Sunday, October 23, 2016

Crimes of the South African Police Service

Why have the South African Police Service Informed  the Public as “who is to blame”?
Ha Ha Ha!

Nkandla files laptop stolen under 
suspicious circumstances

Durban – The office of the man representing the 12 Nkandla “scapegoats” has been burgled – on the eve of the civil servants’ potentially explosive hearings.
Having somehow got past guards and into an 11th floor Durban union office, they stole the personal laptop of Claude Naicker, KwaZulu-Natal manager of the Public Servants Association (PSA), while ignoring DVD players, other valuables and all other offices.
Elevator cameras were “not working” on Friday night, when building security believe the break-in happened.
Misconduct charges
Naicker’s team is representing 12 public works officials who on Tuesday will be formally charged with misconduct and tens of millions in irregular expenditure on the upgrade to President Jacob Zuma’s home. He said two more officials on Monday requested representation in the disciplinary hearings, bringing the total to 12.
Naicker revealed his labour relations officer Roshan Lil-Ruthan would request postponements in all 12 cases on Tuesday, “so we can receive and read the evidence brought by the employer”.
A report by the Special Investigating Unit (SUI) fingers the officials for breaching procurement procedures, but admits none of the employees benefitted financially for their alleged misconduct.
While former public works directors-general are also facing charges, no politician has yet been charged or disciplined in the R246m overspending scandal.
Nkandla files
On Monday, the PSA held a meeting to discuss what Nkandla materials were on the laptop and whether it could have been targeted by unknown parties concerned about the employees’ testimony.
One assistant told Naicker: “They must have been after your Nkandla files.”
The Witness understands some stokvel money may also have been taken.
However, Naicker said he was more sceptical, saying he considered an Nkandla-related motive for the crime a “remote possibility – maybe a five percent chance”.
“But you never know. If that’s what it was about, that would be chilling,” he said.
He said: “The first thing my staff said to me was: ‘How much Nkandla material was on there?’ It was strange they only went to my office and only took my laptop and did not take the DVD player there or some liquor that was there from a previous party.
“Also, they went to a great deal of trouble to get in – we have a pretty immovable padlock; they had to go through a small glass pane. The reason I don’t think it was connected is that there have been other break-ins in recently”.
Security concerns
He said some of the public servants represented by the PSA have expressed concerns about their personal security during the multi-week disciplinary process.
Naicker’s team interviewed the 12 public works employees last week, but said their interviews had not been downloaded to his laptop.
Among them is project manager Jean Rindel – facing eight charges of misconduct. Like his colleagues, Rindel has denied all charges.
While Lil-Ruthan has called his clients “scapegoats”, Naicker said: “I’m hesitant to use words like scapegoat or fall-guy – it may be an unfortunate case of a department wanting to be seen to be fully investigating a very public problem. But these charges are unfair – and they are already having a negative impact on these members and their families. The signs of stress and anguish are clearly visible; there is real concern about loss of jobs for people who have served the department diligently for decades in some cases.”
He said the laptop had held “valuable information”, but that much of it was “personal”.
News24 / The Witness




Crimes of the South African Police Service

Cop’s drunk driving case postponed

February 2 2015 at 09:19pm
By SAPA

INDEPENDENT MEDIA
Mpumalanga police commissioner Lt-Gen Mark Magadlela issued a statement to "put the record straight" on a story about a confrontation between himself and a reportedly errant fellow policeman. FILE PHOTO: SAM CLARK

Port Elizabeth - The case of a 45-year-old warrant officer who allegedly caused an accident while under the influence of alcohol was postponed in the Port Elizabeth Magistrate's Court, The Hawks said on Monday.
Brigadier Hangwani Mulaudzi said the case was postponed until July 13 as the court waited for the blood results of Warrant Officer George Lantu to be released.
The officer was on duty at the time of the accident and using a state vehicle.
He was arrested on Friday after he tried to flee the scene.
“(He) was restrained by traffic officials until his arrest by police,” Mulaudzi said.
Sapa






Crimes of the South African Police Service

Hawks arrest Stanger policeman for double murder
The murder of two policemen on Saturday is believed to have been an inside job.
February 4, 2014

In an ugly twist to the already tragic circumstances, a KwaDukuza policeman was arrested yesterday for allegedly arranging the ambush that saw two officers murdered outside Stanger early on Saturday morning.
A 53-year-old lieutenant colonel was cuffed by the Hawks yesterday afternoon, just two days after the murders of Stanger policemen Const Xulu and Const Mthethwa.
Read more……….









Crimes of the South African Police Service

W Cape police officers arrested for drug, fraud related activities
Saturday 17 September 2016 21:17

SABC

The arrested officers are aged between 34 and 50. (SABC)

Three police officers have been arrested in the Western Cape for their alleged involvement in criminal activities. The officers, aged between 34 and 50, were arrested for dealing in drugs, possession of drugs, possession of stolen property and fraud.

