Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 194South Africa
S v Basson and Another (Sentence) (CC67/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 194 (30 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
30 April 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Basson and Another (Sentence) (CC67/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 194 (30 April 2025)
S v Basson and Another (Sentence) (CC67/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 194 (30 April 2025)
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personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
number:
CC67/2020
In the matter between:
THE STATE
versus
EBEN
BASSON
Accused 1
CHIVARGO
FREDERICKS
Accused 2
Coram
:
Da Silva Salie, J
Written Judgment
delivered
:
30 April 2025
Counsel for the
State
:
Adv. J Ryneveld
Counsel for Accused
1
:
Adv. C Viljoen
Counsel for Accused
2
:
Adv. M Sebueng
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON WEDNESDAY, 30 APRIL 2025
DA SILVA SALIE, J
[1]
This is the sentencing proceedings of the two accused before this
Court for the murder
of Ms. E[...] S[...], a 7 year old child and
other charges preferred against Accused 1 and Accused 2. This
is my judgment
on sentence following the convictions handed down on
10 February 2025. No evidence was led in mitigation or
aggravation.
The accused’s legal representatives made ex
parte statements on their behalf. Counsel for the State also made ex
parte submissions
and 5 victim impact statements were placed before
the Court deposed to by the minor brother of the deceased, both her
parents and
her two grandfathers.
E[...] had been playing
outside of her home in Libra Road, Ocean View when she was shot and
killed on 25 February 2020. She
collapsed outside of her home
as she was fleeing from hailing bullets which were fired from both
sides of the road by you, Mr Basson
on the cul de sac side and you,
Mr. Fredericks from the opposite side of the road c/o Libra and
Aquarius Roads. The Court
also convicted you of attempted
murder charges (Counts 4-7) for the attempted murder of the target of
your shooting, Mr Anees Davis
as well as 3 others whom had escaped
your gunshots, namely, Mr. Marco Simon, Mr. Michael Daniels and Mr.
Oscar Daniels. In
respect of count 9 and count 10 you were both
convicted of the charges in relation to the possession of an
unlicensed firearm and
unlawful possession of ammunition.
[2]
Mr. Basson and Mr Fredericks, you stand before this Court today for
an appropriate
sentence to be meted out against you for the crimes
you had committed and in respect of which this Court had found you
guilty.
[3]
Submissions were made by your respective counsel in mitigation of
sentence which basically
means that they highlighted factors which
they consider as reasons for me to impose a lesser sentence on you.
Counsel for
the State on the other hand, as you would have heard,
pointed out factors which to the State are indicative for me to
impose the
prescribed sentence of life imprisonment in respect of the
murder of E[...] and the harshest sentences for the remaining
convictions.
[4]
Now is the time for me to meet out an appropriate sentence for each
of you.
I do so by explaining what goes through the mind of a
presiding judge when considering and imposing sentence.
[5]
The Court in deciding upon an appropriate sentence takes into account
the triad as
was set out in S v Zinn
[1969] (2) SA 537
(A) which
established the fundamental principle in our law of the 3 factors
which must be taken into account when determining a
just and
equitable sentence. The triad can be understood to be like a
triangle with three corners: each corner representing
a specific
interest in the process of considering punishment:
[6]
These three factors are:
i.
The offender
–
that being the person who
committed the criminal offence/s in question and to that extent your
personal circumstances are taken
into account.
ii.
The crime committed
–
including the seriousness and
nature of the crime.
iii.
Thirdly, the Court must
consider the
interest
of society
and the
need to protect our communities from the type of crimes in respect of
which you had been convicted.
[7]
The legislature or otherwise known as the lawmakers have recognized
that certain serious
crimes must be met with a minimum or prescribed
sentence. The count of murder in respect of which you had been
convicted
attracts a life sentence in that the offence was committed
by you as a group of persons or syndicate acting in the execution or
furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy. The attempted murder
charges each attract a sentence which I consider appropriate
in the
circumstances. The respective convictions of possession of an
unlicensed firearm and unlawful ammunition can warrant
the imposition
of a term of up to 15 years.
