Reeva and Oscar in happier times |
My secong blog on this is here.
Trial by TV
The initial coverage of the Oscar Pistorius trial has left
me rather frustrated. The BBC promised to show live coverage and I assumed this
would be available on the Red Button whenever the trial was in progress. As it
is, they covered a bit of day one then did a few brief reports before
abandoning it altogether in the second week.
Sky News has shown a little more willing and at least supplies
a summary programme each day and a catch-up at weekends. Now that Pistorius is
on the stand, we’re getting full live coverage at last. However, there’s
nothing like objective reporting and this is nothing like objective reporting.
In my opinion, it’s been biased in favour of Pistorius, in particular the
commentary and conclusions of Alex Crawford, the Special Correspondent.
Crawford admits that the Pistorius family has been very
friendly to the press, offering them water and so forth and she happily relates
statistics told her by Pistorius’s uncle. This doesn’t bode well for honest or
impartial observation. She talks about the ‘terrible tragedy’ that has kept
these two families (the Pistoriuses and the Steenkamps) apart as if it were an
act of God, a tsunami, not an action by a member of one of the families. We can
draw the conclusion that Reeva’s mother, June, has not been as chatty to the
press but has instead remained detached and dignified. For this show of
strength, she’s been described in the media as ‘unmoved’ – I’ve seen her cry
but she’s bowed her head and tried to hide it. Even when Crawford calls her
‘stoic’, it’s in a tone of slight disapproval. She seems to expect Mrs Steenkamp to feel pity for Oscar.
Why would a mother waste tears on the person who she believes killed her
daughter in cold blood?
Alex Crawford, Sky News |
Crawford is very anxious about how much more Oscar can take,
and obviously feels a lot of sympathy for him, constantly stressing how
traumatic hearing the details of what he’s done is, how he’s ‘very pale, very
white, ashen’ and how it must be terrible for his family to see him so upset.
How does she think Reeva Steenkamp’s family feels? They’re only ever mentioned
as an afterthought, if at all. At no point does she consider that Oscar’s tears
and the retching might be put on or that if real they might be as much for
himself as they are for Reeva. This can't be countenanced.
Instead Crawford inserts facts learnt from the family into
the news feed, such as, the uncle’s opinion that Pistorius will never get over
this. Neither will Reeva. She says, of Oscar, ‘he and his sister have been
reading books … they’ve been very religious books’, that they’ve been having
‘Bible readings at their house’. This is all designed to sway the viewer into
thinking that the family is a religious one (not relevant to the case), along
with the aforementioned statistic, delivered to her by Uncle Arnold, that the
prosecution has only used 0.7% of the text messages to build its case. I’m not
saying that this is untrue. I’m sure it probably is but shouldn’t a journalist
consider the reliability of the source? I wish that she would spend just 0.7% of the time she spends angsting over Oscar's suffering, reflecting on Reeva's.
Not content with seeing things only from the defence point
of view, Crawford also brings to the fore opinions she’s had Tweeted to her
about prosecution witnesses – someone Tweeted her to say they thought the state’s
ballistics expert was arrogant. First of all, we don't know who this person was
and theirs is just a random opinion so why should it be presented on air as an
addendum to the expert panel section? Then, if you saw this witness, he was
clear, sure and articulate, and at no time appeared arrogant. He didn’t break
down under cross – is that arrogance?
After all, one fact is not in dispute. Oscar Pistorius shot
and killed Reeva Steenkamp. The only things at issue are whether it was
deliberate or not, whether he knew it was her he was shooting at. Even if he
really believed that a dangerous intruder would break in and lock himself in
the toilet, is he within his rights to shoot and kill said intruder?
