mewmewmew13 said:gheezus Oscar…
and he is still free to run around
iejeecee said:I doubt he will walk away from this.
Briant_Gumble said:So he's getting charged with premeditated murder and reckless use of a firearm? I know nothing about the legal system, he sounds like the second charge is something they will sentence him with if his lawyers convince the jury of the intruder story, like a fallback option.
Also will any knew evidence be presented at this indictment?
maxmartin said:Not sure in South Africa, but in US, premeditated murder is the highest degree murder aka first degree in most states, but prosecutor always charge the highest degree crime first, the final verdict by the jury might be much less than original charged.
MarkvW said:Hard to believe he'll be tried with murder along with an unrelated reckless firearm charge. You'd have to worry about unfair prejudice from the reckless firearm charge tainting the murder charge (because there's nothing reckless about what Mr. Pistorious allegedly did to Ms. Steenkamp).
Looks to me like the police were really, really, investigating Mr. Pistorious' background prior to the trial. If Mr. Pistorious tries to claim that he's a sweet national hero in his murder trial, the State may be able to introduce evidence of his crazy gun behavior to rebut that claim.
maxmartin said:again I don't know how legal system works in SA, but here it is common practice, the prosecutor will try to charge every possible charge he can think of from the highest to lowest crime through the evidence at this earlier stage, like unlawful possession of firearm. Later in the trial, if the prosecutor cannot prove beyond reasonable doubt that the defendant commit the murder, then prosecutor at least can try to prove these lower crime charge if possible.
MarkvW said:Where I'm from (USA), unrelated charges almost always cannot be joined into one case. That rule is intended to prevent the finder of fact to be swayed by bad evidence against the defendant that doesn't relate to the other charge.
But that rule exists to protect juries. In SA, Pistorious doesn't get a jury trial, so whether the two unrelated cases get tried together might be a discretion call that the judges make.
Too bad we don't have any SA lawyers here!
maxmartin said:I don't know how you define unrelated charges, as long as the these charges rise under a single continuous event, prosecutor will always bring them together. Otherwise, it will be bared by "Double jeopardy."So for a criminal case, the prosecutor will try to charge as many as possible, basically prosecutor only has one shot.
maxmartin said:I don't know how you define unrelated charges, as long as the these charges rise under a single continuous event, prosecutor will always bring them together. Otherwise, it will be bared by "Double jeopardy."So for a criminal case, the prosecutor will try to charge as many as possible, basically prosecutor only has one shot.
Mortimer said:I am not a lawyer, least of all one in SA or USA, but I believe the reckless discharge events happened months before the death of Ms. Steenkamp (sp.?). So, the events are unrelated, and I would not expect the charges to be brought together. However, as mentioned above, this evidence could be used as character references in the murder trial?
Is this about right?
Cheers,
Mort
Mortimer said:ok, thanks, Mark. so in that case, it would be introduced under cross-examination of a defence witness? If the defence attempted to portray OP as someone who had no interest in/was scared of guns, the fact he kept one under his bed, along with the twitter evidence of his shooting range activities, would put that away without the shooting from a vehicle stuff. Seems the defence would be better off not going down that road at all....
Cheers,
Mort
Mortimer said:I am not a lawyer, least of all one in SA or USA, but I believe the reckless discharge events happened months before the death of Ms. Steenkamp (sp.?). So, the events are unrelated, and I would not expect the charges to be brought together. However, as mentioned above, this evidence could be used as character references in the murder trial?
Is this about right?
Cheers,
Mort