a
psychologist called by his lawyers testified Monday.
Dr. Lore Hartzenberg gave the
testimony ahead of the runner's sentencing for culpable homicide, and it
was almost immediately characterized by the chief prosecutor as
unbalanced.
Hartzenberg said
the double-amputee runner had sometimes cried, retched, perspired and
paced up and down during meetings in which she tried to assist him.
"Some of the sessions were just him weeping and crying and me holding him," Hartzenberg said.
The
testimony was part of an effort by the runner's legal team to persuade
Judge Thokozile Masipa that Pistorius has suffered emotionally and
materially for what he said was an accident and that he is remorseful.
The team hopes the judge will be lenient when she sentences Pistorius
after what is expected to be about a week of legal argument and
testimony.
Pistorius, once a celebrated
athlete who ran in the 2012 Olympics, was charged with premeditated
murder but Masipa instead found him guilty last month of the lesser
charge of culpable homicide. Sentences for that conviction can range
from a suspended sentence and a fine to as many as 15 years in prison.
"We are left with a broken man who has lost everything," Hartzenberg said during her testimony.
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel criticized her findings, saying Pistorius would likely have the chance to rebuild his life.
Several
police officers stood guard on the dais where the judge sat amid
concerns about her security. Masipa drew criticism from some South
Africans who thought Pistorius could at least have been convicted of a
lesser murder charge on the grounds that he knew a person could die when
he fired four bullets through a toilet door in his home early on
Valentine's Day last year.
Steenkamp,
a 29-year-old model, died in the hail of bullets, and prosecutors said
Pistorius had opened fire in anger after the couple argued. The runner
testified that he mistook Steenkamp for an intruder who was about to
come out of the toilet and attack him.
Hartzenberg, who described
herself as an expert in trauma counseling, said she first met with
Pistorius on Feb. 25 last year, 11 days after the shooting death of
Steenkamp, and had been counselling him since then.
She
said the shooting and Pistorius' lengthy and high-profile murder trial
meant the athlete had also suffered severe loss. He had lost Steenkamp,
his "moral and professional reputation," many of his friends, his career
and his financial independence, she said.
"I can confirm his remorse and pain to be geunine," she said.
Responding to Hartzenberg's description of a broken man, prosecutor Nel asked the psychologist about Steenkamp's family.
"Would
you not expect a broken family?" Nel asked, saying Steenkamp's father
Barry had suffered a stroke as a result of the killing of his daughter.
"We are now dealing with a broken man, but he is still alive," the prosecutor said.
Hartzenberg
was the first witness called by Pistorius' defense lawyers to argue in
mitigation of sentencing. Defense lawyer Barry Roux said he would likely
call four witnesses during the sentencing hearing. Prosecutor Nel said
the state would call at least two, with the hearing expected to last a
week.
There is no minimum
sentence in South Africa for culpable homicide or negligent killing,
although some experts say a five-year jail sentence is a guideline when a
firearm is used.
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