Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 45South Africa
Yanta v S (CC44/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 45; 2023 (2) SACR 387 (WCC) (1 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
1 March 2023
Headnotes
that: “If the evidence is adjudged to be new and relevant, then it must be considered in conjunction with all the facts placed before the court in previous applications, and not separately.[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Yanta v S (CC44/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 45; 2023 (2) SACR 387 (WCC) (1 March 2023)
Yanta v S (CC44/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 45; 2023 (2) SACR 387 (WCC) (1 March 2023)
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sino date 1 March 2023
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
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: CC44/2021
Read with Case No:
A71/2021
Read with Case No:
1/82/02/2020
In
the matter between:
SITHEMBILE
YANTA
Applicant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram: De Wet
AJ
Date of Reasons: An order
was granted on 22 February 2023. The reasons for the order were
handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties’ legal
representatives by email. The date and time of handing down reasons
is deemed to be 1 March 2023.
JUDGMENT
DE
WET, AJ
:
[1]
The right of an unsuccessful bail applicant
to an opportunity to present new facts in order to secure their
release on bail must
always be carefully weighed against the
principle that renewed bail applications, where old and previously
known facts are simply
restructured and no real new facts exist,
amounts to an abuse of process.
[2]
The applicant was arrested on 4 September
2020 and first applied for bail during October 2020 in the
magistrate’s court of
Cape Town under case number 16/500/2020.
The state and the legal representatives of the applicant agreed that
the provisions of
s 60(11)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977 (“the CPA”) applied and that the applicant had the
onus to adduce
evidence that would show, on a balance of
probabilities, that there are exceptional circumstances which, in the
interest of justice,
would permit the release of the applicant on
bail.
[3]
During December 2020 the bail application
was refused and the applicant filed an appeal against such refusal in
this court under
case number A 71/2021. The bail appeal was refused
during May 2021 by Lekhuleni AJ (as he then was).
[4]
During November 2022, the applicant lodged
an application for special leave to appeal in the Supreme Court of
Appeal against the
finding of Lekhuleni AJ under case number
026/2022. During January 2022 condonation for the late filing of the
application was
granted but the application for special leave to
appeal was dismissed on the grounds that there are no special
circumstances meriting
a further appeal.
[5]
The
applicant then filed this application, based on alleged new facts,
for his release on bail.
[1]
The
record that was placed before this court is voluminous and contained
all the documents (including the parties’ respective
heads of
argument) in the previous bail application, which I carefully
considered in light of the approach to be adopted in an
application
of this nature. I dismissed the application on 22 February 2023.
These are the reasons for my order.
Factual background:
[6]
The applicant was charged with
murder,
robbery with aggravating circumstances as defined in s 1 of the CPA,
robbery with aggravating circumstances as defined in
s 1 of the CPA,
contravention of s 3, read with sections 1, 103, 117, 120(1)(a), s
121, read with schedule 4 and
s 151
of the
Firearms Control Act, 60
of 2000
, and further read with
s 250
of the CPA (unlawful possession
of firearm) and contravention of
s 90
, read with
ss 1
,
103
,
117
,
12
0(1)(a),
s 121
, read with schedule 4 and
s 151
of the
Firearms
Control Act, 60 of 2000
, and further read with
s 250
of the CPA
(unlawful possession of ammunition).
[7]
It is alleged that on 22 February 2020, at
about 11h30, the applicant and a group of seven other males entered
the parking area
of Orms Pro Photo Shop (“Orms”) in
R[...] Street, R[...] S[...], Cape Town in two motor vehicles, namely
a white Polo
with registration number C[...] 6[...] and a silver-grey
Toyota Quest with registration number C[...] 6[...]. The male
suspects
exited the vehicles and approximately three of the males in
the group approached Orms whilst the drivers remained in the
vehicles.
According to an employee of Orms, two men entered the shop,
one of them took out a firearm, cocked it and pointed it towards him
and instructed him and his client to get down on the floor. The
suspects then proceeded to remove cameras and equipment from the
shop. There were employees and members of the public present in the
shop whilst the robbery took place.