[8]
As your counsel, Adv Viljoen and Adv Sebueng, would have informed you
and as per the
caution which had been explained to you at the time
you were asked to plead to the charges which had been preferred
against you,
you have been informed that the offence of murder
attracts a prescribed minimum sentence of life imprisonment if found
guilty and
that it becomes a mandatory sentence. This means
that the Court must meet out a life sentence as a punishment given
that
you had now been convicted as charged of the murder.
Similarly the prescribed sentence applies to the unlicensed firearm
convictions. It is trite law however that only if a Court is
satisfied that substantial and compelling circumstances exist
which
justify the imposition of a lesser sentence, the Court may impose a
lesser sentence and in this case, sentence you to a lesser
sentence
than life imprisonment in respect of the charge of murder and so too
in respect of the so-called fire-arm and ammunition
convictions.
Those factors must be carefully assessed and weighed into the
totality of the relevant facts of the matter.
To this extent I am
guided by the leading authorities in relation to the laws on minimum
sentences as were set out in the oft quoted
decisions such as
S v
Malgas
[2001 SCA] and
S v Vilikazi
[2012 SCA] In
essence these aforementioned cases set out the principle that whilst
I am empowered to deviate from the imposition
of life imprisonment
and so too the prescribed sentence of up to 15 years in respect of
the unlicensed fire arm charges, I cannot
do so for flimsy reasons
and I cannot lightly depart from same. I need to be satisfied that
the imposition of such a sentence would
not be disproportionate in
the circumstances, and I must likewise be satisfied that the factors
warranting a lesser sentence is
of such a nature that it compels and
justifies the departure of the prescribed sentence which I have
referred to earlier.
[9]
In the aforesaid process the Court must remain mindful of the
objectives of sentencing
which are the following:
retribution,
deterrence, rehabilitation
and
restitution
.
The appropriate weight to attach to each objective will differ from
case to case depending on the prevailing facts and circumstances
of
each matter.
Retribution
is as per the meaning of the
word: to impose a punishment as a penalty for the wrong you had
committed.
Deterrence
which is also an objective of
sentencing, serves not only to deter you from repeating unlawful
behavior but also deters other would-be
offenders.
Rehabilitation
is the appreciation and recognition that you as
wrongdoers can repent and reform your conduct and strive to become
law abiding
citizens in the future as responsible members of
society. Lastly,
restitution
is aimed to protect our
community from you and harmful and unlawful actions being perpetuated
against our community. Mercy
is an important consideration in
the course of determining an appropriate punishment. I pause to
add that a sentencing Court
must also guard against handing down
punishment in anger.
[10]
I will now apply the aforesaid discussion of the various legal
principles to the facts and circumstances
of this matter and explain
how and why I impose the sentence upon you to which I have come.
YOUR PERSONAL
CIRCUMSTANCES:
[11]
Accused number 1, Mr. Basson, I will start with you first. Your
counsel addressed me in
respect of your personal circumstances in so
doing submitted those factors which I need to keep in mind to arrive
at a proportionate
and just sentence. In other words, these are
facts which justify a lesser sentence and in particular for me to
deviate from
the prescribed sentences which I have discussed above. I
have considered that you have been raised in an area rife with
hardships
and gangsterism. When you committed these offences on 25
February 2020, you were still relatively young, and today, at the age
of 31 you still have a measure of youthfulness on your side. You
appear before this Court for sentencing as a first offender.
You have been in custody since February 2020 pending finalization of
these proceedings, that being a period to date of approximately
5
years. During this time, your partner, Ms. Tammy Mostert who
was pregnant at the time of the commission of these crimes
had given
birth to your daughter whilst you had been in custody. Ms
Mostert, who testified before this Court, is the primary
carer of
your daughter and is gainfully employed.