Police spokesperson, Frederick van Wyk, says one of the men has appeared in court and his case has been remanded for further investigation.

Van Wyk says the other two are still due to appear in court.

“A second police officer was arrested at his home in Strand on charges of corruption, dealing with drugs and possession of drugs. He was stationed at Strand. The third police member was arrested yesterday (Friday) afternoon at his workplace at Macassar. The 50 year-old member and the second suspect will appear in the Somerset West Magistrate's Court on September 19 on the said charges. More arrests of police members are imminent.”




Crimes of the South African Police Service

Cape Town probe nets two more police officers
Thursday 22 September 2016 12:12

Ondela Bacela

Two police sergeants, stationed at the Strand Police Station near Cape Town, have been arrested on corruption charges.

The arrests form part of an ongoing probe into a spate of business robberies and hijackings.

The officers, aged 37 and 39, were arrested in Strand and Gordon's Bay and a firearm and bullet proof platings were seized.

Police spokesperson Andre Traut says the arrests follow that of three other policemen and two alleged drug dealers last week.

He says the two suspects will appear in court on Friday.


Crimes of the South African police Service

Race a factor in white cop's wrongful arrest: court

Agency staff | 08 December, 2015 10:14

Race at the centre of the wrongful arrest and assault of a white South African Police Service captain. 


File photo
Image by: Reuben Goldberg

A high court judge has found that race was at the centre of the wrongful arrest and assault of a white South African Police Service captain by a black Pietermaritzburg crime prevention unit.

On Monday, Judge Peter Olsen ordered the Minister of Police to pay damages. The amount is yet to be decided.

"The plaintiff is a white male... the third defendant is a black Zulu. As will be seen, race unfortunately features in this case," said the judge.

Crime Intelligence unit Captain Paul Andrew Williams was arrested by the Pietermaritzburg unit in September 2011. He was arrested on charges of drunken driving and crimen injuria.
The judge said that although subjected to an alcohol test at a hospital, no evidence of drunkenness was put before the court and Williams was not charged.

‘Move the bloody car’
Williams told the court that he was arrested while driving home. The street was blocked and he could not drive around police vehicles.

Policemen were standing around and Williams asked them to move a kombi, but they ignored him.
Then reacting automatically, he shouted out: "Move the bloody car!"

His car door was flung open, he was hauled out while another man in the passenger seat shovelled him out.

Williams was wearing a T-shirt, shorts and flip flops.

He was grabbed around the neck.

'I don't care who you are'
During the fracas he shouted that he was a policeman from crime intelligence but someone shouted: "I don't care who you are."

With hands cuffed behind his back he was hustled to the van.

He was told to get into the back of the bakkie, but it was too high to step up.  He felt a hard shove in his back which flung him into the van.  His head struck something, and lying face down as the van was driven off.

All he could say was that it felt like a long time. It must have been because he was only extracted from the van about a quarter to midnight at a hospital.

After the medical examination, his hands were again cuffed behind his back and he was again thrust into the back of the van. On the way to a police station, the van was driven fast and then slow and fast over humps and rough stretches.

He suffered excruciating pain and when his body was being thrown about he would land firmly on his handcuffed hands.

At the police station he was placed in a holding cell. He managed to contact a colleague and he was released at about 04:00.

Williams did not wash or change until he was examined by a doctor who recorded multiple abrasions and bruises, and circumferential abrasions on his wrists.

Three policemen testified for the defence but Olsen said it was difficult to avoid the conclusion that they were rehearsed. Williams, a captain for 15 years gave clear, lucid evidence.

Olsen said that the evidence led during the trial reflected poorly on the South African Police Service.
Source: News24







Crimes of the South African Police Service

Dockets in the loo no cause for stink
Stacked in boxes are hundreds of documents, some the resident believed to be criminal investigation dockets

Bathroom humour - a resident submitted this photograph of boxes of documents in an accessible bathroom on the

Empangeni SAPS premises
A CONCERNED resident contacted the Zululand Observer this week after visiting the ladies toilet at the Empangeni SAPS station.
Stacked in boxes there are hundreds of documents, some the resident believed to be criminal investigation dockets.
Cellphone photographs of the documents led the ZO to investigate further.
‘These documents are administrative documents, and certainly not active dockets,’ said SAPS spokesperson Captain Mbongeni Mdlalose.
‘The bathroom in question is also a staff only bathroom that is kept locked in the afternoons.’
Capt Mdlalose then took the ZO on a tour of the secure store rooms where the dockets are kept.
‘As you can see we keep these dockets very securely where no member of the public has access to them.’
Owing to a current standing order, the SAPS are not allowed to discard any dockets, even those for petty crimes.
‘Usually we would destroy petty crime dockets after about three years, now we have to keep everything.’
In an older storeroom, dockets from as far back as 1996 are kept as per regulations for more serious crimes.
The hundreds of dockets filed away every year bear testament to the massive number of crimes the Empangeni SAPS deal with on a daily basis.

