Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 252South Africa
S v Minnaar (CC68/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 252 (3 October 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Minnaar (CC68/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 252 (3 October 2023)
S v Minnaar (CC68/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 252 (3 October 2023)
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3IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION. CAPE TOWN
# CASE
NO:CC68/2020
CASE
NO
:
CC68/2020
DATE
:
2023.10.03
In
the matter between
# THE STATE
THE STATE
and
MARVIN
MINNAAR
Accused
JUDGMENT
NZIWENI.
J:
[1]
This tragic case arises out of a horrific
killing of a boy.
The
deceased, S[...]D[...], ("S[...]"), a 12-year-old boy who
went missing on Wednesday, 26 February 2020.
His grandmother last saw him alive at their
home at Goniwe Street in lmizamo Yethu, Hout Bay on Wednesday, 26
February 2020 at 3
P.M. S[...]'s grandmother has since passed away.
[2]
The evidence produced in this trial reveals
that S[...]was last seen alive in the presence of Mr Minnaar,
hereinafter referred to
as the accused, on 26 February 2020 around
quarter to 7 P.M. On Thursday,
27
February 2020, S[...]'s grandmother filed a missing person report to
the police at the Hout Bay Police Station.
The disappearance of S[...]sparked
extensive search operations involving the police and community
members.
[3]
At some point, the accused also took part
in the collective effort to try to find the missing boy.
Two days later, on Friday morning of 28
February 2020, after scouring the horse trail and its surrounding
areas for hours, the police
found off a horse trail in the reeds in
Manchester Road, Hout Bay, the completely naked body of S[...].
The medical evidence reveals
inter
alia
that the body had a contusion in
the anal area and the neck had ligature marks around it.
The postmortem report reveals further that
S[...]died due to strangulation.
[4]
The area where the body was found is a
wetland with dense and thick reeds.
The
body laid face down on the stomach with arms slightly underneath the
body.
The
postmortem
also
shows the rest of S[...]'s
body also had multiple abrasions and a
blunt force injury to the left eye.
Various
items of clothing were found strewn near the surrounding area where
his body was found.
The
clothing was identified as belonging to S[...], save for the
underpants.
[5]
The accused, who also lived with his
grandfather and his uncle in lmizamo Yethu, was arrested on Friday,
28 February 2020.
The
witnesses in this trial have used the area name "lmizamo Yethu"
and "Mandela Park" interchangeably throughout
this
judgment.
At the
critical
time,
the
accused was the coach of the Snipers
(basketball team) of Hout Bay.
[6]
The State preferred three charges against
the accused.
The
first count is that of kidnapping of the deceased.
Count 2 is that of rape and count 3 is that
of murder.
In
respect of counts 2 and 3, the state invoked the provisions of
Section 51(1) of the Criminal Amendment Act, Act 105 of 1997.
Thus, the state alleges life imprisonment
is applicable to both counts 2 and 3.
Accused, represented by Mr Brand throughout
these proceedings,
pleaded
not guilty to all the charges preferred against him.
Pursuant to the accused's not guilty pleas,
he, the accused, elected not to tender any plea explanation as
contemplated in
Section 115
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
,
the
Criminal Procedure Act hereinafter
referred to as the act.
[7]
Admissions
were,
however,
made
on
behalf
of
the
accused. Predominantly, the admissions made
by the accused were formal admissions pertaining to the identity of
the deceased, where
the deceased stayed, the deceased's last sighting
by the family, the contents of the postmortem report, photographs of
the crime
scene and the deceased's body as found on the crime scene,
injuries on the body of the deceased, exhibits collected by Sgt
Avontuur
at the crime scene.
[8]
The
State,
in
its
endeavours
to
prove
its
case
against
the
accused,
called 17 witnesses and presented, amongst others, evidence of
pre-trial
statements
made by the accused, CCTV footage from the horse trail and still
photographs
that
the
police
took
from
the
horse
trail,
CCTV
footage, photographs depicting the Snipers
of Hout Bay basketball teams 2015 kits and maps of roads.
[9]
During this trial, various
trials-within-a-trial were held to determine admissibility of the
evidence that the state intended to
present.
The evidence involved a confession, a
pointing out and a search at the house of the accused for the clothes
that the accused wore
on 26 February 2020.
After the parties had presented evidence
and argument in the various trial-within-a-trials, I then intimated
that reasons for the
ruling would be furnished in this judgment.
[10]
At the conclusion of the trials-within-the-trial, both parties
expressly agreed that the evidence
of the witnesses in the
trial-within-a-trial could be incorporated and carried over to the
main trial. Consequently, in this trial,
the evidence of various
trial-within-a-trial forms part of the main trial. Thus, it was not
necessary to recall some of the state
witnesses who testified in the
trial within-a-trial to come and repeat their evidence in the
main trial.