[12]
Accused number 2, Mr. Fredericks, you hail from a similar background
as that of your co-accused,
you have no previous convictions and thus
stand before this Court as a first offender. Born in 2000, you
were almost 20 at
the time of the offence and 5 years later, you are
now 25. You are by all accounts still a young man. Like that of
Mr. Basson,
the Court considers that you have been in custody for a
period of approximately 5 years from the date of your arrest pending
the
finalization of this matter.
[13]
I have also considered the pre-sentencing reports prepared recently
dated 31 March 2025 by the
Department of Social Development for each
of you after consultation conducted with you and with certain of your
family members
or collateral sources of information. I need not
repeat the contents thereof, same have been noted and taken into
account
particularly so where it relates to your personal
circumstances and other relevant considerations as set out therein.
It
is significant that neither of you have displayed remorse for the
crimes you have committed. Had you expressed any contrition
for
your actions, I would have taken that into account as a mitigatory
factor and to impose a lesser sentence. However, you
did not do
so and in fact no such submission had been placed before the Court on
your behalf. Mr. Basson, in your case, this
is evidently so as
you stood by your position that you are a victim of a manipulated
justice system, and that you have no sympathy
for your victim, the
late 7 year old E[...], nor her family and their grief and that in
fact you are suffering as the victim.
The position
in this regard is similar for you, Mr. Fredericks, who has not
displayed any remorse or sympathy for the
family of E[...] who had
lost their child and sister. I hasten to add that had either of
you displayed genuine remorse for
the crimes and loss of life you had
caused it could have been considered as a factor in mitigation of
your sentence, however the
converse does not apply. Your lack
of remorse or refusal to take accountability for your unlawful
actions and its consequences
does not amount to an aggravating factor
in the imposition of an appropriate sentence. In other words,
your sentence cannot
be increased for lack of remorse or
accountability.
NATURE OF THE CRIME:
[14]
Turning to the crimes which you have committed, it is a starkly and
shocking feature of the offences
that it had been committed in a
place and space which ought to be a safe area for the residents,
being their home and play area.
These children and the adults
on that fateful day were going about their daily affairs.
E[...] was just an innocent child,
who played with other children
after school and before preparing for bathtime, dinner and bed.
The facts of this matter illustrate
that you were not only
indifferent to their presence, but I consider it significant that
these children were not one of your own
so to speak. The facts
accepted by this Court are that they were children of the road and
the shooting did not risk any of
your children or loved ones. The
chance that any one of them could get harmed or killed was a factor
clearly prevailed in your
minds when you decided to launch this
lethal and brazen attack. An injury or death of these children,
albeit they were not
the main target, would in any event facilitate
the rival warfare between your gang and that of the territorial gang
as the residents
would be less tolerant of the presence of the Taylor
Gang in this area thereafter. It is quite evident that you were
alive
to this. It is a most disturbing feature of this offences
that it was done with this children caught in the middle of these
gunshots, with these young and vulnerable children having to run for
protection. E[...] was shot in her back as she ran to
the
safety of her home and that of her mother. The bullet exited
through her chest and another gunshot hit her hand.
She fell to
the ground in her garden. She was playing with her friends in
an area which you decided to make your shooting
range and
battlefield. An act which lacks and defies basic humanity.
[15]
The photographs also depict what her loved ones had to face and must
come to terms with: that
being her body lying fatally wounded
on the ground, blood oozing from her young and lifeless body. You
both had time to reconsider
and reflect on what you had planned to do
that day. You had time to refrain from your conduct. You saw the
children playing in
the road. Even during the shooting, you had time
to stop and hold your fire. Yet, you mercilessly continued to rain
bullets over
these children.
