PRETORIA, South Africa - A judge 
cleared Oscar Pistorius of murder on Thursday, but said there was "no 
doubt" the double-amputee acted unlawfully when he shot and killed his 
girlfriend.
        
After ruling out that 
Pistorius' actions were premeditated, Judge Thokozile Masipa also said 
the athlete could not be found guilty of the lesser charge of murder.
        
"Clearly he did not 
subjectively foresee this as a possibility that he would kill the person
 behind the door, let alone the deceased as he thought she was in the 
bedroom,'' Masipa told the court as Pistorius sobbed and shook in the 
dock.
        
"That, however, is not 
the end of the matter," Masipa said, pausing for lunch before returning 
briefly to begin considering the notion of "culpable homicide" - similar
 to a manslaughter charge in the U.S.
        
She told the court that 
there was "no reason nor explanation" why Pistorius didn't call for help
 if he suspected an intruder and why he instead picked up a loaded gun.
        
Masipa said she was "not
 convinced that a reasonable person" with the same disability as the 
double amputee would have fired four shots into the bathroom without 
realizing that the person inside could be killed.
        
"In the circumstances, 
it is clear that his conduct was negligent," she said, then abruptly 
adjourned court for the day. The verdict will continue on Friday.
        
Pistorius - often called
 the "Blade Runner" because of his blade-shaped prosthetic limbs - shot 
dead his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp while she was in the bathroom of his
 luxury Pretoria home on Valentine's Day last year. The prosecution 
accused him of killing Steenkamp intentionally after a fight, while 
Pistorius' defense team argued that he fired his weapon at the bathroom 
door believing she was an intruder.
        
Although Judge Masipa 
said there were "not enough facts" to prove premeditated murder, she 
heavily criticized Pistorius as a "very poor witness" who was evasive in
 his testimony during the trial.
        
The athlete "failed to 
listen carefully to questions put to him, giving the impression that he 
was more worried about the impact his answers might cause," the judge 
told the court. When contradictions were pointed out to him "he often 
blamed his legal team," she added.
        
Masipa also dismissed 
the defense's claims that the athlete suffered temporary "insanity" and 
did not know the difference between right and wrong the night he shot 
Steenkamp. Pistorius had been referred during the trial for psychiatric 
assessment to see if his mental state meant he lacked the criminal 
capacity for murder.
        
Earlier in the day's 
session, the judge cast doubt on "most" of the trial's witnesses, saying
 they "got their facts wrong" and suggesting that media coverage of the 
case might have tainted their memories. The court was "fortunate" it 
could rely on technological evidence, such as phone calls and messages, 
she said.Source
 
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