[8]
An armed response vehicle entered the
parking lot whilst the robbery was taking place. One of the suspects
approached the vehicle,
took out a firearm and shot and killed the
driver. The suspect proceeded to remove a firearm and ammunition from
the armed response
officer whom he had just shot. The armed response
officer died from the gunshot wound. After the shooting incident all
the suspects
fled the scene in the vehicles.
[9]
The applicant was identified through
security video footage as the driver of one of the getaway vehicles
and was in due course arrested,
being known to the investigating
officer from a previous similar case. According to the state the
video footage shows the applicant
sitting behind the steering wheel
of the silver Toyota getaway vehicle. This is the same vehicle which
a security officer saw four
males climb out of before the robbery
and, the same vehicle used to fled the scene.
[10]
According to the affidavit of Luvuyo
Theodoric Maki, a detective sergeant at the Provincial Organised
Crime Unit in Cape Town, both
vehicles used in the robbery at Orms
belonged to two Uber drivers, one of whom gave a statement to the
police that he lent his
vehicle to one of the suspects. Both these
vehicles were fitted with tracking devices and were soon after the
robbery traced to
a car wash in Dunoon, Milnerton.
[11]
The state relies on video footage obtained
from the parking area and from inside the store, identity parades,
ballistic evidence
and cell phone data, placing the applicant in the
vicinity of where the crime was committed.
Bail application
based on new facts:
[12]
In S v Mpofana
1998 (1) SACR 40
at 44(G –
I) the court explained the approach to be taken in applications for
bail based on new facts as follows:
“
In
considering an application for bail allegedly brought on the strength
of new facts, the court’s approach is to consider
whether there
are, in the first instance, new facts and, if there are, reconsider
the bail application on such new facts, against
the background of the
old facts.”
[13]
In S v Mohammed
1999 (2) SACR 507
(C), the
court stated that “it seems logical that any renewed
application based on new facts or changed circumstances should
only
be able to be properly judged with reference to those facts and
circumstances which were placed before the court in the first
instance. There can of course be no
numerus
clausus
as to the nature of new facts
or changed circumstances that may legitimately warrant the grant of
bail previously refused. The
newly discovered evidence of a witness
who may prove the accused’s innocence, as was in this case, is
an example.”
[14]
In
the matter of Davis and Another v S (2888/2015) [2015] ZAKZDHC 41 (8
May 2015), it was held that: “If the evidence is adjudged
to be
new and relevant, then it must be considered in conjunction with all
the facts placed before the court in previous applications,
and not
separately.
[2]
[15]
The
CPA does not prescribe or define what constitutes new facts and there
is no prescribed procedure for renewed bail applications,
[3]
but it appears with reference to case law, that certain general
principles have been identified as relevant, when a court is faced
with an application for an accused’s release on bail based on
new facts.
[4]
These can be
summarised as:
15.1
Whether
the facts came to light after the bail was refused. Such facts can
include circumstances which have changed since the first
bail
application was brought such as the period that an accused had been
incarcerated;
[5]
15.2
Whether
the facts are ‘sufficiently different in character’ from
the facts presented at the earlier unsuccessful bail
application in
the sense that it should not simply be a “reshuffling of old
evidence”;
[6]
15.3
Whether the alleged new fact(s) are
relevant in the sense that if received by the court, it would
per
se
or together with other facts already
before the court from the initial bail application, assist the court
to consider the release
of an accused afresh;
15.4
A
court hearing an application based on alleged new facts, must
determine, with reference to the evidence previously presented in
the
unsuccessful bail application, whether such facts are indeed new.
[7]
In S v Mpofana
1998 (1) SACR 40
(Tk) at 44 g-45 a Mbenenge AJ (as he
then was) explained that “whilst the new application is not
merely an extension of the
initial one, the court which entertains
the new application should come to a conclusion after considering
whether, viewed in the
light of the facts that were placed before
court in the initial application, there are new facts warranting the
granting of the
bail application”; and
15.5
Where
evidence was known and available to a bail applicant but not
presented by him at the time of his earlier application, such
evidence can generally not be relied upon for purposes of a renewed
bail application as ‘new facts’. In this regard
it was
explained in S v Le Roux en andere
1995 (2) SACR 613
(W) at 622 that
in the absence of such a rule, there could be an abuse of process
leading to unnecessary and repeated bail applications
and that an
accused should not be permitted to seek bail on several successive
occasions by relying on the piecemeal presentation
of evidence. I
agree with the opinion of Van der Meer
[8]
that this rule should not be an absolute or inflexible one and that a
court should be willing to consider why relevant and available
information was not place before the court in the initial
application.
