Ottawa Citizen

Police rushed to take photos of Pistorius after arrest

49 cellphones confiscate­d from officers; disciplina­ry action possible, minister says

- GERALD IMRAY

STELLENBOS­CH, South Africa Even police officers clamoured to get photos of Oscar Pistorius on their cellphones after the famed Olympic athlete was arrested for the shooting death of girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, South Africa’s minister of police said in a written response to a question in parliament.

The former lead police investigat­or in the case also told The Associated Press that he had fears that reporters were trying to buy pictures of key pieces of evidence from officers in the first few days after the shooting, including the toilet door through which Pistorius fired the shots that killed Steenkamp inside the athlete’s home in the pre-dawn hours of Valentine’s Day.

The door was then taken from inside the bathroom in Pistorius’ house and put in “a body bag” and moved to a senior policeman’s office, former detective Hilton Botha said.

Police minister Nathi Mthethwa said 49 cellphones were confiscate­d from officers at Boschkop police station in Pretoria after they were used to take photograph­s of Pistorius when he was being transferre­d between court and the station soon after his arrest. Mthethwa made the revelation in a reply to parliament Monday and it was seen by The Associated Press Tuesday.

The minister said four “official” cellphones and 45 private phones were taken from the officers on Feb. 20, six days after Pistorius’ arrest. They could be used as evidence in possible disciplina­ry proceeding­s against the police officers, Mthethwa said.

Pistorius was initially held at Boschkop, a station close to his home in suburban Pretoria, after being arrested on Feb. 14 following the killing of Steenkamp at his house. The Olympian was later moved to another police station for his bail hearing at Pretoria Magistrate’s Court.

South Africa’s ministry of police declined to give further details on the cellphone photos and any possible disciplina­ry action against police officers, but the sensationa­l Pistorius case has already cast doubts on the profession­alism of South Africa’s force.

The same former lead investigat­ing officer, Botha, gave shaky evidence in court during Pistorius’ bail hearing and it later emerged that Botha himself was facing seven charges of attempted murder. Botha was removed from the case and later resigned from the South African police.

Botha told the AP on Tuesday that when he was working the case, he had arranged for the toilet door to be taken from Pistorius’ house and moved to Boschkop station after another officer told him she had been offered money to provide photograph­s of it to the media. The officer named by Botha couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment.

Botha did not name the media company or say how much money was offered, but said he was told that the offer was from an internatio­nal media house and was “in dollars.” Botha said he had learned that South African reporters were also trying to buy photograph­s of evidence and the crime scene from police.

South Africa’s Star newspaper quoted Botha as saying there was an offer of $50,000 for a photograph of the toilet door.

Two days after the shooting, the door was “sealed in a body bag” and moved to the office at Boschkop police station, Botha told The AP. It was later taken to a police evidence centre by the investigat­ing officer who replaced Botha, the former detective said.

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