[11]
Turning to the evidence which was led by the state in the main trial.
S[...]'s father,
W[…] N[…],
testified that at
the relevant time, S[...] was staying with his mother. He last saw
S[...] alive sometime on Wednesday between
2 P.M. and 3 P.M., at the
end of school day, when S[...] was on a school transportation
en
route
home. On Thursday, he received a call from his
mother telling him that S[...]did not sleep at home. No one in his
family knew where
S[...] slept. His mother was the last one to see
S[...] going to play.
[12]
He joined the search team looking for
S[...].
They also
went to look for the accused and they met him on the street.
At a critical time, he [S[...]'s father]
was not well acquainted to the accused.
He
only knew the accused from seeing him around in lmizamo Yethu.
He found out where the accused lived during
the search for S[...].
To
get to the accused's house, from his mother's home, a person passes
two houses.
Then
a person walks around the corner and passes two streets.
The accused's house would be found on the
left.
[13]
According to him, the accused's house is
located as depicted in Exhibit "K".
There are two alternate routes to get to
his mother's house from the police station.
One route is to go through the Main Road
and the other one is through the informal settlement.
In either route used, his mother's house
would be the first one to be reached compared to the one of the
accused.
[14]
During the search, the accused approached
him.
They
informed the accused that they were looking for him as they believed
that he was the last person to be seen with S[...].
Amongst other things, the accused informed
them that he separated with S[...] at the police station.
The accused said he used the steps, the
route through the informal settlement, and S[...] used the Main Road.
When he asked the accused why they
separated at the police station as they were going towards the same
direction, the accused did
not give any clear response.
[15]
The accused joined the search team.
He and the accused both walked to the
police station.
At
the police station, they met the police officer who was part of the
search.
After the
police officer had spoken to the accused, they went to the house of
the accused to conduct a search.
[16]
The accused and his stepfather came to his
S[...]'s grandmother's house Friday morning to inquire whether they
had found S[...].
He
was the one who opened the door for them.
He knew the accused stepfather very well.
S[...]'s body was found by the police on Friday.
He identified the clothing item depicted on
Exhibit "D" as belonging to S[...], save for the
underpants. Briefly, that
was his testimony.
[17]
The state called
Bryn
Mbulawa
who testified that he has been
living in lmizamo Yethu since 2009.
He
knows the accused very well, even before they established the
basketball club.
At
that juncture, they used to practice basketball informally.
The accused would come with other children
and join them in their practice.
That
was around 2013.
The
accused developed a passion for basketball.
According to him, a basketball team has 12
players. The player numbers
start
from four to 15.
[18]
The basketball club called Hout Bay Snipers
was formally established in 2015.
In
the same year, they received their first kit with their club's name.
The vest of the team had the team's traditional colours
that were
royal blue and an orange number on the front left-hand side of the
chest and at the back. The vest was a V-neck with
white trims around
the V-neck outline.
The
vest had orange stripes on both sides.
The
sleeveless vest had white trims on the armholes.
The 2015 kit had one number seven vest.
He identified the 2015 kit as the one
depicted in Exhibit "2".
[19]
The kit also included a pair of shorts with
numbers on the front.
The
2015 kit size was a mistake because it was not the size for the
children.
The
size was an adult male size.
After
one season, the oversized kit was changed as it embarrassed the
children.
Most of
the 2015 old kit was returned to the accused to keep at his house.
In 2017 and 2018, the boys team got new
kits. In 2018, the accused became the coach for the under 12 and the
under 14 boys.
In
2020, the team had three coaches that included the accused, himself
and Ronald.
[20]
In 2020, the practice sessions started at 5
P.M. at Hout Bay Sports Complex.
During
summer season, they train from 5 P.M. until 7 P.M. The sport complex
is right opposite the police station.
On the Main Road there is a small gate to
access the sport complex.
Then
there is a main gate which is normally used by vehicles.
On 26 February 2020, there was a practice.
He arrived at the practice between 20 past
5:00 P.M. and 5:00 P.M.
When
he arrived at the sports complex, there was chaos.
Both the accused and Ronald were not at the
premises.
He did
not know why the other two coaches were not there.
[21]
After he had restored order, he went to the
girls team and the senior boys were busy with the junior
boys.
When
he looked
at the
direction of the small gate, he noticed the accused entering the gate
and coming towards the direction of the court where
they trained.
He thinks he saw the accused before 6 P.M.
He estimated that the time to be 5:30 P.M.
or 5:40 P.M.
When
he saw the accused entering through the small gate, he [the accused]
wore their old basketball kit that is depicted on Exhibit
"2",
their first kit.
He
specifically remembers this.
[22]
According to him, the accused was the only
coach who still wore the old vest.
