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Pistorius defence to resume attack on key state witness

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Lawyers for Paralympian Oscar Pistorius will on Tuesday resume a searing cross-examination of a key witness at his murder trial who claims to have heard screams, then shots, as his girlfriend was killed.

The second day of Pistorius's trial for the Valentine's Day killing of Reeva Steenkamp will begin with lawyer Barry Roux redoubling efforts to pick apart the prosecution's premier witness.

Neighbour Michelle Burger testified Monday that she heard "bloodcurdling" screams at the home less than 200 metres (yards) away from her own, before shots rang out in the early hours of February 14, 2013.

The sequence of events, if accurate, would undermine the Paralympic gold medallist's claim that he shot Steenkamp after mistaking her for an intruder.

Carl Pistorius (R) embraces his brother Oscar at the end of the first day of the trial on March 3  2...
Carl Pistorius (R) embraces his brother Oscar at the end of the first day of the trial on March 3, 2014, in Pretoria of South African Paralympian star Oscar Pistorius, accused of murdering his girlfriend
Themba Hadebe, Pool/AFP

Pistorius, 27, a double amputee known as the "Blade Runner" for his carbon-fibre running blades, pleaded not guilty to murder and three unrelated gun charges on the opening day of the trial.

In a statement read out by his lawyer Kenny Oldwage, the sprinter described Steenkamp's death as a "tragic accident".

While admitting killing the 29-year-old model and law graduate, he denied murderous intent. "This allegation is denied in the strongest terms," he said. "We were in a loving relationship."

If found guilty of premeditated murder, Pistorius faces 25 years in South Africa's notoriously brutal jails and an abrupt end to his glittering sporting career.

- 'Bang... bang, bang, bang' -

Monday's proceedings were dominated by the duel between Roux and Burger -- who is a construction economics lecturer at the University of Pretoria.

June Steenkamp (left)  mother of Reeva Steenkamp  sits inside the High Court in Pretoria for the ope...
June Steenkamp (left), mother of Reeva Steenkamp, sits inside the High Court in Pretoria for the opening day of South African amputee Olympian sprinter Oscar Pistorius' murder trial on March 3, 2014
Themba Hadebe, Pool/AFP

Burger, the first prosecution witness, said she and her husband were awoken at around 3:00 am by "bloodcurdling screams" coming from the Pistorius home in an upmarket gated community of Pretoria.

"She screamed terribly and she yelled for help," Burger recalled. "It was something you can't explain to someone else, how anxious those screams were."

"Just after her screams, I heard shots, four shots," she said, describing one clear shot then three clustered together.

"Bang... bang, bang, bang."

"I heard petrified screaming before the gunshots, and just after the gunshots," she said when pressed by Pistorius's lawyer.

Roux grilled her over the number of shots she heard -- and whether they were gunshots at all -- suggesting that Burger's account contradicted that of her husband, who has yet to testify.

(From left) Carl Pistorius  Aimee Pistorius and Lois Pistorius sit at the High Court in Pretoria on ...
(From left) Carl Pistorius, Aimee Pistorius and Lois Pistorius sit at the High Court in Pretoria on March 3, 2014
Herman Verwey, Pool/AFP

Roux also suggested she may have mistaken for shots the sound of Pistorius breaking the toilet door with a cricket bat after realising that Steenkamp was inside.

And he questioned Burger's claim that she heard the shouts of both a man and a woman.

"You know... if Mr Pistorius is very anxious, if he screams it sounds like a woman's voice," Roux said.

As well as Burger's account, the prosecution is expected to call a witness who will allege that Pistorius told security guards at his luxury estate that everything was fine when they phoned after hearing gunshots.

The state has compiled an exhaustive list of 107 witnesses who include the defendant's former girlfriends, though it is unlikely everyone will be called to testify.

- Botched evidence -

The defence is likely to relentlessly pick holes in the testimony of state witnesses while also calling into question the reliability of the prosecution's forensics.

The state has already admitted that ballistic tests suggest Pistorius might not have been wearing his prostheses when he fired the shots that killed Steenkamp, which removes a key argument for premeditation.

Pistorius walked free on bail a year ago as the chief detective on the case and the prosecution's star witness Hilton Botha was sacked amid a scandal over botched handling of evidence.

A single judge, Thokozile Masipa -- aided by two assistants -- will rule in the case, which has already been likened to the murder trial of American footballer OJ Simpson over the killing of his ex-wife and a friend in 1995.

