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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 1341
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## Director of Public Prosecutions v Ngobeni (A358/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1341 (29 November 2024)
Director of Public Prosecutions v Ngobeni (A358/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1341 (29 November 2024)
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sino date 29 November 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: A358/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/
NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
29/11/2024
In
the matter between:
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Appellant
And
BETHUEL
NGOBENI
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOSOPA,
J
1.
This is an appeal against the granting of the Respondent's bail on
the 27 October
2023, in terms of section 65(A)(1)(a) of Act 51 of
1977 by Magistrate Thupatlase, in the Oberholzer Magistrates court.
2.
Section 310A makes it peremptory for the appellant to first apply for
leave to
appeal and such application must be dealt with by the Judge
in Chambers'. It is further a requirement on the appellant, to make
such an application within a period of 30 days of the decision or
within such extended period on application in good cause.
3.
For the sake of completeness, I find it prudent to make reference to
the particular
provisions which provides as follows;
"[310A](1) The
attorney-general may appeal against a sentence imposed upon an
accused in a criminal case in a lower court,
to the provincial or
local division having jurisdiction, provided that an application for
leave to appeal has been granted by a
judge in chambers.
(2) (a) A written notice
of such an application shall be lodged with the registrar of the
provincial or local division concerned
by the attorney-general,
within a period of 30 days of the passing of sentence or within such
extended period as may on application
on good cause be allowed."
4.
Section 65(A)(1)(b) of Act 51 of 1977, makes following provision;
"(b) The
provisions of section 310A in respect of an application or appeal
referred to in that section by an attorney-general,
and the
provisions of section 65 (1) (b) and (c) and (2), (3) and (4) in
respect of an appeal referred to in that section by an
accused, shall
apply mutatis mutandis with reference to a case in which the
attorney-general appeals in terms of paragraph (a)
of this
subsection."
5.
Reference to Attorney-General in the subsection should be construed
as reference
to the Director of Public Prosecutions.
6.
The appellant complied with the provisions of section 310A of Act 51
of 1977,
save for the fact that when the application for leave to
appeal was filed, it was late with 3 days. It means that the
appellant
was supposed to file their application for leave to appeal
on the 27 November 2023, application for condonation of the late
filing
of the application for leave to appeal was also filed on the
30 November 2023.
7.
When the matter served In this court for hearing on the 13 November
2024, the
application for leave to appeal had not been determined by
a Judge in chambers.
8.
It was agreed by the parties that I determine the application for
appeal, condonation
for its late filing and the appeal itself. I
firstly heard the arguments in the condonation application and after
hearing the arguments
I made an order granting the appellant
condonation for the late filing of the leave to appeal application,
without providing reasons
for such an order.
9.
The appellant gave reasons for the delay in applying for leave to
appeal, and
such can be succinctly summarised as follows, that after
an instruction was given to appeal the decision to grant the
respondent
bail, necessary arrangements were made and the record for
the bail application of the 20 December 2022, wherein the respondent
was denied bail were obtained. On the last day of filing of the
application for leave to appeal, instructions were given that such
application, be filed without the records of the 27 October 2023 as
they were not available at that stage.
10.
It was discovered on the 24 November 2023 that the application was
not properly paginated
and indexed as such, they had to re-do the
whole process. The records of the bail hearing of the 27 October 2023
were received
by the appellant by way of email on the 24 November
2023 at 11h28.
11.
It is because of the late receipt of that record that it necessitated
the appellant to attend
to the amendment of the grounds of the
application for leave to appeal and to add that record to the bundle
of documents to be
filed, which then resulted in the application
being filed out of time.
12.
In contention, Mr Osborne on behalf of the respondent argued that the
appellant did not
have to wait for the transcripts to file their
application. That the appellant is not in compliance with Rule 27 of
the Uniform
Rules of Court in that, the appellant failed to apply for
the extension of time and that the prejudice that the respondent is
going
to suffer is associated with the main application, which is the
bail appeal.
13.
Section 310A(1)(b) does not make it a requirement for the appellant
to apply . for extension
of time, but to show good cause why the
application is late. There are a number of aspects that come to play,
amongst them the
aspect relating prospects of success, reasonable
reasons for the delay, prejudice on the part of the party against
whom an application
is brought and finally the length of time that
has passed since the decision and when the application was filed.
