The reason relies that on the asseveration that indicates that the perpetrator’s intention to kill must relate to the person killed, does not mean that a perpetrator must know or appreciate the identity of the victim. So when the trial court decided that Pistorius was guilty for a culpable homicide because he thought that Reeva was on his bed and not on the bathroom, do not relieved the accused of dolus eventualis, because It does not matter who is behind the door, what really matters is the fact of killing someone, as in the case of the ‘dolus indeterminatus’ that refers to an indeterminate person and is not a form of intention apart of dolus eventualis.
Consequently, the second question was answered dismissing the Gauteng Division by saying that the court incorrectly conceived and applied the legal principals pertaining to circumstantial evidence because the court do not take into account the evidence of Cpt. Mangena, a police forensic expert, which proved that there was nowhere for the deceased to hide and that the accused must have foreseen the potentially fatal consequences of his actions, this was a crucial evidence that was not