Police: No inconsistencies in Pistorius account
PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) -- A police
detective, testifying at Oscar Pistorius' bail hearing Wednesday, said
that police have not found anything inconsistent with how the star
athlete described his shooting of his girlfriend - a killing that
Pistorius says was accidental but which prosecutors call murder.
The second day of the
bail hearing in a case that has riveted South Africa and much of the
world appeared at fir
st to go against the double amputee, with prosecutor Gerrie Nel saying a witness can testify to hearing "non-stop talking, like shouting" between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. before the predawn shooting on Valentine's Day.
st to go against the double amputee, with prosecutor Gerrie Nel saying a witness can testify to hearing "non-stop talking, like shouting" between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. before the predawn shooting on Valentine's Day.
Pistorius said in
an affidavit read in court Tuesday that he and girlfriend Reeva
Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model and budding reality TV star, had gone to
bed and that when he awoke during the night he detected what he thought
was an intruder in the bathroom. He testified that he grabbed his 9 mm
pistol and fired into the bathroom door, only to discover later to his
horror that Steenkamp was there, mortally wounded.
Under
cross-examination, police Detective Warrant Officer Hilton Botha
acknowledged that the witness who allegedly overheard argument was 600
meters (yards) from Pistorius' house, where the shooting occurred.
Pistorius, the first Paralympian runner to compete at the Olympic Games, is charged with premeditated murder in the case.
The
prosecution attempted to cement its argument that the couple had a
shouting match, that Steenkamp fled and locked herself into the toilet
and that Pistorius fired four shots through the door, hitting her with
three bullets.
Botha added: "I believe that he knew that Reeva was in the bathroom and he shot four shots through the door."
But
asked if the police found anything inconsistent with the version of
events presented by Pistorius, Botha responded that they had not.
Botha,
a 16-year police veteran, said the trajectory of the bullets showed the
gun was fired pointed down and from a height. Pistorius' statement
Tuesday said that he was on his stumps and feeling vulnerable when he
opened fired. Prosecutor Gerrie Nel has said the killing was
premeditated because Pistorius took time to put on his prosthetic legs
before the shooting.
Nel projected a plan of
the bedroom and bathroom for the courtroom and argued Pistorius had to
walk past his bed to get to the bathroom and could not have done so
without realizing the Steenkamp was not in the bed.
"There's no other way of getting there," Nel said.
Hilton
said the holster for the 9 mm pistol was found under the side of the
bed on which Steenkamp slept - also implying it would have been
impossible for Pistorius to get the gun without realizing that Steenkamp
was not in the bed and could have been the person in the bathroom.
Pistorius testified Tuesday that the bedroom was pitch dark.
Hilton
said Steenkamp was shot in the head over her right ear and in her right
elbow and hip, with both joints broken by the impacts.
Defense
attorney Barry Roux asked Botha if Steenkamp's body showed "any pattern
of defensive wounds," and the detective said it did not.
Hilton
said the shots were fired from 1.5 meters (five feet), and that police
found three spent cartridges in the bathroom and one in the hallway
connecting the bathroom to the bedroom.
Police
also found two iPhones in the bathroom and two BlackBerrys in the
bedroom, Hilton said, adding that none had been used to phone for help.
Pistorius had said that he called the manager of his guarded and gated
housing complex and a private paramedic service.
Roux
said Pistorius did make calls, including to the guards of the housing
estate. In one case, he said, a guard could hear Pistorius crying. "Was
it part of his premeditated plan, not to switch off the phone and cry?"
Roux asked sarcastically.
Botha said Pistorius
did not have a license for a .38-caliber weapon and consequently his
possession of ammunition for such a weapon was illegal.
The detective said that all Pistorius would say after the shooting was "he thought it was a burglar."
In an additional revelation Wednesday, police said they found two boxes of testosterone and needles in the Pistorius' bedroom.
But Roux said the substance was a "herbal remedy," and not a steroid or a banned substance.
----
Imray reported from Johannesburg, from which Associated Press writer Michelle Faul contributed to this report.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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