http://zululandobserver.co.za/100257/dockets-in-the-loo-no-cause-for-stink/

Crimes of the South African Police Service

Cop charged for docket theft


BLOEMFONTEIN – A female South African Police Service (SAPS) lieutenant was released on R3000 bail after she appeared in the Bloemfontein Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday for allegedly stealing police dockets from court. According to police spokesman, Captain Chaka Marope, Patricia Pitt who is stationed at the Parkweg Police Station was arrested on Monday along with a local businessman who faced charges of rape.
“Information revealed that the officer allegedly stole five dockets at the Bloemfontein Magistrate’s Court offices last week Tuesday. She allegedly used a false name and collected the dockets which were being investigated by the Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offences (FCS), under the pretext of being one of the investigators,” said Marope.
He added that the arrested businessman was denied bail as he is an accused in one of the rape case dockets that were stolen and he will reappear on September 28. Marope said that it was suspected that the motive for the theft of dockets was to assist the businessman to evade trial. The two accused face charges of theft and defeating the ends of justice.











Crimes of the South African Police Service

Nine South African policemen have been charged with murder after a taxi driver was dragged behind a police van and later found dead.






Crimes of the South African Police Service

Why?  Because they can with impunity










Crimes of the South African Police Service

A South African Police Services Captain appeared in court accused of armed robbery.

July 4 2008: A police captain appears in the Wynberg magistrate’s court today accused together with four student-constables, a police-reservist constable and two members of the public, of an armed robbery of a factory in Bramley, 

Johannesburg. Seven suspects have already appeared in court but the Captain was only arrested two days earlier in Alexandra. A female student-constable suspect has already been released on bail. According to inspector Moses Maphakela, police spokesman, the 27-year-old constable was released on bail between R2,000 and R3,000. The suspects are accused of carrying out an armed robbery of a factory in Bramley in April 2008. Some of the police officers were wearing police-uniforms. They allegedly also robbed a police-vehicle. The Captain, who works at the Alexandra police station, was arrested by police-members of the Bramley police station. Last week two senior police officers, were remanded respectively in the Randburg- and the Johannesburg magistrate’s courts, on charges linked with explosions at cash-points and armed robbery. A 33-year-old police-inspector of the West Rand dog-unit was arrested last Friday in connection with cash-point explosions. The head of the SAPS criminal investigations division in Magaliesburg was arrested two weeks ago together with give of his detective-branch colleagues. They were accused of robbing foreigners in April (2008). Note placed by Beeld journalist  – André Damons




Crimes of the South African Police Services

With the festive season fast approaching, the Ekurhuleni Metro Police Department's roll-out of a fleet of almost 500 patrol cars is not going as smoothly as planned.

The vehicles cost taxpayers R88-million, and were bought to beef up a beleaguered department run by Robert McBride until he was placed on special leave and later fired.


But instead of hitting the streets, they stood idle for more than four months - a delay described by one councillor as a "disgrace".

For the cars to be put to use they had to be marked, registered and fitted with sirens and police lights.

After The Star exposed the bungle, Ekurhuleni Municipality vowed "the majority" of the fleet would be operational by the first week of November, in time for the "hectic festive season".

The Star returned to the Primrose parking lot - where the fleet had been parked since May - and found that while things looked different, there were still dozens of cars not being used.

Metro spokesperson Zweli Dlamini confirmed this, saying that of the 493 cars bought, 97 were "running on the streets".

"We are expecting 100 more by the end of the week, branded and all," he said.

"Then we hope to release 100 per week."

At that rate, all cars should be out by early December.

Dlamini said the municipality was not to blame for the new delay.

"We were under the impression that the service provider would be able to deliver … the delay is external."

At the end of last month, a new controversy hit the roll-out when community safety councillor Michele Clarke claimed the process had ground to a halt because of in-house bureaucratic fighting.

She said the task team set up to speed the project along had been ordered to back off.

This was a worrying development, as crime tended to spike in the build-up to the December holidays.

Clarke said: "Residents' lives are at stake."

The municipality denied these claims.

In the wake of The Star's initial coverage, the political head of the EMPD, Aubrey Nxumalo, launched an investigation into what had caused the delays.

He conceded that plans had been canned to hire cars - at a cost of R350 000 per month - while the cars the municipality had bought were readied.

The cars are destined to the following units: highway patrol, speed law-enforcement, intervention unit and public order policing.






Crimes of the South African Police Service

Police Services Shoot Priest in Face



Crimes of the South African Police Service

Voetsek!




Crimes of the South African Police Service

Children Object the Mass Murder of Miners by the South African Police Service





Crimes of the South African Police Service

Cartoon of the South African Police Service









Crimes of the South African Police Service

South African Police Service in Mass Murder of Miners