14.
In my considered view, three days is not an inordinate delay, and I
do not see the respondent
suffering any prejudice hence I granted the
application for condonation for late filing. There is a reasonable
explanation for
the 3 days which can be attributed to the appellant
filling its leave to appeal application late.
15.
The condonation application is entwined with the leave to appeal
application and as a result,
it was also granted. During the
condonation hearing, it was brought to my attention that since the
appellant filed its application
for leave appeal the Deputy Judge
President could not immediately allocate the matter to a Judge in
Chambers for its determination.
Several meetings were held by the
Deputy Judge President and the parties when the matter was
transferred to this court and it appeared
that several judges in this
division decided other bail appeals of the respondent's co-accused
excluding them from hearing the
bail appeal of the respondent until
the matter was allocated to me. No date that suit both Counsel could
be immediately obtained
which caused the matter to be further
delayed. Blame cannot be apportioned to any of the parties.
BACKGROUND
16.
The respondent was arrested on the 04 October 2022 at his home, and
was arraigned in the
Oberholzer Magistrate's court on the number of
charges which consists of amongst others of the contravention of
Prevention of Organized
Crime Act 121 of 1998 ("POCA")
which includes the managing of an enterprise, pattern of racketeering
activity, unlawful
acquiring and possession of unwrought gold and its
smelting, money laundering and contravention of the
Immigration Act
13 of 2002
, allegations made being that he illegally entered and
remained in South Africa.
17.
The first bail application of the respondent was determined on the 12
December 2022 and
bail refused on the 20 December 2022, and the bail
was dealt with in terms of Schedule 5. In that bail application, the
respondent
did not testify but presented evidence by way of an
affidavit and the following was provided;
17.1. He was
born on the 8 February 1984, and a South African citizen, born at
Bushbuckridge, Mpumalanga Province;
17.2. He is
married with seven children in terms of customary law to two wives
which are all South African citizens;
17.3. He is
self-employed and conducts a salon business, trades in used motor
vehicles by informally buying, fixing
and selling them;
17.4. He
earns an amount of over R65 000,00 monthly from all his businesses;
17.5. He is
the owner of two houses all situated at Khutsong. In addition to that
he is the owner of a vacant land at
Potchefstroom;
17.6. He has
four motor vehicles, namely a Volkswagen, Amarok, Audi A3 and
Volkswagen Tarok;
17.7. He has
bank savings in excess of R1 million and these are the amounts that
he obtained in Gold Rush Betting wins;
17.8. He has
a previous conviction of theft which is more than 15 years;
17.9. That
the investigating officer is in possession of his passport and
identity document;
17.10. He will suffer
irreparable harm if not released on bail and his business will
"collapse" and that the respondent
(at that stage, the
appellant) will not suffer any prejudice if released on bail, and
17.11. That the state
does not have a strong case against him."
18.
In opposition of bail, the state led the oral evidence of Mothusi
Goodhope Letsogo from
the Department of Home Affairs. He received a
request to verify the identity document of the respondent for its
authenticity. He
went to the archives and obtained a Dl24 form which
is the birth registration form of the respondent and the registered
name of
his mother was Thandi Patricia Ngobeni with identification
number 6[…]. Ms Ngobeni was traced and found at Bushbuckridge
and denied knowing the respondent. Ms Ngobeni has a son called
Bethuel Ndelo Ngobeni born on 02 August 1985, who also deposed to
an
affidavit averring that he does not know the respondent and further
that the respondent is not his brother. Then he came to
the
conclusion that the respondent obtained his identification document
fraudulently. The other children of Ms Ngobeni are Mashego
Beauty
Providence and Mashego Mathlatsi Vincent. Their surnames are
different from that of Ms Ngobeni, because she was subsequently
married. He received a letter from the Department of Home Affairs of
its intention to cancel his identity document and was allowed
to make
representation on why such identity document should not be cancelled
but requested extension of time. There is no passport
appearing under
the identification number of the respondent. The identification of
the respondent and that of the child of Ms Ngobeni,
Bethuel Ngobeni
are not the same.
19.
The state also led oral evidence of Kgomotso Galetlole, the
investigating Officer in the
matter. An application was done to
intercept communication of the people they were suspected of
committing crimes in the operation
they conducted. The respondent's
phone calls and that of his co-accused were intercepted after the
application to intercept was
granted. They also received information
that the respondent and.accused 2 in the matter are brothers and that
they are from Zimbabwe,
in Chipinda. The respondent in the
intercepted calls is referred to as Zingaiyi.