[9]
[16]
Against this background, the new facts that
the applicant requests this court to accept and consider, can be
summarised as follows:
16.1.
The investigation by the state is now
complete;
16.2.
The applicant no longer has any similar
pending cases against him;
16.3.
The applicant has been in custody for more
than two years and he has consequently been unable to develop a
relationship with his
minor children which is to their detriment; and
16.4.
The applicant’s continued
incarceration has led to his ill health which will only deteriorate
further should he not be released
on bail.
Finalisation of the
investigation:
[17]
In paragraph 25 of the applicant’s
initial bail application affidavit, he stated that the investigation
against him “may”
(
sic
)
have been completed, but that the police were still looking for other
suspects.
[18]
In the opposing affidavit to the initial
bail application, detective sergeant Maki stated that he believed
that the applicant, if
released on bail, would hamper the
investigation pertaining to the tracking of the other suspects. He
further stated that the state
has extensive evidence against the
applicant such as video footage, eyewitness statements, cell phone
data, evidence regarding
the tracker systems, ballistics and medical
evidence. The applicant did not in the initial bail application
allege that he was
at a disadvantage when he applied for bail and he
has not alleged in the new affidavit that any information has come to
light due
to the investigation being complete which would cast doubt
on the state’s case as was the case in S v Nwabunwanne (
supra
).
[19]
No information was placed before me as to
whether further suspects were indeed found. Be that as it may, it
appears from the available
information that the investigation was for
all practical purposes complete when the initial bail application was
heard. I do not
regard the finalisation of the investigation to
constitute a new fact for purposes of this application.
Pending cases:
[20]
In the applicant’s initial bail
application, he stated that he only had one pending matter in the
Bellville magistrates court
for robbery with aggravating
circumstances and further that the only time he had a warrant issued
against him was when he could
not attend court due to a heath
condition. I will return to this aspect later in the judgment.
[21]
According to the opposing affidavit of Mr
Maki, the applicant had two pending cases (there appear to have been
some confusion regarding
a further charge) for robbery with
aggravating circumstances. In respect of one of these charges the
applicant was allegedly the
driver during an armed robbery at Camera
World in Bellville during 2019, where a group of suspects also stole
expensive photographic
equipment.
[22]
The presiding officer hearing the
applicant’s initial bail application dealt with the issue of
pending cases on the basis
that the applicant had two pending cases
and that he had allegedly committed the offences he is accused of in
this case, whilst
out on bail in those cases.
[23]
From the new affidavit filed by the
applicant, it is apparent that he indeed had two pending cases for
similar offences and not
one as stated by him initially.
[24]
It appears that during August 2022 the
Bellville matter under case number SH 5/230/2019 was withdrawn due to
the complainant not
being available and the applicant was acquitted
in Bellville case number SH 5/108/2020.
[25]
The state during argument conceded that
that the fact that the applicant no longer has any pending cases,
amounts to a new fact
and I will as a result consider this as a new
fact for purposes of the renewed bail application.
The interests of
the applicant’s minor children:
[26]
The
issue of the impact on the applicant’s minor children, should
he not be released on bail, was raised in his initial bail
application and was also considered by Lekhuleni AJ
[10]
in the bail appeal.
[27]
The interests of minor children were dealt
with in S v Petersen
2008 (2) SACR 355
(C) and it was held at
para 63 at 372i-373a that:
“
When,
in an application for bail, the special circumstances relied on by
the accused include the constitutionally protected interests
of a
minor child, this court must, in terms of s 28(1)(b) of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, take cognisance
of the child's right 'to family care or parental care, or to
appropriate alternative care when removed from the family
environment'.