Lawyers for Paralympian Oscar Pistorius will on Tuesday resume a searing cross-examination of a key witness at his murder trial who claims to have heard screams, then shots, as his girlfriend was killed.

The second day of Pistorius’s trial for the Valentine’s Day killing of Reeva Steenkamp will begin with lawyer Barry Roux redoubling efforts to pick apart the prosecution’s premier witness.

Neighbour Michelle Burger testified Monday that she heard “bloodcurdling” screams at the home less than 200 metres (yards) away from her own, before shots rang out in the early hours of February 14, 2013.

The sequence of events, if accurate, would undermine the Paralympic gold medallist’s claim that he shot Steenkamp after mistaking her for an intruder.

Carl Pistorius (R) embraces his brother Oscar at the end of the first day of the trial on March 3  2...

Carl Pistorius (R) embraces his brother Oscar at the end of the first day of the trial on March 3, 2014, in Pretoria of South African Paralympian star Oscar Pistorius, accused of murdering his girlfriend
Themba Hadebe, Pool/AFP

Pistorius, 27, a double amputee known as the “Blade Runner” for his carbon-fibre running blades, pleaded not guilty to murder and three unrelated gun charges on the opening day of the trial.

In a statement read out by his lawyer Kenny Oldwage, the sprinter described Steenkamp’s death as a “tragic accident”.

While admitting killing the 29-year-old model and law graduate, he denied murderous intent. “This allegation is denied in the strongest terms,” he said. “We were in a loving relationship.”

If found guilty of premeditated murder, Pistorius faces 25 years in South Africa’s notoriously brutal jails and an abrupt end to his glittering sporting career.

– ‘Bang… bang, bang, bang’ –

Monday’s proceedings were dominated by the duel between Roux and Burger — who is a construction economics lecturer at the University of Pretoria.

June Steenkamp (left)  mother of Reeva Steenkamp  sits inside the High Court in Pretoria for the ope...

June Steenkamp (left), mother of Reeva Steenkamp, sits inside the High Court in Pretoria for the opening day of South African amputee Olympian sprinter Oscar Pistorius' murder trial on March 3, 2014
Themba Hadebe, Pool/AFP

Burger, the first prosecution witness, said she and her husband were awoken at around 3:00 am by “bloodcurdling screams” coming from the Pistorius home in an upmarket gated community of Pretoria.

“She screamed terribly and she yelled for help,” Burger recalled. “It was something you can’t explain to someone else, how anxious those screams were.”

“Just after her screams, I heard shots, four shots,” she said, describing one clear shot then three clustered together.

“Bang… bang, bang, bang.”

“I heard petrified screaming before the gunshots, and just after the gunshots,” she said when pressed by Pistorius’s lawyer.

Roux grilled her over the number of shots she heard — and whether they were gunshots at all — suggesting that Burger’s account contradicted that of her husband, who has yet to testify.

(From left) Carl Pistorius  Aimee Pistorius and Lois Pistorius sit at the High Court in Pretoria on ...

(From left) Carl Pistorius, Aimee Pistorius and Lois Pistorius sit at the High Court in Pretoria on March 3, 2014
Herman Verwey, Pool/AFP

Roux also suggested she may have mistaken for shots the sound of Pistorius breaking the toilet door with a cricket bat after realising that Steenkamp was inside.

And he questioned Burger’s claim that she heard the shouts of both a man and a woman.

“You know… if Mr Pistorius is very anxious, if he screams it sounds like a woman’s voice,” Roux said.

As well as Burger’s account, the prosecution is expected to call a witness who will allege that Pistorius told security guards at his luxury estate that everything was fine when they phoned after hearing gunshots.

The state has compiled an exhaustive list of 107 witnesses who include the defendant’s former girlfriends, though it is unlikely everyone will be called to testify.

– Botched evidence –

The defence is likely to relentlessly pick holes in the testimony of state witnesses while also calling into question the reliability of the prosecution’s forensics.

The state has already admitted that ballistic tests suggest Pistorius might not have been wearing his prostheses when he fired the shots that killed Steenkamp, which removes a key argument for premeditation.

Pistorius walked free on bail a year ago as the chief detective on the case and the prosecution’s star witness Hilton Botha was sacked amid a scandal over botched handling of evidence.

A single judge, Thokozile Masipa — aided by two assistants — will rule in the case, which has already been likened to the murder trial of American footballer OJ Simpson over the killing of his ex-wife and a friend in 1995.

AFP
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