Pistorius: ‘The moment when everything changed'

Athlete removes prosthetic legs in court and stands by toilet door through which he shot

Oscar Pistorius attends his trial at the high court in Pretoria. Photograph: Themba Hadebe/Pool/Reuters
Oscar Pistorius attends his trial at the high court in Pretoria. Photograph: Themba Hadebe/Pool/Reuters

Oscar Pistorius has described what he said were the moments before he shot dead Reeva Steenkamp and even removed his prosthetic legs in court and stood by the toilet door which he had fired into last year.

Mr Pistorius told the court in Pretoria that he heard a window open in his bathroom in the early hours of February 14th, 2013, causing him to believe intruders had entered his house. He said “that’s the moment when everything changed”.

The double-amputee was asked by defence lawyer Barry Roux to stand by the toilet door through which he shot.

In a dramatic moment, he took off his prosthetics and approached the door in court.

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Mr Pistorius has told his murder trial he and girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp sometimes had troubles in their relationship but that they sorted them out, were in love and were planning a life together.

Mr Pistorius said he was “besotted” with the 29-year-old model when they started dating and “if anything, I was maybe more into her than she was at times with me”.

Mr Pistorius’s defence presented an extensive list of intimate mobile phone messages between the couple, some sent in the days before Mr Pistorius fatally shot Ms Steenkamp, to try to show that they were loving and tender with each other.

Prosecutors say Mr Pistorius was often jealous and overbearing in his relationship with Ms Steenkamp and killed her intentionally after a loud argument in the pre-dawn hours of Valentine’s Day last year.

Mr Pistorius claims he shot the 29-year-old model by mistake through a toilet door at his house, thinking she was a dangerous intruder.

Mr Pistorius referred to a phone message Ms Steenkamp sent him in late January 2013 when she said she was sometimes “scared” of the double-amputee Olympic athlete, who “picked” on her. The prosecution presented the message earlier in the trial as an indicator of Mr Pistorius’s threatening behaviour.

Mr Pistorius (27) said that the couple had a disagreement at a social function that day and he was “maybe just being sensitive, insecure or jealous”. Mr Pistorius said he apologised to Ms Steenkamp and sent her a message saying: “I want to talk to you. I want to sort this out. ... I’m sorry for the things that I say without thinking.”

“My lady, I think it was a bad day in our relationship,” Mr Pistorius said, addressing the judge who will ultimately deliver a verdict in the Pretoria trial that began last month.

Defence lawyer Barry Roux asked Mr Pistorius if the unhappiness in their relationship had passed and Mr Pistorius replied yes.

Mr Pistorius was being led through questions by Mr Roux, with the defence attempting to counter accusations that the runner was a reckless hothead with an obsessive love of firearms and prone to outbursts of anger.

Speaking softly, Mr Pistorius mostly kept his composure, with his voice occasionally quivering with emotion when he spoke about the woman he killed by shooting her three times, in the head, arm and hip.

He also spoke of the first time he met Ms Steenkamp, in November 2012, and his decision to ask her to join him at a sports awards event that evening on the spur of the moment. He denied he had cheated on a former girlfriend when he met Ms Steenkamp, saying the previous relationship had ended.

Mr Pistorius first gave evidence on Monday, making a tearful apology to Ms Steenkamp’s family for killing her as Ms Steenkamp’s mother, June, sat in the courtroom, staring at him without expression.

Mr Pistorius faces 25 years to life in prison if convicted on the murder charge.