Barry Roux |
The Defence – Barry Roux
Much is made of Barry Roux’s ‘grandstanding’ (Sky’s term not
mine) as if it were effective; of him ‘practising his art’. Alex Crawford relays to viewers that he’s ‘shredded the
prosecution’s case’ when all he’s done all day is split hairs and introduce red
herrings, raise points that are immaterial to the matter at hand. But no one
ever questions relevance or redirects. His objective seems to be to confuse the
issue, cast doubt over minor details when it really doesn’t matter whether
Pistorius’s ex-girlfriend thought he took his phone to bed with him often or
every night. And Sky seems to be complicit in this, Alex Crawford often
refusing to recognise the crucial evidence of the day and cutting off the
‘experts’ when they start to make a good point.
Roux badgers witnesses (which I’m sure wouldn't be allowed in an English court) and the press seem to then think that he’s broken them
down when time after time, their testimony has proved consistent under
cross-examination. If they’ve faltered, it’s only out of frustration and
boredom as they have to repeat what they’ve said yet again because it still doesn’t
match Oscar’s version.
It’s Roux’s cross that has proven inconsistent, for
instance, when he purports that a neighbour would not have been able to hear
shots from Pistorius’s house and then suggests to the woman’s husband that some
of the sounds he heard were Pistorius trying to break the toilet door down with
a cricket bat. I’m sorry – if he contends that she couldn’t hear
gunfire, how does he think that her husband could have heard a cricket bat
hitting a door? The reporters still insist that he’s destroyed the
prosecution’s case.
Often, Roux has called upon opinions from witnesses, along
the lines of ‘what did they think Pistorius was feeling’, etc.? In a British
court, I’d like to think these would be rejected as conjecture, that the state
would raise an objection but this never happens. He even asks the same
ex-girlfriend to tell him which side of the bed Oscar would have been on when
he was with Reeva. How would she know? She can only speculate.
Gerrie Nel |
The Prosecution – Gerrie Nel
As far as I can tell, the prosecutor, Gerrie Nel, hasn’t prepared a
proper case, constructed a narrative of events or even a proper opening
statement. Instead, his witnesses and questions have hopped back and forth
between the different charges. I'm not sure why he's even added these - they show Pistorius's propensity for recklessness but here they simply divert attention from the killing of Reeva. At no point has he put the case as he sees it.
Now it’s moved to the defence and the cross-examination of
Oscar Pistorius, it seems that the prosecutor is simply raising minor
discrepancies rather than making a point, and badgering the witness, just like Roux before him. The real
questions are not being asked by either attorney and the question I want to ask
is why.
e.g. Why is Nel concentrating on whether Pistorius went onto
the balcony or not when he has said he spoke to Reeva before he moved the fan?
If he talked to her at this stage, why didn’t he address her when, in the next
instant, he claims he heard a noise? Why didn’t he say ‘Did you hear that?’ In
fact, a day or so later, he does finally ask this question although by then the
impetus and import are lost.
Nel keeps saying that Oscar is ‘tailoring’ his evidence. What he means is that he’s embellishing it (furnishing extra details) as the case progresses. On the bail application, he heard a noise from the bathroom, by the time of the plea statement this has become the sound of a window closing and by the time he gives evidence it’s a window sliding and hitting the frame.
This seems to be a mere muddying of the waters but while he’s doing this, the case is merely treading water and not going anywhere. If we assume that he is going to come to a point somewhere down the line, the problem might be that the judge will have completely forgotten it all by then as she already seems to have trouble keeping track of who they’re talking about.
Nel keeps saying that Oscar is ‘tailoring’ his evidence. What he means is that he’s embellishing it (furnishing extra details) as the case progresses. On the bail application, he heard a noise from the bathroom, by the time of the plea statement this has become the sound of a window closing and by the time he gives evidence it’s a window sliding and hitting the frame.
This seems to be a mere muddying of the waters but while he’s doing this, the case is merely treading water and not going anywhere. If we assume that he is going to come to a point somewhere down the line, the problem might be that the judge will have completely forgotten it all by then as she already seems to have trouble keeping track of who they’re talking about.