Section 252A
trap was
also applied for, and agents were tasked to infiltrate the alleged
syndicate and establish their modus operandi, they
then also
established that they are dealing with unlawful raw material. The
agents met with the customers at the respondent's place
of residence.
The
section 252A
trap was in place from 2018 to 2022. The
respondent's names are Zingaiyi Diliwayo.
20.
The respondent bought all his vehicles for cash and more than four
vehicles are registered
in his names. All his houses were purchased
for cash and registered in his wives' names. Also, that the
respondent has a wife in
Zimbabwe and some of the vehicles he
purchased were transported to Zimbabwe.
21.
In denying the respondent bail, the presiding Magistrate made the
following findings;
"I am satisfied that
the accused is part of a criminal syndicate that is wellrun
operation. They have cash and are willing
to corrupt state officials
they want and persuaded that illegal mining activities involve
violence in the fight for territorial
domination. I am satisfied that
these activities had a negative effect on the economy of the country.
On a balance of probabilities,
this court does not find that the
accused persons have successfully discharged the onus contemplated in
section 60(11)(1)(b)
of Act 51 of 1977. They have failed to show that
there are factors which, in the interests of justice permit their
release on bail.
I am satisfied that there
is a strong case which on its own, is a good incentive to make or
cause the accused to be a flight risk."
(sic)
22.
Aggrieved by such decision to refuse them bail, the respondent
appealed such decision in
terms of section 65(1)(a) to this court,
which appeal was refused on the 18 May 2023, after the presiding
Judge saw no misdirection
on the part of the presiding Magistrate.
23.
On the 23 September 2023, the respondent brought a bail application
on new facts. In his
affidavit used support of bail on new facts
stated that;
23.1. That
since his arrest and despite being in custody for a period of over a
year, he has not been supplied with
a case docket and there have been
numerous postponements in the matter for no various reasons, and the
state has been placed on
notice in terms of section 342A of Act 51 of
1977;
23.2. On the
14 December 2022, the investigating officer indicated that
investigation will be complete in the matter
in a period of a month
or two, meaning that investigations should have been completed on the
14 February 2023. A period of 8 months
has since lapsed, but
investigations are not yet completed;
23.3. His
health has deteriorated since his incarceration, and he is currently
suffering from fits and hypertension;
23.4. His
incarceration has also negatively affected his family, in particular
his children. They are being threatened
to be expelled from school
due to non-payment of school fees;
23.5. Monies
have been transferred from his account with an investment of
approximately R400 000,00 without his permission,
which his wife has
access to. The money is transferred to the account unknown to him. He
blames the state for such transfers, as
since his phones were seized
by the police, they have been in the state's custody;
23.6. His
4-year-old child is extremely ill and before his incarceration, he
was together with his wife taking the child
to traditional healers to
cure the child's illness. Upon medical assessment the child is
diagnosed with Down's Syndrome medical
condition;
23.7. Social
Worker's report indicates that the whole family has been affected by
his arrest. They all present with
severe symptoms of stress and
depressive mood. His second wife is on chronic medication,
antidepressants, caused by stress related
to financial stress and
parenting of the child with special needs;
23.8. Medical
bills, municipal rates and taxes remained unpaid and have accumulated
arrears;
23.9. His
citizenship has not been revoked since the Department of Home Affairs
has issued the notice of intention to
cancel and that shows that he
is South African citizen. The immigration officer approached a wrong
person who is alleged to be
his mother.
24.
The state in opposing bail on new facts of the respondent, presented
in evidence the affidavit
of the Investigating Officer which stated
that;
24.1. He
testified that the investigation will be finalised in two months
period but that was an estimation. Due to
factors beyond his control
which includes but not limited to the fact that state facilities are
over burdened and the turnover
rate for results is delayed and
also the aspect of load shedding which is affecting the whole
country. The delay was also occasioned
by the arrest of the life
partners of the respondents and his co-accused.
24.2. Denies
that a wrong person was interviewed by the Department of Home Affairs
who is not the mother of the respondent.
Despite requesting the
details of the correct mother of the respondent for verification with
the Department of Home Affairs such
has not been received from the
respondent.