[16]
This Court heard and read the sentiments which E[...]’s brother
(10 years old at the time
of her passing, now 15) had endured with
her death. He suffers daily, haunted by flashbacks, missing his
sister and robbed
of the joy of having his sister grow up and old
with him and their other sibling. E[...] had an infectious
laugh he stated,
she had unwavering kindness, and she had shone a
light to their family. The grief and loss stated by her mother,
her father,
both her grandfathers gave this Court a very clear
indication of the loss they have suffered and how they continue to
mourn her
death and the cruel manner in which she has been executed.
This family remain in anguish and anxiety and they continue to
experience
immeasurable pain as they come to live without E[...] and
cope with her savage murder. They have to accept that their child had
been brutally robbed of her life and dreams. She had a flair
for fashion and beauty, she had dreams of being a beautician,
she
showed the talent for being a successful businesswomen in the beauty
and fashion industry. She also did not get to fulfil her
other
wishes, having a family and children of her own. This family
and the community’s star had fallen. Your
unlawful
conduct has caused them a permanent loss with this traumatic event
and consequences continuing to haunt them and the community.
This is indeed aggravating in the determination of an appropriate
sentence. The emotional devastation caused to this child’s
parents, grandparents, siblings and community is glaring and
devastating. The collective trauma inflicted on the community,
particularly where children can no longer feel safe is aggravating.
The shooting of a child, particularly in a public place
in broad
daylight, reflects extreme callousness and cruelness on your part
with complete disregard for the sanctity of life.
Gang related
shootings are also an aggravating circumstance as it endangers the
public and undermines the rule of law. The
crime does not only
kill an innocent child but also instills ongoing fear and terror in
the community, making ordinary life unsafe.
[17]
This crime represents one of the most disturbing and devastating acts
of violence to come before
it. A seven-year-old child,
innocent, unarmed and engaged in the most ordinary of childhood
pursuits, playing outside after
school. She was entirely incapable of
protecting herself. Her death, under such a violent
circumstance, is an egregious breach
of her right to life, safety and
dignity. This space in the cul de sac, with blocks marked to
facilitate their ballgames
and playing, should be considered a space
which is sacrosanct, particularly for the children. The use of
semi-automatic firearms
in a densely populated street further
compounds the complete disregard of your vicious acts. Gang
related shootings for drug
and turf control amounts to domestic
terrorism in its most destructive form, shattering families and
robbing communities of a peaceful
life in their residential areas and
hope for a better future. The lives of those who have been
affected have been irreversibly
altered. The grief they carry, the
trauma experienced, and the psychological scars inflicted on them as
set out in the Victim Impact
Statements by her loved ones are
relevant in this consideration of an appropriate sentence along with
other factors.
THE INTEREST OF
SOCIETY
[18]
Society demands that brutal murders such as these must be dealt with
very seriously. These sentiments
also apply to the possession of
unlicensed firearms and unlawful possession of firearms which causes
the continued spiral of our
country to greater depths of violence and
crime. The Court has a duty to protect innocent people from being
murdered by imposing
long term prison sentences. Failing that,
the community will lose faith in the Courts and our country’s
judicial system.
This event is tragic to say the least and yet
it has become a common occurrence in our communities.
[19]
The broader community impact cannot be ignored. The evidence
before this Court is that
the residents of this area have been left
reeling, fearful and angry. Children are no longer safe to play
in their own streets.
It is the Court’s duty to signal,
through sentencing, that such conduct will be met with the full
weight of the law.
FINAL
ANALYSIS
:
[20]
From the discussion above, the factors submitted to be sufficient to
justify a departure from
the prescribed sentence of life imprisonment
must be considered collectively and not in isolation. I need to
weigh this against
each other to consider what would be a just and
appropriate sentence. Relative youth, being a first offender
and incarceration
time when dealing with a life sentence is not a
guaranteed factor to amount to a substantial and compelling
circumstance warranting
a deviation from a life sentence.