Inasmuch as a decision in regard to an accused's bail
application and subsequent appeal (if the application is refused)
will, of
necessity, impact upon a child of the accused, it may not be
lost from sight that the child's best interests are, in terms of s
28(2) of the Constitution, paramount. This does not, of course, mean
that such interests will simply override all other legitimate
interests, such as the interests of justice or the public interest.
It must, however, always be taken into consideration as a relevant
factor and a general guideline in assessing such competing rights.”
[28]
The applicant now submits that the fact
that he has been in custody for more than two years due to the trial
not being finalised,
should be considered afresh in the context of
his inability to form or maintain a bond with his very young
children. The delay
in the finalisation of the trial is an
unacceptable but commonly found situation. No evidence was placed
before me to indicate
that the prosecution has been the cause for any
delay, and I can only assume that the delay is mainly as a result of
the overburdened
criminal court rolls. I accept the applicant’s
continued incarceration amounts to changed circumstances and that his
incarceration
has an impact on his minor children, and I will
consider this fact together with all the other facts before me.
The applicant’s
ill-health:
[29]
The applicant states in his founding
affidavit that whilst in custody he contracted tuberculosis in April
2022 and was hospitalised.
He is now on medication and there is
nothing to indicate that he is not receiving adequate medical care.
[30]
Whilst I agree that, in principle a later
medical condition may constitute a new fact for purposes of a renewed
bail application,
I am not convinced, given the factual situation set
out by the applicant in his affidavit, that his medication condition
would
have any influence on the outcome of the renewed bail
application. Insofar as it is a changed circumstance and was not
before the
presiding officer hearing the applicant’s initial
bail application, I will allow and consider the applicant’s
changed
medical condition.
[31]
In light of my findings that there are new
facts and changed circumstances, the question is thus whether these
new facts and circumstances,
together with the facts already before
the court, would justify the release of the applicant on bail.
Has the applicant
shown, on a balance of probabilities, that exceptional circumstances
exist, which, in the interest of justice,
would permit his release on
bail?
[32]
The charges against the applicant fall in
the category of the schedule 6 offences and the bail application in
the court
a quo
was brought in terms of section 60(11)(a) which provides that:
“
Notwithstanding
any provision of this Act, where an accused is charged with an
offence referred to in Schedule 6, the court shall
order that the
accused be detained in custody until he or she is dealt with in
accordance with the law, unless the accused, having
been given a
reasonable opportunity to do so, adduces evidence which satisfies the
court that exceptional circumstances exist which
in the interest of
justice permit his or her release.”
[33]
As
correctly pointed out by Binns-Ward J in the matter of Killian v The
State
[11]
the effect of s 60
(11) (a) was exhaustively discussed and elucidated in the
Constitutional Court’s judgment of S v Dlamini;
S v Dladla; S v
Joubert; S v Schietekat 1999(2) SACR 51 (CC) and an onus is imposed
on an applicant for bail to adduce evidence
to prove to the
satisfaction of the court the existence of exceptional circumstances
justifying his release on bail. Furthermore,
the court must be
satisfied that the release of the accused is in the interest of
justice and the standard proof is on a balance
of probabilities.
[34]
It
has further been held that exceptional denotes something “unusual,
extraordinary, remarkable, peculiar or simply different
(see S v
Petersen 2008 (2) SACR355 (C) Se v Josephs
2001 (1) SACR 659
(c) at
6681 and S v Viljoen
2002 (2) SACR 550
SCA.
[12]
[35]
I do not intend to again summarise the
personal circumstances of the applicant save to add that the
applicant suffers from tuberculosis
for which he receives medication.
The personal circumstances of the applicant do not in my view
constitute exceptional circumstances.
[36]
For the reasons already on record, I agree
with the findings of the presiding magistrate in the initial bail
application, that the
state,
prima
facie,
has a strong case against the
applicant. In this regard Lekhuleni AJ held as follows at para 20 of
his judgment: “The record
reveals that the magistrate in the
court below considered the real evidence in the form of photographs,
cell phone location based
evidence, corroborating evidence in
photograph identification parade which identified both appellants as
the alleged perpetrators
of the crime….The magistrate also
considered the photograph identification parage which connected the
appellants to the
charges levelled against them and came to the
conclusion that the State has a strong
prima
facie
case against both appellants. In
my view the finding of the court a quo in this regard is spot on and
cannot be faulted. I agree
with the view expressed by the court below
that at least
prima facie
,
the State case against both appellants is considerably strong”.