24.3. DNA
report indicates that respondent and accused 2 in the trial matter,
are full siblings.
24.4.
Passport photo page of accused 2 was found on the seized phone of the
respondent on analysis,
24.5.
Department of Home Affairs is in the process of cancelling the
identity documents of the respondent;
24.6.
Financial investigations of the respondent are supposed to be
conducted and financial statements from financial
institutions and
private persons had to be obtained and there was no unreasonable
delay based on the complexity of the case; and
24.7. In one
of the court appearances photos of the prosecutor and the
Investigating Officer were "discretely"
taken despite the
court room being full, and they have since received stalking phone
calls which resulted in case docket being
registered.
25.
Attached to the opposing affidavit was amongst others, the affidavit
by N Ditlogolo from
the Potchefstroom Correctional Services, Remand
detention facility stating that the centre has a primary health care
clinic on
site. Inmates diagnosed with chronic medical conditions are
treated at the clinic by professional nurses and visiting medical
practitioner.
Inmates receive their medication daily and follow ups
to check their vital signs and their response to medication is also
done.
Complicated cases that cannot be managed at primary health care
level are referred to public hospital, Potchefstroom Hospital.
26.
In permitting the respondent to bail, the presiding Magistrate made
the following conclusions;
"As it stands, as
this court, I can only accept that they have documents that are
showing them to be South African citizens.
Section 28 of the
Constitution which says that the interests of a child, were the
interests of the children is, tramped then the
court must the court
must look at the interest of the child.
I am satisfied that
accused number 1 was able to show that there are new factors that
have been both from the family perspective
as well as from the fact
that there has been a delay in incarceration and that he be admitted
to bail." (sic)
27.
Bail was set with necessary conditions, that he must not communicate
with any witness or
potential witness of the matter. That he must
report to Carletonville Police Station every Monday and Sunday and
restricted to
the Magisterial district of Merafong Carletonville and
may not leave without the prior written approval of the Investigating
Officer.
That he must surrender his passport to the Investigating
Officer, and he is prohibited from applying for another passport for
purposes
of traveling outside the boarders of the Republic.
ANALYSIS
28.
The applicable schedule under which this bail appeal is to be
determined remains schedule
5. The provisions of section 60(11)(b) of
Act 51 of 1977 then became applicable, which permits the release on
bail if the bail
applicant adduces evidence which satisfies court
that the interest of justice permits his or her release. At the
initial bail hearing,
it was found that the respondent did not
satisfy the requirements and bail was refused. The presiding
Magistrate found the exitance
of new facts or circumstances on the
respondent when dealing with bail on new facts and permitted the
respondent on bail.
29.
Section 65(4) of Act 51 of 1977, gives a court powers on appeal and
such are circumscribed
and the following provision is made;
"[4] The court or
judge hearing the appeal shall not set aside the decision against
which the appeal is brought, unless such
court or judge is satisfied
that the decision was wrong, in which event the court or judge shall
give the decision which in its
or his opinion the lower court should
have given."
30.
It is trite that where the court
a quo
, in this instance the
court that permitted respondent to bail, misdirected itself
materially on the fact or legal principles, the
court of appeal may
consider the issue of bail afresh. The functions and powers of the
court or judge hearing appeal under section
65 of Act 51 of 1977 are
similar to those in an appeal against conviction and sentence. In
S
v Barber
1979 (4) SA 218
(D) at 220 E-H
, Hefer J
stated that;
"It is well known
that the powers of this Court are largely limited where the matter
comes before it on appeal and not as a
substantive application for
bail. This Court has to be persuaded that the magistrate exercised
the discretion which he has wrongly.
Accordingly, although this Court
may have a different view, it should not substitute its own view for
that of the magistrate because
that would be an unfair interference
with the magistrate's exercise of his discretion."
31.
In
S v Vermaas
1996 (1) SACR 528
(T)
, Van
Dijkhorst J when dealing with bail on new facts stated that;
"Obviously an
accused cannot be allowed to repeat the same application for bail
based on the same facts week after week. It
would be an abuse of the
proceedings. Should there be nothing new to be said the application
should not be repeated and the court
will not entertain it. But it is
a
non sequitur
to argue on that basis that where there is some
new matter the whole application is not open for reconsideration but
only the new
facts. I frankly cannot see how this can be done. Once
the application is entertained the court should consider all facts
before
it, new and old and on the totality come to a conclusion. It
follows that I will not myopically concentrate on the new facts
alleged."