Though
he did not pay too much attention to the accused, he noticed the
accused coming and passing through the basketball court
and heading
towards the direction of the skateboard park.
That was the last time he saw the accused
that day.
As he
was the only coach present, the older boys had to monitor the under
12 and the under 14 teams that were supposed to have been
coached by
the accused.
About
10 to 15 minutes later, Ronald arrived and came to greet him.
Ronald went to coach the girls and he went
to the boys.
According
to him, had the accused coached the children that day, he would have
seen him.
[23]
He also testified that normally, when one
of them arrives and finds another one already there, the one arriving
late would go and
greet.
On
Thursday, the police came to his work.
One
of the police identified himself as Mpateni.
He was informed that one of his players was
missing.
When he
was informed that the missing player was S[...] he did not recognise
that name as belonging to a member of his club.
On the same day, when he came from work,
he found the accused
and
Ronald
at the
basketball
court.
The
police were questioning the accused.
The
accused told him that he went with S[...] to the pharmacy and they
parted ways at the police station.
That
evening, training was cancelled due to the weather.
[24]
He, the accused, and Ronald joined the
search party looking for S[...].
He
knows where the accused and S[...] stayed.
Their houses are not far from one another.
The houses are two streets away from each
other and they are on a straight line.
A
person on either yard can see another from their respective yards.
When Exhibit "2" was shown to
him, he testified that the vest worn by the person depicted on
picture '9' looks exactly
like the vest of their basketball kit.
According to him, this is so because he
could identify the logo of their club on the vest depicted on the
picture, the number seven,
as well as the white sleeves.
Everything on the vest depicted in picture
number '9' is the same as their vest.
[25]
On picture '13', he could clearly see that
the number depicted on it is number 'seven'.
On picture number '14', he could clearly
identify the top as theirs.
He
could even see the orange stripe on the side.
According to him, this is so because the
camera was focused above the individuals.
On picture '15', he identifies the orange
number seven as their 2015 kit.
On
picture '17', he identifies number seven on the vest.
However, according to him, the camera made
the number seven to look whitish instead of orange. He also testified
that he could not
clearly see the logo and the word "Snipers"
on
the
vest
depicted
on
Exhibit
"2".
However,
when
looking
at
the
logo
depicted on the vest in image '21' of the Exhibit, he gets an
impression that it is their logo.
It
is his testimony that even though there is a blurred black mark in
the image where the Sniper's logo is supposed to be on the
vest
depicted in the image, image '21', there are still sufficient
features of resemblance that made him to believe that the vest
depicted in the image is the one of their old 2015 vest.
He mentioned the reddish flame and the
orange ball, the word "Snipers" are visible on image '21'.
He also testified that in the past five
years he had never encountered
a
basketball team with a vest like theirs.
[26]
The next witness for the State was
Ronald
Ningomashe.
It
is his testimony that he was also a coach for Hout Bay Snipers.
On 26 February 2020,
he
arrived
late
at
the
training.
When
he
arrived
at
the
training,
Mr Mbulawa was already at the training.
He
saw the accused arriving at their training place.
He stated that he noticed the accused
standing at the big gate and that was the last time he saw him [the
accused], that day.
He
saw the accused again the next day around 3 P.M. at a high school
training.
[27]
On the same day the accused and him met up
with S[...]'s family while on their way going to the sports complex
and returning from
the high school training.
S[...]'s family stopped them and they said
they were looking for S[...].
They
told the accused that they heard that he was the last person to be
seen with S[...] and asked him to go to the neighbourhood
Watch with
them.
The accused
told the neighbourhood Watch people that he parted ways with S[...]at
the police station and they then went their separate
ways.
[28]
The accused was asked to go to the police
station and everyone went with the accused to the police station.
At the police station only the accused and
S[...]'s family went inside.
After
that they went to the sports complex and training
was
dismissed.
They
then
helped
with
a
search.
It
was
his testimony that before you get to the
accused's place, you go past S[...]'s house and that is the safest
route.
[29]
The state also presented evidence of
Gregorio Biagi
.
At this trial Biagi testified under oath by
way of video conferencing because he could not travel to trial.
Biagi was studying full time in Italy
during this trial, hence he could not attend the trial.
In the instant case, both the defence and
the state did not have any objection or reservations to the use of
the procedure.
The
Court was also satisfied that, in the circumstances, it would be
convenient and necessary to save costs to make use of video
conferencing.
Thus,
this Court used its discretion to order that the evidence of Biagi be
heard by video conferencing.
[30]
Through the video conferencing, this Court
and the parties could fully observe Biagi as he testified.
Biagi testified that at the relevant time,
he knew the accused, as the accused used to coach basketball at his
school.
He was
familiar with the accused because he used to go frequently to the
skateboard park.