[37]
More importantly in my view, is the fact
the applicant had,
prima facie
,
placed false evidence before the court in the initial bail
application. In this regard it appears from the record that the
applicant
had raised an
alibi
defence and had stated that he did not commit the offences he is
charged with as he was receiving treatment from a traditional
healer
at the time the robbery had taken place. In support of this
allegation, he attached a medical certificate from a Mr Pama,
which
indicated that the applicant was receiving treatment from him for the
period 22 January 2020 until 25 February 2020. On further
investigation by the state, an affidavit was obtained from Mr Pama,
and placed before the court during the initial bail proceedings.
In
the affidavit, Mr Pama states that the applicant’s mother had
approached him as her son was in trouble for not attending
court and
that he had then issued the medical certificate on her request. It
further transpired that the applicant had used this
very same medical
certificate in the proceedings which took place in the Bellville
regional court, in order to prove that he was
not wilfully absent
from court in those proceedings on 24 January 2020.
[38]
In the bail appeal the court held in this
regard as follows: “It was argued that this court should not
attach much weight
to this statement as the credibility of Mr Pama is
questionable and that the circumstances under which the statement was
obtained
are not known. In my view, this document forms part of first
appellant’s defence. It was filed as an annexure to the first
appellant’s affidavit and it forms part of this record. This
affidavit was intended to be used by the first appellant in
support
of his
alibi
defence which in turn supported his averment that the State’s
case against him is weak. If the first appellant intends to
challenge
the circumstances under which this statement was obtained, the first
appellant is at liberty to do so during trial. In
my considered view,
and
ex facie
the document, I am in agreement with the findings by the court
a
quo
that the medical certificate was
obtained by fraudulent means in a quest to mislead the court. I also
agree with the views expressed
by the magistrate that the first
appellant misled the Bellville regional court by submitting a medical
certificate that he was
sick when in fact he was not. This is
indicative of the fact that if he is released on bail he is likely to
evaded (sic) justice”
[39]
The serious charges the applicant is
facing, originates from a robbery which took place whilst the
applicant was on bail facing
similar charges. It is in my view of
little consequence that these charges had subsequently been withdrawn
or that the applicant
had been acquitted of the other pending charge.
The fact remains that the applicant is accused, on strong evidence,
of committing
serious offences and further provided false information
during both proceedings, all whilst out on bail.
[40]
Section 60(4)(d) read with s 60(8)(a) of
the CPA dictates that when an accused knowingly provided false
information at the time
of his or her arrest or during bail
proceedings, it would show that there is a likelihood that an
accused, if he or she were to
be released on bail, would undermine or
jeopardize the objectives or the proper functioning of the criminal
justice system. The
applicant supplied false information in his bail
application and at a warrant enquiry as aforesaid. I therefore find
that the state
has established that s 60(4)(d) of the CPA is
applicable insofar as the applicant’s release on bail would
undermine the proper
functioning of the criminal justice system. I
further find that there is a likelihood that the applicant, if
released on bail,
would commit schedule 1 offences as contemplated in
s 60(4)(a).
[41]
The question of a detainee’s
ill-health due to conditions in our prisons was considered in the
matter of S v Mpofana
1998 (1) SACR 40
(TK) and it was stated in this
regard, as follows:
“
Upon
a proper construction of s 35(2)(e) and (f) of the said Constitution,
one whose detention has been pronounced lawful and in
the interests
of justice cannot simply resort to a further bail application merely
because he has been detained under inhumane
and degrading conditions
or on the ground that his right to consult with a doctor of his own
choice has been infringed. It is,
however, available to such person
firstly to apply to the prison authorities concerned and call upon
them to remedy whatever complaints
he/she has with regard to the
conditions of his/her detention. Should the prison authorities fail
to remedy such complaints, it
is available to the detainee concerned
either to challenge the detention before a court of law as being
unconstitutional or obtain
a court interdict to force the prison
authorities to comply with the law. In any event, in
hoc
casu
, the magistrate has, quite
correctly in my view, ordered that the prisons officials should
afford appellant the right to consult
with a medical practitioner of
his choice and appellant's concern in this regard should be laid to
rest.”