32.
In
S v Nwabunwanne
2017 (2) SACR 124
(NCK) at para
24
, the following was stated;
"[24] New facts can
and should be put before a magistrate by adducing oral evidence or
submitting a document stating facts
which are common cause. The
purpose of adducing new facts is not to address problems encountered
in the previous application, but
should be facts discovered after the
bail application. The facts relied on by the appellant in this
instance were discovered after
the initial application."
33.
At the initial bail application of the respondent, the health
condition of his minor child
who is 4 years old suffering from Down
Syndrome was not a subject for determination. The respondent raised
this aspect for the
first time at his bail hearing on new facts and
indicated that the child is extremely ill. The second wife of the
respondent indicated
that the condition the child is suffering from,
the child was diagnosed with it before the arrest of the respondent,
an aspect
which was confirmed by the respondent himself.
34.
The child was before the incarceration of the respondent cured for by
the traditional healer
and raised the point that his medical aid is
no longer in use because of the money he owes to the medical aid
scheme. It is not
known why this aspect was not raised at the initial
bail hearing. The presiding Magistrate deemed this aspect as
constituting new
fact or circumstances and used it as one of the
reasons to permit the respondent to bail.
35.
In
Sibuyi v S
(A115/2020) ZAGPPHC 217 (4 June 2020)
at para 26
, when dealing with the bail applicant's failure to
raise an aspect known at initial bail hearing and raises as new
evidence, in
the second bail hearing on new facts, Mosopa J stated;
"[26] Appellant in
his bail application on new facts, in my view, did not provide any
new facts since the first bail application.
What appellant did was to
explain what happened at the time of his arrest. He had at the
occasion of the first bail application
all this information at his
disposal and failed to relay it to court. It is therefore my
considered view that such facts are not
new and secondly not relevant
for the determination of bail on new facts."
36.
I would agree with the presiding Magistrate that the respondent's
health since his incarceration
deteriorating is a new fact, but the
presiding Magistrate ignored evidence before him when determining
this aspect. Evidence from
the Correctional Centre where the
respondent was kept, is that there is a primary health care facility
at the centre (Clinic) wherein
all accused who are kept in custody
awaiting finalisation of their trial matters are referred to in cases
of various ailments,
there is a permanent professional nurse on site
and also visiting medical practitioners. Inmates are given medication
on daily
basis and there is a constant check on their vital signs. In
cases of complex chronic conditions, inmates are referred to public
hospital, Potchefstroom Hospital.
37.
The respondent did not present evidence that since he was diagnosed
with the conditions
he is suffering from, he was not referred to the
clinic for treatment or that he was given wrong medication which
worsened his
medical condition. He did not say that the medication he
was receiving at prison was inadequate for his condition.
38.
Respondent's status in the country was viewed as new evidence, since
over a period of a
year that the Department of Home Affairs had
issued notice of intention to cancel the identity document of the
respondent has failed
to do so, the respondent is a South African
citizen. Again, in this instance the presiding Magistrate elected to
ignore evidence
before him. It was said that the respondent
fraudulently obtained his identity document and there is no passport
linked to that
identity document number. No new evidence was
presented to gainsay that.
39.
What served on bail on new facts was that a person who was
interviewed was not the mother
of the respondent, but she was a wrong
person an aspect which was not raised at the initial bail hearing.
Nothing indicates that
the respondent's mother is deceased or is not
traceable. Despite state requesting the respondent to provide them
with particulars
of the real mother of the respondent, he failed to
do that and blaming the Department for not finalising the
cancellation process
of the respondent's identity document; in my
considered view lacks merit. The respondent at the initial stage of
the process, where
he was issued with the notice of intention to
cancel, he requested extension of time without indicating the amount
of time needed.
Also, the evidence of the Immigration Officer that he
was instructed to put hold on the cancellation process pending the
outcome
of the respondent's criminal matter.
40.
The state at the bail hearing on new facts indicated that the
Department is in a process
of finalisation of the cancellation of the
Respondent's identity document and has finalised such process in
respect of one of the
respondent's co-accused.
41.