On
26 February 2020, he finished work at 5:00 P.M. He then went to the
skateboard with friends.
He
arrived at the skateboard park between 5:15 and 5:20 P.M. Whilst at
the skateboard park, he saw the accused walking from The
reeds [horse
trail] towards the skateboard park.
[31]
When the accused went past the skateboard
park, they greeted each other and he, the accused, headed towards the
basketball court.
Around
quarter to 7:00
P.M.,
he
finished skating and proceeded to his car in the parking lot.
The accused, who was in company of an
unknown boy, came to his car and asked for a lift to Clicks.
He gave the accused and the boy the lift
and they sat in the back seat.
The
boy appeared to be stressed or anxious. He thought that this was
because the child was uncomfortable getting a lift from someone
he
did not know.
The
boy did not greet and was quiet throughout the trip.
[32]
The accused informed him that the boy was
his little brother and that he needed to buy an asthma pump for his
grandfather.
The
accused was wearing the Sniper's basketball vest that was blue and
orange.
He cannot
recall what pants he was wearing.
He
dropped the accused and the little boy off at Mainstream Mall where
Clicks was.
The
boy was still very quiet, uncomfortable, and looking down.
When he heard about the missing boy in Hout
Bay, he did not immediately make a connection between that and the
boy who was in his
car.
[33]
On Sunday, he heard that a basketball coach
was arrested, but still he did not make any connection between what
happened on 26 February
2020 and the arrest.
He became
aware
of the accused's
arrest
on Monday when he saw a post on social media of the murdered child.
He recognised him as a boy he gave a lift
to.
[34]
Turning
to
the
testimony
of
the
pathologist. The
pathologist,
Dr
Bronwyn Afton Inglis
, testified that
she specialises in forensic pathology. She has been practicing as a
pathologist since 2018.
She
has performed thousands of autopsies.
She
was called in by the police to attend a death scene in Hout Bay.
On Friday 28 February 2020, at 2: 21P.M.,
she visited the crime scene.
She
stated that the death scene was amongst tall reeds off Manchester
Road in Hout Bay.
S[...]'s
body was pointed to her by Warrant Officer Lesch.
[35]
On the crime scene, she observed linear
marks all the way around the neck, consistent with ligature marks.
There were also abrasions to the neck.
According to her, the linear marks were in keeping with when a
ligature or some object that
can go around the neck, had been in
contact with the neck. She opined that the linear marks were not
consistent with manual strangulation.
There
was no evidence of manual strangulation.
Some of the linear lines on the neck had
crisscrossed each other.
It
appeared as if the object that was used to tie around the neck went
around it twice.
[36]
According to her, a thin piece of material
would be able to go around the neck more than once and it could
possibly crisscross it.
She
found a hemorrhage directly underneath where abrasions were on the
skin.
It was her
testimony that the pressure that was applied to S[...]'s skin had
extended to the underlying muscle.
As
a result, the underlying muscle was injured by the force that was
applied to the neck and that is why there was blood in the
neck
muscle.
[37]
It was her testimony that there must have
been some sort of force applied in order to be able to injure the
muscle around the neck
like that.
She
also observed abrasions to the back, the right arm, the right thigh,
as well as the buttocks.
The
abrasions were scattered over a significant part of the front and the
back of S[...]'s body.
The
pathologist concluded that the surrounding vegetation where the body
was found most likely cause the abrasions.
She stated that this was in keeping with a
naked body in struggle contacting a rough surface.
[38]
She also testified that the numerous
abrasions inflicted on various parts of S[...]'s body suggest some
sort of movement and motion
during their infliction.
The injuries were consistent with a
struggle on the ground.
She
opined further that the infliction of the abrasions caused S[...] to
suffer obvious pain. She conducted an autopsy on the body
of S[...]
on 2 March 2020.
Signs
of decomposition were present.
When
she examined the anus at the scene, it appeared to be dilated.
The anus looked wider than it was supposed
to. Upon inspection of the anal canal and the rectum at the autopsy,
she observed a purple
contusion or bruise measuring four millimetres
by two millimetres.
[39]
The contusion was noted at the one o
clock region.
With the body on its back, the contusion
would appear at the one o
clock
position.
Above
the contusion,
there
was a little bit of redness
in the mucosa
and
that was what she described as a congestion.
The congestion was located on the
right-hand side in a nine o
clock
position.
Her
training has taught her that in children congestion could be a soft
sign of some sort of injury to the mucosa of the vagina
or a rectum,
but it can also
be non-pathological.
The contusion
was
located
inside the anus in the rectum.
[40]
She stated that it was an unusual place to
find a bruise because
it
is a protected area of the body that is unlikely to be internally
injured.
She
stated that in her experience, the only thing that comes out of the
rectum in the opposite direction is the stool.