Oscar Pistorius |
The Accused – Oscar Pistorius
Pistorius continually refers to ‘the accident’ that
‘happened’, or calls the killing of Reeva a ‘mistake’. A ‘mistake’ would be
putting too much salt on his food; killing someone is more than a mistake. Talk
about a gift for understatement. Gerrie Nel at least is rightly calling him on
this, asking whether the gun went off accidentally. There’s another incident later when Oscar is asked which
Valentine’s Day Reeva’s card was for and he says ‘the day when the accident
happened’. He could at least acknowledge that he killed her.
But Nel hasn’t pulled him up on these two contradictory statements:1 ‘I had many thoughts’ and 2 ‘I didn’t have time to think’.
Which is it? Or these two: 1 ‘She wasn’t breathing’ as he
found Reeva in the toilet and 2 ‘She was struggling to breathe’. So this means
she was still alive so why didn’t he try to get help at this point? Did he wait for her to die?
Oscar has also said ‘I kneeled down’ when he was shooting.
Is this a good idea when he’s on his stumps? Can he balance? I think Nel should
have followed this up.
Oscar says things like ‘That’s where the firearm was
pointed’ as if he had no agency in this, as if it did this by itself. Or ‘I was
responsible for the firearm when the round went off’ but claims that although
no one else touched it, he didn’t pull the trigger. He continually distances
himself from his own actions.
What is being painted, in a pointillist style, bit by bit, piecemeal, is a portrait of a man who likes to control things, who does not relinquish control easily but still refuses to take responsibility for his actions. He won't avoid a confrontation, is not the sort to go ‘cowering and running away’. It seems impossible that he really wants to somehow come out of this a hero. However, Nel’s constant darting about between dates and incidents is as confusing for the viewer (and maybe the judge) as it is for Oscar. One minute, we’re talking about the alarm system in the house, the next about an incident in which Pistorius claims he was shot at while he was driving. I don't think this approach is helpful to anyone and may even elicit more sympathy for the accused.
The Texts
What the texts tend to illustrate is that Reeva was often
unhappy with their relationship, that she might raise this but was usually
conciliatory, constantly reassuring Oscar, expressing her love for him,
apologising to him, defending herself, sometimes pre-emptively. His responses (he didn’t always respond) might offer
an apology but inevitably follow this with an explanation that blamed her for
his action in some way. It’s a type of semi-abusive behaviour that I’ve
observed in my own family. Oscar has said Reeva was a strong person who would
stick up for herself but his actions (criticising her in public) and the texts
that resulted were a means of subtly undermining her confidence, of making her
feel that she was in the wrong. I don't think that Oscar is even aware that he does this. And the sad thing is that I believe he really loved her and that’s
partly why he’s emotional now. He’s crying because he feels guilty.
Thokozile Masipa |
The Judge – Thokozile Masipa
The judge is pretty laidback, usually only
rousing herself to check what the time is before an adjournment. You’d think
they could put a clock in the courtroom. She’s been a little more proactive of
late, telling someone off for not turning off their phone – cue some silly
sniggering from people who should know better. But recently, she’s reprimanded
Nel for calling Oscar a liar although his whole case is predicated on that
fact. Unfortunately, Nel has yet to make his case, which we presume involves
the couple arguing, Oscar losing his rag and eventually gunning his girlfriend
down. In English courts, the attorney can and often does say ‘I put it to you
that you’re lying’, etc. But what worried me is that the judge might believe
that no one lies on the witness stand. If so, we’re in trouble.
The Victim – Reeva Steenkamp
It seems that no one is speaking for Reeva. It’s impossible
to imagine how terrified she must have been, how much she suffered, how she was
gunned down and how savage and brutal her death was. Whenever I even try to
contemplate it, I start to cry. When I hear Oscar say he was not the type to
cower or run away, he knows that this is what he made her do. She was trusting,
straightforward and good-natured and she tried to find the good in him. She had
so much to live for. Rest in Peace, Reeva.