It also emerged in the bail hearing on new facts, after it was
alleged in the initial bail
hearing that respondent is a blood
brother of accused 2, that DNA report shows that they are blood
brothers. Investigations also
revealed that accused 2 like the
respondent is also using a fraudulent identity document. At the time
of his arrest, he indicated
to the police that he is James and
several people that the police interviewed confirmed that he is
James. He is a Zimbabwean national,
the police source confirmed that
both the respondents and accused 2 are from Chipini in Zimbabwe and
also the respondent has a
wife in Zimbabwe. The presiding Magistrate
misdirected himself in not considering evidence which served before
him, to declare
the respondent a South African citizen.
42.
Nothing new was brought challenging the strength of the state's case
against the respondent
as such, the findings made by the court in the
initial bail hearing stand.
43.
In terms of section 35(3), it enshrines every accused's right to a
fair trial, which includes
the right to have his trial begin and
concluded without unreasonable delay (section 35 (d)). In the initial
bail hearing the Investigating
Officer promised to finalise his
investigation in a month or two. Sight should not be lost of the fact
that permission to intercept
the respondent's phone and section 252A
trap applications were done long before the respondent was arrested.
44.
At the time of hearing of bail on new facts which was approximately 8
months after the initial
bail application, the investigations have
not been finalised by the Investigating Officer. According to the
Investigating Officer,
the two months to finalisation of his
investigations that he provided was an estimation. He provided
reasons that can be attributed
to the delays that were inherent in
the state's case.
45.
The respondent disputed the fact that he is a blood brother of the
accused as alleged by
the state. For the appellant to confirm that,
it was only going to be through DNA analysis. I cannot ignore the
fact that DNA analysis
process in this country is a great challenge.
There are serious backlogs in the country which threatens to collapse
the criminal
justice system. The issue of loadshedding which has
impacted the country can also not be ignored.
46.
Section 35(3)(d) does not confer upon the respondent absolute right,
but such right is a
subject of limitation under section 36 of the
Constitution, to the extent the limitation is reasonable and
justifiable in an open
and democratic society based on human dignity,
equality and freedom.
47.
All issues that delayed the matter has been finalised at the time of
bail on new facts,
safe for cancellation of the identity document of
the respondent and that the matter is currently transferred to the
jurisdiction
of the High Court. This aspect in my considered view
even if viewed by the presiding Magistrate is a new factor, it lacked
relevance
for the determination of the bail application on new facts.
48.
It was strongly contended that since the respondent has been released
on bail on the 27
October 2023, the respondent has been in
complainant with stringent conditions set for his release on bail and
he has not defaulted.
There was no application brought by the state
under section 66 or 67 of Act 51 of 1977, by virtue of respondent's
failure to observe
his bail condition or failed to appear at court at
the place, date and time appointed for his trial.
49.
The state delayed for a period of 3 days to timeously bring an appeal
against the granting
of bail but the appeal matter could not be heard
immediately for reasons already indicated elsewhere in this judgment.
This court
is also mindful of the fact that the appellant is not
appealing against the conduct of the appellant after being released
on bail,
but the irregularities committed by the presiding Magistrate
when he released the respondent on bail.
50.
It is my considered view that the presiding Magistrate misdirected
himself when releasing
the respondent on bail and ignored evidence
before him. All the properties the respondent is alleging to be
belonging to him, are
all registered under his life partners names,
vehicles are registered under their names and all the properties are
purchased for
cash. I also fail to see why respondent's bank account
which one of the life partners has access to, can be said after he
found
that there are funds missing, that the state is implicit in the
theft of such funds by the mere fact that the state seized his
cellphone and it has since been in the state's custody.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is made;
1.
Appeal against granting of the respondent bail is upheld.
2.
The respondent is ordered to immediately surrender himself for
detention to the
Investigating Officer at Khutsong and/or
Carletonville Police Station.
3.
The respondent is to be kept at the Potchefstroom Correctional Centre
until his
trial matter is finalised.
M.J.
MOSOPA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT : ADV SEKHONYANA &
ADV MAPHALALA
INSTRUCTED
BY
: THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
FOR
THE RESPONDENT : ADV OSBORNE
INSTRUCTED
BY
: MASHE E ATTORNEYS INC
Date
of hearing :
16 October
2024
Date
of judgment :
29 November 2024
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