She testified further that the stool does
not typically cause a focal bruise or a contusion like that on the
rectum.
Although
she acknowledged that there could be chronic injuries to mucosa in
the rectum, she stated that a chronic injury would present
a
laceration or a healed scar.
The
laceration could happen when a person passes a hard stool.
When a chronic injury is fresh, it presents
a laceration and when the laceration has healed, it will present a
scar.
[41]
It was her testimony that in this case, she
examined the anus of the child.
When
she examined the anus of the child, she did not see any laceration.
She concluded that in this case, it can be
excluded that a stool had caused the contusion.
It was her testimony that a contusion is
caused by an applied blunt force that causes injury to the underlying
blood vessels and
this causes blood to ooze into the surrounding
tissue.
She
concluded that there was evidence of penetration of the anus by an
external object penetrating into the
anus.
She
also
testified
that
the
penetration
by
penis
or digital
[finger] cannot be excluded.
[42]
Dr Inglis stated that the injuries she
observed on S[...]'s body did not have any evidence of healing.
She opined that all the injuries she
observed on S[...] were fresh or recently inflicted on the body.
However, she could not give any exact or
specific time.
She
concluded
that
the cause of death was consistent with ligature strangulation and the
consequence thereof.
[43]
I now turn to deal with State witness
Marco
Alfino Avontuur.
He
testified that he works for the unit of the South African Police
Service called the Provincial Crime Scene Investigation.
His work involves collection of evidence of
crime scenes.
He
got information about a body of a boy that was found in between the
reeds in Hout Bay.
He
visited the crime scene in Manchester Street, Hout Bay.
He arrived on the scene at 11:40 A.M.
At the scene he met Warrant Officer Lesch
and Warrant Officer Oosthuizen.
[44]
On the scene he did a walk through and then
he took a video recording, Exhibit "Y", and photos of the
crime scene.
The
scene had reeds which were about 2.5 metres long.
He saw S[...]'s body on the scene and the
body was surrounded by reeds.
He
also collected evidence on the scene. The collected items were:
1.
toilet paper, approximately four metres
from S[...]'s body;
2.
a child blue tracksuit pants;
3.
a child size navy blue shirt;
4.
a
pair of black,
red and green slippers, approximately 30 centimetres apart; and
5.
child underpants.
[45]
He also discovered a body which was in the
same path as the toilet paper and the blue tracksuit pants.
The distance between the navy-blue T
shirt and the blue tracksuit pants was about five metres.
The distance between the navy-blue T-shirt
and the toilet paper was approximately 1.5 metres. Shortly, that was
his testimony.
[46]
The next witness for the state was
Warrant
Officer D Lesch
.
He testified that he is stationed at the
Hout Bay Police Station.
When
he started work on 28 February 2020, they were briefed about the
missing 12-year-old boy.
The
sports field is two minutes from the police station.
He and other police officials did foot
patrols at the reeds in a wetland area with dense reeds. According to
him, the wetland area
is quite big and isolated.
There is also a horse trail on it.
He testified that members of the community
walked through the area from Victoria Road to Princess Road and ride
horses.
[47]
As they were doing patrols, they went past
the sports field.
They
also went through the horse trail and got to the grass footpath that
led up to Manchester Road.
Their
team then split and walked towards different spots. He went into a
path and four metres into the path he noticed a pair of
blue
tracksuit pants.
He
stopped at the tracksuit pants and when he looked up he saw a naked
body lying face down.
The
time was about 7:40 AM.
[48]
He thought that it was the missing boy.
He then handed over the scene to Warrant
Officer Oosthuizen.
He
left the scene around 2:00P.M.
It
was his testimony that people frequently use the horse trail to walk
through it from Victoria Road to Princess Road.
He testified that the Mainstream mall is
close to Princess Road and lmizamo Yethu is close to Victoria Road.
He also testified that it will be a long
way for people from lmizamo Yethu to use the path through the reeds
to walk from the shopping
center to lmizamo
Yethu. By foot it takes an extra eight to
10 minutes from lmizamo Yethu to the Mainstream Mall.
[49]
According to him, the quickest road to take
to go to lmizamo Yethu from the Mainstream Mall is through the Main
Road.
Notwithstanding
that, there are people who use the path through the reeds to walk
from lmizamo Yethu to the Mainstream Mall.
Shortly, that was his testimony.
[50]
Sgt Van Der Westhuizen
testified that she is a member of South
African Police Service stationed at Hout Bay Police Station.
She works as an exhibit management
official.
There
are two routes from
Mainstream
mall
to lmizamo Yethu.
The
Main Road is shorter than the route through the reeds. The walk from
Mainstream Mall along Main Road at the beginning of lmizamo
Yethu,
takes between 20 to 30 minutes.
