Thursday, February 2, 2017

Crimes of the South African Police Service

Rotten top cop claims rock SA … again
The allegations stem from a sworn statement signed on Monday by perennial stone in the police’s shoe forensic consultant Paul O’Sullivan.
39 mins ago November 2016

Nearly a million rand in cash in plastic shopping bags, death threats to investigators, intimidation: it’s not a Lethal Weapon movie plot, but for the fourth time in a row, serious allegations against South Africa’s top cop have emerged, as well as against the Independent Police Investigative Directorate’s (Ipid) Israel Kgamanyane, an additional detail many appear to have missed.
Acting national commissioner General Khomotso Phahlane – a career cop supposed to restore faith in the South African Police Service after disasters around the three previous civilian appointees – is being accused of defeating the ends of justice by interfering in an Ipid investigation.
“We are not in a position to comment at this stage without jeopardising our investigations,” said Ipid spokesperson Moses Dlamini. “We take the death threats against our investigator seriously and we will be working hard to identify the source of such death threat.”
The other accusation of corruption was levelled against Kgamanyane, whose position as acting executive director was usurped when Robert McBride returned to work after his suspension fell away.
The allegations stem from a sworn statement signed on Monday by the perennial stone in the police’s shoe, forensic consultant Paul O’Sullivan.
Kgamanyane had failed to investigate a complaint registered with Ipid in January over a the financing of a luxury house built by Phahlane, O’Sullivan stated, and claimed Kgamanyane had informed Phahlane about the matter, and alleged further that Phahlane had been given a copy of the Ipid investigation.
In April when O’Sullivan was dramatically hauled off a plane in front of his children by Hawks officers, Gauteng Hawks boss Prince Mokotedi allegedly accused him of lying about being a qualified engineer; Kgamanyane being the only person O’Sullivan had previously disclosed this fact to in January.
After McBride’s return, a new investigator was appointed to O’Sullivan’s case, who received an SMS telling him and O’Sullivan to back off.
“u must stop now. we know where u stay and ur family. paul is a stupid old man. his days r numbered. we r on his heels. u must either choose to die with him,” the sms in part reads.
The SMS followed the rejuvenated investigation by Ipid into O’Sullivan’s complaint over Phahlane’s alleged R8 million home in an exclusive waterfront village. It discovered Phahlane had allegedly sent his personal driver on at least two occasions to apparently deliver R350 000 in cash to Phahlane’s contractor.
The only person who had the Ipid investigators’ and O’Sullivan’s phone numbers was Phahlane’s contractor, claimed O’Sullivan, and he believed this person had given the details to Phahlane.
“….the only possible and logical conclusion, is that Phahlane either sent the SMS himself, or procured the sending of the SMS,” O’Sullivan wrote in his worn statement.
Phahlane’s spokesperson, Brigadier Mashadi Selepe, said the SAPS respected Ipid’s mandate to investigate any member of the police, and Phahlane welcomed the investigation into the allegations.
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