The verdict comes a day after Judge Thokozile Masipa cleared Pistorius of murder in the killing of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp -- but he could still end up behind bars.
The maximum prison sentence for culpable homicide is 15 years.
Sentencing could be weeks away and will come after more legal argument.
The verdict also dealt with three other charges, all weapons-related.
He was found not guilty
of two -- a car sunroof shooting incident and illegal possession of
ammunition found at his house after the killing.
The judge found Pistorius guilty of the third: a charge involving a shooting at a restaurant.
Weapons charges
In a shooting from a car's sunroof, Masipa
said the state failed to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. She
said she didn't find the state's witnesses persuasive, saying the pair's
version of events differed too much.
In another shooting at a
restaurant, she said the state had proven its case. Pistorius, she
said, was trained in the use of guns and should not have asked for the
gun at the restaurant, let alone handle it.
In the third, Pistorius
was found not guilty of an ammunition charge. Masipa said the state
failed to introduce evidence that proved he intended to possess the
ammunition
Letting the world know
Masipa,
who has presided impassively for months over the high-profile trial,
finally let the world know what she has been thinking on the first day
of reading her verdict Thursday.
Pistorius did not intend
to kill his girlfriend, Masipa said, accepting his defense that he
thought someone had broken into his house and that he believed he was
defending himself.
Pistorius,
27, has always admitted firing the bullets that killed his girlfriend
Steenkamp, then a 29-year-old cover model about to turn reality TV star.
He pleaded not guilty to murdering her in his home on Valentine's Day
last year, claiming that the killing was a tragic mistake.
But in grabbing his gun
and heading toward the supposed threat, Pistorius "acted too hastily and
used excessive force," Masipa ruled Thursday.
"His conduct was
negligent," and not what a reasonable man would do in the circumstances
-- not even a disabled one, she said before adjourning for the day.
From 'blade runner' to murder suspect
Defense arguments that
his upbringing "in a crime-riddled environment and in a home where the
mother was paranoid and always carried a firearm" might explain his
conduct that night, but "it does not excuse the conduct," Masipa said.
Before and after the killing: the Pistorius I knew
"The accused had
reasonable time to reflect, to think and to conduct himself reasonably,"
she said. "I am not persuaded that a reasonable person with the
accused's disabilities in the same circumstances would have fired four
shots into that small toilet cubicle."
There is no minimum
sentence for culpable homicide in South African law, so it will be up to
the judge to decide. Sentencing takes place in a separate phase of the
trial that can come weeks after the verdict.
Not guilty of murder
Masipa found Pistorius not guilty Thursday of murder, premeditated or otherwise.
She said the prosecution had failed to prove its case that Pistorius and Steenkamp argued on the night of the killing, and that the Olympic track star then shot her in a rage.
Masipa was not persuaded by the testimony of neighbors who said they heard shouting, screaming and shots.
The neighbors' stories
do not match the timings on phone records the night of the killing, she
concluded, saying: "Technology is more reliable than human perception
and human memory."
She also said she
believes media coverage contaminated testimonies, and that state
witnesses were in and out of sleep the night of the killing.
She knocked down other
key aspects of the state's case: the fact that Steenkamp took her phone
and locked herself in the bathroom allegedly out of fear for her safety,
phone messages between the couple that showed some rocky patches, and
stomach contents that might suggest the victim ate later than Pistorius
said.
Pistorius could be seen
crying at times during the reading of the lengthy verdict. The
Olympian's trial started six months ago, transfixing the world with
graphic details of how he fatally shot Steenkamp.
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