On
the other hand, a walk from Mainstream mall along the horse trail to
lmizamo Yethu takes between 30 and 40 minutes.
[51]
On Friday, 28 February 2020, she was also
part of the team that went to search for S[...].
She was present when S[...]'s body was
found. Whilst at the crime scene, they were informed that a suspect
was taken in for questioning.
On
her arrival at the police station, angry community members had
gathered there, seeking answers.
That's
a
brief synopsis
of
her
testimony.
[52]
Lieutenant Colonel J Lawrence
then testified.
He
testified that he is a member of the South African Police Service,
stationed at Muizenberg Police as an Acting Station Commander.
At the time of the incident, he was
stationed at
Hout
Bay
Police
Station
and
his
rank
was
that
of
captain.
On 28 February 2020, around 20 to 8 A.M.,
he received a message from Lesch that they had found the body.
He proceeded to the crime scene.
The crime scene area is notorious for being
used by criminals.
As
a result, the neighbourhood watch had recently installed surveillance
cameras to monitor criminal activities.
A
security company based in Hout Bay monitored the cameras.
According to him, the installation of the
cameras within the horse trail improved its security.
[53]
He then instructed a detective, Detective
Oosthuizen, to go and determine from the security company whether
there is any video surveillance
footage of the area available.
It was also his testimony that in terms of
safety, it would be recommended to use the trail with the cameras
during daytime. During
cross examination, he testified that a walk
from Hout Bay CBD to lmizamo
Yethu
through the Main Road is a shortcut and quicker than a walk through
the horse trail.
Briefly,
that was his testimony.
[54]
The state also called
Warrant
Officer Alistair Claassen.
He
testified that he is a member of the South African Police Service
attached to the Investigative Psychology Unit.
His duties entailed providing investigative
assistance to detectives.
In
this case, he was requested
inter alia,
to create a timeline connected to the
movements for the person that the State alleges to be the accused in
the footage concerned.
He
made use of Google Earth and Google Maps to point out certain key
points that were provided by the
footage.
[55]
He also received the address of the accused
and that of S[...].
He
also used CCTV footage.
It
is his testimony that from the evidence provided to him, he provided
possible routes that were possibly taken.
He testified that the
shortest
route
from
the
skateboard
park
to
Mainstream
Mall
is
1.88 kilometres.
The
skateboard park is at Mandela Park, also known as lmizamo Yethu, and
the mall is in Princess Road.
Using
a vehicle, the shortest route would be to go down the Main Road.
The drive with a motor vehicle would be
less than two minutes.
[56]
The mall can also be reached by taking an
alternate route, by turning left into Mandela Road, then going left
down Empire Road.
This
route leads straight
down
to Princess Road again.
If
a person turns left into it, it will take a little bit longer because
the distance is mapped down to 2.49 kilometres.
tt a person walks from Clicks to Mandela
Park, the shortest route is through Main Road.
An alternative
route for walking
from Clicks is through the horse trail.
Along Princess
Road
there are
surveillance
cameras. Before the footpath where the body
was found, there is also a surveillance camera placed there.
[57]
If a person goes into that footpath, where
the body was found, the person will end up ln Manchester Road.
There is also another CCTV camera looking
down into that path.
According
to him, the surveillance footage, which had timestamp of 6:01:56
P.M.
showed the footpath towards Manchester
Road leading to the scene of the crime.
[58]
The first image in the vicinity between the
reeds is that of a suspect with an unknown boy as depicted in picture
2 of Exhibit "J".
At
the time stamp, 6:03
P.M.,
the
footage from Manchester CCTV camera depicts the suspect and an
unknown child walking towards Manchester Road.
The footage also depicts that the suspect
had his arm around the child's neck.
The
suspect is wearing a blue vest and shorts.
The unknown child is wearing shorts.
[59]
He testified that a few minutes later the
suspect and the unknown child turn around.
According to Claassen, when the suspect in
the footage turns around coming back, a number that looked like seven
is depicted at
the back. The suspect and the unknown child are
depicted on the footage continuing on a horse trail in the direction
of Princess
Road.
[60]
At timestamp 6:34P.M., they are captured by
the camera that faces towards the footpath in the direction of
Mandela Road.
The
camera captures them coming from Princess Road towards Mandela Road
and the skateboard park. According to him, as depicted by
picture 9
to 11 of Exhibit "J", [ the still images from the
surveillance video], this is the last image of the two individuals
in
the footage.
[61]
He testified further that around
40
minutes later
, the surveillance video
depicts the same suspect in company of a different child.
The second child is taller than the first
one and had different clothing on.
The
video surveillance footage shows that at approximately 7: 30 P.M.,
the suspect with a second child, they were walking from Princess
Road
direction towards Mandela Road. The suspect was wearing the same
clothes, a blue vest with the number seven on the back.