[21]
Whilst it was argued on behalf of counsel that the accused both
illustrate relative youth, it
was not the case that evidence had been
placed before me that your background, level of intelligence and
mental capacity was of
such a nature that your respective ages can be
suggestive of reduced blameworthiness. In S v Matyityi
[2011
(1) SACR 40
(SCA) at para 11 the Court held that:
“
This
whilst someone under the age of 18 years is to be regarded as
naturally immature, the same does not hold true for an adult.
In my view a person of 20 years of more must show by acceptable
evidence that he was immature to such an extent that his immaturity
can operate as a mitigating factor.”
[22]
The evidence of this case illustrates to the contrary that both
accused had capably planned the
ambush, with a well-orchestrated plan
and ambush attack tactics, illustrating your advance intellect and
intuitiveness, capacity
to have insight and foresight. There is
certainly no lack of maturity in t hose actions.
[23]
As regards the time spent in custody, the test is not whether on its
own the period of detention
constitute a substantial and compelling
circumstance to depart from the life sentence but rather whether the
sentence proposed
by the State (that being the imposition of the
prescribed sentence of life) is proportionate to the crimes
committed. It
is trite law that pre-sentencing incarceration is
but one of the factors to take into consideration when determining
the existence
of circumstances which are substantial and compelling
to deviate from a life sentence. A Court cannot approach a
factor submitted
as a mitigating factor such as time spent in custody
on a piecemeal basis to consider departure nor is deducting the
period from
the proposed sentence permissible as a standalone
factor. In S v Kammies [2019] ZAECPEHC 86 paras 34 – 49
this approach
presents conceptual difficulty when life imprisonment
is the prescribed sentence. There is no rational way in which
to take
the pre-sentencing detention into account. The answer
is not a mere calculation by deducting the incarceration time from a
life sentence. These factors though need be considered as a
whole.
[24]
As regards both accused standing before this Court as first
offenders, I need emphasise that
Section 51(1) unlike Section 51(2)
does not differentiate between first and multiple or repeat
offenders. The fact that the
accused is a first offender may,
in combination with other factors, lead a Court to the conclusion
that the prescribed sentence
of life would be disproportionate
however this factor must be considered cumulatively and holistically
with all prevailing factors
and evidence.
[25]
The aggravating features of this offence hardly need to be
emphasized. Notwithstanding
the fact that no evidence had been
placed before me that the accused at 25 years (Accused 1) and 19 and
11 months (Accused 2) lacked
maturity, I am though satisfied that
together with other mitigatory factors such as time awaiting trial
and being a first offender
would make a life sentence for the murder
disproportionate and that a sentence of 22 years would be just and
equitable. In
my considered view the four (4) attempted murder
charges warrant a sentence of 5 years each to run concurrently.
The convictions
in respect of possession of the unlicensed firearm
and unlawful possession of ammunition warrant the imposition of a
sentence of
8 and 3 years each, both sentences to run concurrently
with each other.
CONCLUSION:
[26]
I thus impose the following sentence upon both accused 1 and 2:
(a)
Count 3
– murder:
The accused is sentenced
to
22 years
direct imprisonment.
(b)
Counts
4 to 7 – attempted murder:
The accused is sentenced
to
5 years
direct imprisonment ordered to run concurrently.
(c)
Count 9
and 10 – Possession of an unlicensed firearm and unlawful
possession of ammunition:
The accused is sentenced
to
8 years
in respect of count 9 and 3 years in respect of
count 10. The sentences in respect of count 9 and 10 are ordered to
run concurrently,
resulting in an effective 8 years’
imprisonment for both these counts.
(d)
It is further
ordered that the sentences in respect of count 3 shall run
consecutively with the sentences imposed in respect of
counts 4-7 and
9 and 10 resulting in an effective period of
35
years
direct
imprisonment.
(e)
In terms of
section 103(1)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
both accused
are declared unfit to possess a firearm.
DA
SILVA SALIE, J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
WESTERN
CAPE
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