Reeva Steenkamp, RIP |
I have no choice but to agree with on all points. And as a South African I shiver. Let's just hope that by some miracle this cold-blooded murderer gets what he deserves so that justice is done to Reeva. Thank you for an excellently insightful article. Antoinette Keyser, South Africa.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Antoinette. I'm worried that the judge is going to let him off. I'd feel better if I thought Nel had made the case properly instead of darting about so much and if I'd thought the judge was really listening. When she's spoken up, it's usually to crticise Nel or back up Pistorius. I feel so sorry for Reeva and her family.
DeleteWell that's nice and cozy: I see you've found him guilty even before you've heard all the evidence. In fact it is most unlikely that anyone will hear all the evidence because, as mentioned in the blog, it has not all been transmitted. So what makes any of you think you can make any kind of judgement other than a completely arbitrary one based on your own prejudices.
ReplyDeleteBut seriously: why on earth does anybody care? Why is any trial on television at all? I'd like to see less of this kind of abuse of television. What is the point of relaying the proceedings to the general public? They can't affect the outcome of the trial. On average it usually costs about £2000 a minute to produce a tv programme. So someone is making one shed-load of money out of this, as there are hardly any overheads. It's not even a good tv programme. It's boring, and I am getting sick of hearing that bloke whining and snivelling. It's cheap telly. We should demand better and turn pointless programmes like this off.
Thanks for reading. I see we disagree. I made a judgement based on what I've heard so far. Nel has called Oscar's story implausible. I would go further and say it's pretty incredible. Having said that, I still think he'll get off. Neither lawyer has made a solid case. I've found it fascinating though.
ReplyDeleteWell said,not only Alex is biased in her reporting. Karen maughan is also biased.I am beginning to think they are the publicist s hired by Oscar to help make his case look plausible.I Even if he walks free he will meet with karma on his way,he will pay for what he did I will bet on it.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I know what you mean. I haven't seen Karen Maughan. I understand that people don't want him to be guilty but the reporting should at least be balanced. It's as if they have tons of sympathy for Oscar and none at all for Reeva and her family.
ReplyDeleteEvery evening after the day's proceedings "Carte Blanche", the producers of the programme us South Africans watch, hosts a discussion panel, "The Legal Round Table". The panel comprises various guests which include defence attorneys, a retired High Court Judge and others experts. Many aspects of the case are discussed. The issue of Gerrie Nel darting around was discussed and explained as a cross-examination technique to prevent a witness from merely reciting a memorised, sequenced concocted version of events. Apparently when questioned about events out of sequence of the rehearsed explanation the human brain cannot respond quickly enough if lies are being told. One defence attorney mentioned that a further application of this technique is to ask the witness to repeat the explanation in reverse order i.e not from beginning to end but from end to beginning. I googled "cross-examination techniques" and was fascinated by all the articles. For me, the most ridiculous comment made by Oscar was when he was sworn in to tell the truth, the whole truth etc. he said "I will try not to lie!" With regard to the journalists interpretations, I think that they are pandering to readers need for a sensationalist sob story. An interesting aspect of South African law is that a "motive" does not have to be furnished for the crime! One would think that establishing the motive for the crime would be critical in proving your case.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this. Very interesting. I’m glad that it’s a deliberate tactic although I thought Nel also used it on the state witnesses. Maybe I’m wrong about that. I’m glad that the judge can't be influenced by the reporting and the general misrepresentation I’ve seen, where Oscar’s tears are emphasised along with what a good neighbour he is. What amazes me is that Nel doesn’t object more on relevance grounds when we’re hearing about Oscar’s distress afterwards and witnesses’ interpretations of his behaviour or how friendly he was to newcomers on the estate. It calls for speculation and ok goes to state of mind after the crime but not before. And just because he was nice to his neighbours doesn’t mean he couldn’t have killed his girlfriend deliberately. Wish we had more coverage here in the UK. I don’t have a smart phone so can't access all the apps.
ReplyDelete