The child had on blue or turquoise
tracksuit pants as shown in image 16 of EXHIBIT J.
[62]
The timestamp 7:14 P.M. depicts the suspect
walking on the horse trail towards Mandela Road with the child.
As they walked, the suspect placed his arm
around the neck of the child in a similar position as the first
child.
They
passed the footpath to the crime scene and continued walking towards
Mandela Road as depicted in picture 22 of Exhibit "J".
[63]
A timestamp 7:16 P.M., the footage shows
the boy running towards Princess Road.
The
suspect also appears in the footage running behind the boy.
After running, the suspect paused for a
moment to take off his shoes and then continued running.
[64]
After
the
chase,
at
7:22
P.M.,
the
footage
depicts
the
boy
and
the suspect coming back from Princess Road
in the direction towards Mandela Road.
The
suspect is holding the boy's wrist with his [suspect's,] hand.
At 7:23P.M., the footage shows the suspect
and the boy entering the footpath towards the crime scene as depicted
by photos 23 and
28.
According
to him, the last sighting of the boy and the suspect on the footage
disappearing in the reed is at timestamp 9:25:19.
[65]
He testified further that the surveillance
cameras in the wetland cover certain areas and there are areas that
are out of reach
of the cameras.
It
was his testimony that closer to the side of Mandela Road there are
no cameras. According to him, it is possible to exit the
reeds
without being captured on the surveillance footage.
That is a brief synopsis of Claassens's
testimony.
[66]
Warrant Officer Mpateni
testified that he is stationed at Hout Bay Police
Station.
He
testified that he knew the accused prior to the incident of 26
February 2020.
He
used to work with a relative of the accused.
He knows the accused from having seen him
when he went to drop the accused relatives at their home [accused's
home].
[67]
On the day S[...] was reported missing, he
was on duty.
After
the missing report had been filed, they went to search for the child.
The accused and S[...]'s father came to the
police station.
S[...]'s
father informed him that the accused was the last person seen with
S[...].
They then
went to the accused's place to look for S[...].
[68]
He obtained permission to search the house
from the accused and his grandfather.
They
did not find the child.
The
following day, Friday, after S[...]'s body was found, he received
information to go and pick up the accused.
He picked up the accused and took him to
the police station.
He
kept the accused at the holding cells for an interview with the
investigating officer.
The
trial-within-a-trial pertaining to the search for the clothing worn
by the accused on 26 February 2020.
[69]
Sgt Mpateni further testified that Const
Thimba told him that they had to go to the accused's home and collect
clothing he [the
accused], was seen wearing on the CCTV footage.
At this juncture, the defense raised an
admissibility issue.
Principally,
the objection related to the accused consent to a police search of
his [the accused], bedroom for clothing.
In
the objection, Mr Brand, on behalf of the accused, contended that
there was no permission sought or given by the accused to go
and
search his room.
[70]
Additionally, in his objection, counsel for
the accused stated that in terms of
Section 22
of the
Criminal
Procedure
Act, a
search must be with the consent
of
the person concerned
to
search his room, although his room was in his grandfather's house.
The argument continued that the accused is
an adult and the room was his domain.
In
essence, it was argued that the search was unlawful.
The defense thus requested this court to
determine whether the condition precedent to the admissibility
of the proposed evidence were met. In
particular;
whether
the
consent
of
the
accused
was
obtained
before
the
search was conducted.
[71]
In the circumstances, the State conceded
that the Court had to proceed with a trial-within-a-trial.
This Court agreed that the objection raised
by the defense warranted that a trial-within-a-trial should be
conducted to determine
the lawfulness of the search conducted by
Mpateni and Thimba, in the bedroom of the accused.
In the trial-within-a-trial, the state
proceeded and called its witnesses and the accused testified.
[72]
Mpateni, in the trial-within-a-trial
testified that he accompanied Thimba to go to the accused house.
This was after Thimba asked him to travel
with him to the accused house.
They
went together in the same car. In the car it was him, the accused and
Thimba. After he agreed to go along to look for the clothing
of the
accused, Thimba went to the holding cell to fetch the accused. Thimba
informed him that the accused agreed that they should
go and fetch
the clothes. They got into the vehicle and proceeded to the accused's
house. When the accused came to the car, he
appeared normal and they
spoke with each other. He did, however, notice that the accused was
frightened.
[73]
In the car, they talked about the impending
search.
They
spoke to him so that the accused
could
be aware
of what
was going to take place.
They
asked the accused
where
they
were
going
to
find the clothing.
The
accused did not indicate
that he did not want to go to his bedroom.
According
to
him, the accused gave his permission by saying, "the clothing
are
[sic]
in
my room. Let us go fetch it in the room."
