Pistorius cried and prayed for girlfriend to survive, court hears

Doctor describes how he tried to save shot model after she was hit by three rounds

One of the first people on the scene after Oscar Pistorius shot girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp told a court today he feared the South African Olympic and Paralympic star, who is on trial for murder, might kill himself with the same gun.

Testifying on the fourth day of Pistorius’ trial, neighbour Johan Stipp said he entered the athlete‘s home last year a few minutes after hearing screams and shots to find the distraught sprinter kneeling over the lifeless body of a woman.

“‘I shot her. I thought she was a burglar and I shot her,’” Stipp quoted the 27-year-old Pistorius as saying.

Mr Stipp, a doctor, went on to describe his futile attempts to revive Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model and law graduate who been dating Pistorius for a few months.

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She died after being hit by three rounds, including one to the head, out of four fired by Pistorius through the locked door of an upstairs toilet. He denies murder, arguing that it was a tragic mistake and that he mistook her for an intruder.

As Mr Stipp checked Steenkamp for signs of life, Mr Pistorius was begging him to save her life, Stipp told the court.

“Oscar was crying all the time. He prayed to God: ‘Please let her live, she must not die,‘“ he said.

At one point, when Mr Pistorius left Steenkamp, Mr Stipp and housing complex manager Johan Stander to go upstairs, Mr Stipp thought he might be about to kill himself.

“I noticed that Oscar was going upstairs and I asked Mr. Stander if he knew where the gun was because it was obvious that Oscar was emotionally very, very upset,“ he said.

“I didn‘t know the situation in the house so I thought maybe he was going to hurt himself.“

Pistorius had his lower legs amputated as baby but went on to achieve international fame as the “fastest man on no legs“, running on carbon-fibre prosthetic limbs.

Earlier Mr Pistorius’ lead defence lawyer questioned one of the athlete’s neighbours today over how many gunshots he thought he heard on the night of Ms Steenkamp’s death.

Lawyer Barry Roux said Charl Johnson's testimony and statements to police were manipulated to match those of his wife, who testified on the opening day, and were an attempt to "incriminate the accused".

“I can confidently say I heard gunshots,” Mr Johnson insisted on cross-examination by Mr Roux on the fourth day of Mr Pistorius’ murder trial. Later, Mr Johnson said: “I’m convinced that I heard a lady’s voice.”

Mr Roux argues that prosecution witnesses Mr Johnson and his wife are mistaken over what they heard on the night Mr Pistorius killed his girlfriend by firing four times through a toilet door.

Mr Roux says the banging sounds were actually Mr Pistorius hitting a toilet door with a bat and the screaming was the distressed athlete calling for help — and there were no sounds from Ms Steenkamp. Pistorius says he shot her by mistake.

Mr Johnson said he “disputed” some of what Mr Roux was saying and described in more detail what he heard that night. The Johnsons live 177 metres from the villa where Ms Steenkamp died.

“The fear ... in the lady person’s calls contrasted with a very monotone male voice,” Mr Johnson testified. “The man almost sounded embarrassed to be calling for help.”

Mr Roux did get Mr Johnson to concede right at the end of the court session that he never heard what he thought was the woman’s voice and the man’s voice at the same time. Mr Roux wants to show that it was the same person — Mr Pistorius — screaming.

The sequence of events soon after 3 am on the morning of February 14th last year is a critical aspect of the case. Prosecutors say there was a loud argument between Mr Pistorius and Ms Steenkamp before the shooting. Mr Pistorius says there was no argument and he killed the 29-year-old model, by accident thinking she was an intruder in his home.

Mr Roux, who was at times interrupted by the judge to clarify some of his questions, also attempted to throw doubt on the validity of Mr Johnson’s testimony and that of his wife Ms Burger. Mr Roux said their versions were vague and different in statements to police and in notes they made in the weeks after the killing. Then, the couple’s stories and recollection of the events of that night became suspiciously similar later, Mr Roux said.

“Your intention is a design to sideline and incriminate the accused,” Mr Roux said to Mr Johnson. “It’s a design on your side to incriminate, and it’s unfortunate.”

Mr Johnson, who appeared stronger and surer today than he was Wednesday, replied: “I have no reason to design an incriminating statement.”

Pistorius, a double-amputee runner who competed at the 2012 Olympics, is charged with murder with premeditation after shooting Ms Steenkamp. Dressed in a dark suit, Mr Pistorius arrived earlier than usual for proceedings and sat alone and staring ahead before the judge arrived.

PA/Reuters