gain ground.
Pressing Stipp in
cross-examination, he suggested that the male and female voices the
radiologist heard could have both been Pistorius. But Stipp insists the
voices were intermingled and had two distinct tones.
In his morning interrogation of
Charl Johnson, another neighbor, Roux tried to get him to admit the
same. But maintaining his composure, Johnson also insisted he could
clearly distinguish two voices – a male and a female – because they
shouted for help in quick succession.
"I have difficulty accepting Mr
Roux's version," Johnson said, also refusing to admit that the "bangs"
he heard could have been a cricket bat against a door, noting that they
happened in such rapid succession the person wielding the bat would not
have time to swing between hits.
Roux questioned Johnson's
credibility, the independence of his police statement and the accuracy
of his notes, accusing him of having made up his mind about Pistorius'
guilt.
"Your interpretation is a
designed one, to sideline and incriminate the accused," Roux told
Johnson on the stand. "There's a design on your side to incriminate, and
that's unfortunate."
Johnson remained adamant he is only relating what he heard.
"We didn't want to choose sides,"
he said, adding that he and his wife Michelle Burger had felt a moral
obligation to come forward, despite being very private people.
Stipp will return to the witness box on Friday.
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