[42]
The applicant on his own version is
receiving adequate medical treatment and has placed no facts before
the court to substantiate
his statement that his health would
deteriorate further should he remain in custody pending trial.
[43]
As
to the issue of the delay in the finalisation of the trial, I point
out that new facts or changed circumstances will not have
the same
effect in every bail application on new facts as the cumulative
effect of the facts in each bail application may differ.
Whilst a
delay in one matter may tilt the scales in favour of an applicant in
some circumstances, it does not necessarily have
the same effect in
others.
[13]
The
prima
facie
case
for the state, the fact that the applicant
prima
facie
placed false information before the court and had allegedly committed
the crimes of murder and armed robbery as part of a group,
whilst out
on bail, override the factors raised by the applicant, including the
legitimate interests of the minor children (whom
do not appear to
have been left without care) and the delay. The interest of justice
therefore does not permit the release of the
applicant on bail.
[44]
In the circumstances and having considered
the evidence in the initial bail application together with the new
facts which were placed
before me, I could not find on the totality
of the evidence, that the applicant had established a case to permit
his release on
bail in terms of s 60 (11) (a) of the CPA.
A De Wet
Acting Judge of the
High Court
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Adv L Ngoza
Anthony
Berinato Attorney-at-law
berinato@asblaw.co.za
On
behalf of the State:
Director of Public Prosecutions: Western Cape
Adv.
Gertse
CGertse@npa.gov.za
[1]
The
pending trial was transferred to this court
.
[2]
See
S v Vermaas
1996 (1) SACR 528
(T) at 531e-g; S v Mpofana
1998 (1)
SACR 40
(Tk) at 44g-45a; S v Mohammed
1999 (2) SACR 507
(C)
[1999] 4
All SA 533)
at 511a-d.
[3]
See
S v De Villiers
1996 (2) SACR 122
(T) at 124i – 125c
[4]
See
Criminal
Justice Review, No 2 of 2017, “New facts” for purposes
of a renewed bail application: Principles, issues
and procedures by
Steph van der Meer.
[5]
In S v Mousse
2015 (3) NR 800
(HC) at para 7 the court held that the
passage of considerable time coupled with the state’s failure
to make progress with
the investigation of the case can be qualified
as a new fact. Also see in this regard S v Hitschmann
2007 (2) SACR
110(ZH)
at 113b
[6]
See
S v Mohamed
1999 (2) SACR 507
(C) at 512 and S v Petersen
2008 (2)
SACR 355
(C) at [57]
[7]
See
S v Vermaas
1996 (1) SACR 528(T)
at 531
e-g
where
Van Dijkhorst J reiterated the principles set out in S v Acheson
1991 (2) SA 805
(NmHC) 821 F-H, as “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
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, ne w and
old, and on the totality come to a conclusion”.
[8]
Criminal Justice Review (
supra
)
[9]
See S v Nwabunwanne 2017(2) SACR 124(NCK) where it was held at para
27, that a court “should not lightly” deny a
bail
applicant the opportunity to present new facts.
[10]
Judgment, paragraphs 7.5 and 18, Case number A 71/21.
[11]
Case
A 87/2021
[12]
In
in S v Bruintjies 2003 (2) SACR (SCA) at paragraph 6 exceptional
circumstances was defined as follows: “What is required
is
that the court consider all relevant factors and determine whether
individually or cumulatively they warrant a finding that
circumstances of an exceptional nature exist which justify his or
her release … If, upon an overall assessment, the court
is
satisfied that circumstances sufficiently out of the ordinary to be
deemed exceptional have been established by the appellant,
consistent with the interests of justice, warrant his release, the
appellant must be granted bail.”
[13]
See
for example S v Acheson (
supra
)
and S v Ali
2011 (1) SACR 34
(ECP)
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