Oscar Pistorius trial set to begin today
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A TV channel dedicated to the murder trial of Oscar Pistorius has gone on air in South Africa just over 12 hours before the double-amputee Olympian is expected in court.
The 24-hour channel, called The Oscar Pistorius Trial – A Carte Blanche channel is on South Africa’s most popular cable TV network and intends to show live video from the court from Monday.
The cable company is one of the three broadcasters which asked a judge to allow live coverage of the trial and has installed three remote-controlled cameras in the courtroom in Pretoria.
The channel was up and running on Sunday night and hosted by a well-known South African presenter. It dedicated some its early programming to the life of Reeva Steenkamp, the woman Pistorius shot dead at his home.
Fallen South African athletic star Pistorius will rely on a hand-picked team of forensic experts when he mounts his defence against murder charges.
“We are going to see a clash of experts in this case. It is going to be an issue of how the forensics plays out,” according to David Klatzow, a South African forensic scientist not linked to the case.
Pistorius, the 27-year-old Paralympian and Olympian dubbed the “Blade Runner” for his prosthetic legs, is on trial for the premeditated murder of his model girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, whom he shot dead on Valentine’s Day 2013.
He is expected to argue he shot his 29-year-old lover through a locked toilet door at his home believing she was an intruder.
The prosecution will use forensics to show that, far from being scared, Pistorius fired at Steenkamp from a close distance, repeatedly and with premeditation.
“The precise positions at which the shots were fired; the grouping of the shots; the number of shots that were fired,” are among the key points to be raked over by experts according to Klatzow.
“Ballistic evidence is going to show that Oscar was very close to the door and that is going to be a difficult thing, I think, for him to explain away.”
“It doesn’t make sense to approach the danger more closely,” said Klatzow.
“His next problem is he fired so many shots,” he added. “He will have difficulty justifying the reasonableness of firing four shots.”
To address those problems, Pistorius will call on at least four forensic scientists, ranging in expertise from guns to blood splatter, to testify in his defence.
The all South African forensic team includes forensic geologist Roger Dixon, private forensic pathologist Reggie Perumal, and gun experts Thomas Wolmarans and Jannie van der Westhuizen.
Team Pistorius is unusual for its size and depth in South Africa, a country with a 25 per cent unemployment rate where the average annual income is around $US9,500 ($A10,626.99).
“It’s a question of resources,” said Stephen Tuson, criminal law adjunct professor at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.
“Many trials are run with the barest minimum of forensic evidence, a post-mortem report by the pathologist and maybe a few photographs.”
All the experts, except Perumal, are based in Pretoria, where Pistorius has lived with his uncle, businessman Arnold Pistorius, in preparation of the trial.
It makes sense that Pistorius hired people from his own country, said Michael Baden, a forensic expert speaking from New York.
“In my experience, the local experts are given more credibility by judges… than someone who could be called a carpet bagger or hired gun,” said Baden, author of “Dead Reckoning: The New Science of Catching Killers.”