Oscar Pistorius is a volunteer caretaker at NG Kerk Waterkloof
Forensic expert Wollie Wolmarans gives evidence at the murder trial of paralympic star Oscar Pistorius at the high court in Pretoria on Friday, 9 May 2014. Picture: Herman Verwey/Media24/Pool
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel continued his cross-examination of the defence witness and asked him about wooden splinters on Pistorius’s toilet.
Nel displayed a photo of the toilet on screens around the court and asked for it to be zoomed in to show the splinters.
“There is at least one splinter,” Wolmarans said.
“It fell there [after the gunshots]… or it could’ve been of the blow of the cricket bat. My opinion is that it was rather from a shot that was fired.”
The paralympic athlete is charged with murdering his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp. He shot her dead through the locked door of his toilet in his Pretoria home on February 14 last year. Pistorius has denied guilt, saying he thought she was an intruder about to open the door and attack him. The State contends he shot her during an argument.
On Monday, Nel questioned Wolmarans on tests he carried out. He told the court he had to conduct an experiment with the firearm twice because he could not fire rapidly.
“The first firearm that I used was not friendly with that type of ammunition,” he explained.
“I was not able to fire rapidly.”
Questioned by Nel on Friday, Wolmarans highlighted differences between his conclusions and the State’s.
Pistorius is also charged with three contraventions of the Firearms Control Act — one of illegal possession of ammunition and two of discharging a firearm in public.
He has denied guilt on these charges as well.
– Sapa
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