It was his testimony that the accused gave
them permission to go and fetch the clothing.
[74]
When they left the police station, the accused had an agreement with
Thimba and when they were
in the car, the accused did not show any
problem. The accused was cooperating with everything they were doing.
On their arrival
at the place of the accused, Thimba spoke with
accused's grandfather and explained the purpose of their visit. The
accused's grandfather
also gave them permission so they could
proceed. They then proceeded straight to the accused's bedroom. It
was his testimony that
the trip to the accused's place was a matter
of fetching the clothing. Shortly, that was his testimony in the
trial-within-a-trial.
[75]
Still in the trial-within-a-trial, the
State called
Sgt Thimba
who testified as follows.
He
is stationed at the Hout Bay police station.
At the time of the incident, he was tasked
with gathering information.
On
28 February 2020, Friday, he was informed by Warrant Officer
Oosthuizen that they were going to go and watch a video footage
at a
neighborhood
watch.
They then went to watch the footage of a
person seen walking with a child.
[76]
After
viewing
the footage,
they
went
back
to the police
station.
He
heard that a suspect,
suspected
to be the person that walked
with a boy was held in the holding
cells.
He
went
to the
holding cells and introduced
himself
to the
accused.
He
asked
him
what
he
was
wearing
when
he
last
saw
the
child.
The
accused told him that he was wearing a navy basketball vest and short
gray pants.
When
he talked to the accused, the accused was relaxed. The accused told
him that the shirt had the word "Snipers" inscribed
on its
front.
The
clothing fitted the clothing he saw on the video clip.
He
then asked the accused the whereabouts of the clothing. The accused
told him that they were at his place. He then asked the accused
to go
with them to get the clothing. The accused gave him permission to go
with him to get the clothing. They then went to the
place of the
accused. He was satisfied that the accused was exercising his choice
as he did not show any problems that he did not
want to do that.
According to him, the accused came across as a person that was not
inclined to refuse. The accused also told him
that he also assisted
in the search for the boy.
[77]
He did not have a discussion with the
accused in the car.
He
did not hear what the accused and Mpateni were talking about in the
car.
He cannot
recall talking to them about clothing in the car.
At the house of the accused, after
speaking
to
the
grandfather,
the
accused's
grandfather
gave
them consent to go into his house.
The accused directed them to his bedroom.
The accused, Mpateni and him went into the
accused's bedroom.
He
did not know where the clothing was.
The
accused told them where the garments were and they could also see
where they were.
[78]
From the questions by the Court, he
testified
that he
did not go to the accused's house to search for clothing.
They simply went there to fetch the
clothing.
[79]
After the State closed its case in the
trial-within-a-trial,
the accused
took the witness stand.
He
denied that he ever gave the police permission to go and search his
house for his clothes.
He
testified that Thimba came to him in the cells and asked him about a
missing child.
Thimba
then told him about the friends of the child who told him [Thimba]
that he was the last person to be seen with the child.
Thimba interrogated him about the child,
where he [the accused] was headed to and what he was wearing that
day.
[80]
He told Thimba what he wore.
He did not tell Thimba where the clothes
were.
He also
does not recall giving Thimba a description that was on the sweater.
After Thimba spent 10 to 20 minutes with
him in the cells, he left. Thimba returned a few moments later with
handcuffs, took him
to a car and then was already in the car.
They never told him where the car was
going.
He does
not recall having a conversation with Mpateni in the car.
He denies that he ever had a conversation
with Mpateni. According to him, he only spoke with Thimba.
[81]
They drove to his grandfather's place.
He only realised that they were going to
his grandfather's house when they arrived there.
He did not know why they went to his
grandfather's house.
At
his grandfather's place the police spoke with his grandfather in the
living room.
He
does not know what they were talking about, as he was not listening.
It is not that he was not listening on
purpose.
He was
trying to process what was happening.
He
was shocked and traumatised.
[82]
After they had spoken to his grandfather his grandfather showed them
his room. Thimba and Mpateni
proceeded to his room. Thimba then
called him about the clothing they found in his room. He went into
the room and Thimba asked
him as to whether the clothes on the bed
were the ones he wore on that day. He said yes. The clothes were put
in a bag. They then
left for the police station. He testified that
Thimba is correct when he says he was cooperative that day. It was
also his testimony
that, had Thimba asked him for consent, he would
have given it to him. That's a brief synopsis of the evidence led in
that particular
trial-within-a-trial.
[83]
As I intimated before, the reasons for the
finding were reserved for this judgment.
The reasons now follow.
[84]
The issue in this trial-within-a-trial
hinged on whether the accused had indeed given consent to the police
to go to his house and
get his clothes from his bedroom.
In this trial-within-a-trial this Court was
faced with two diametrically-opposed versions of events which
occurred before and when
the accused was taken to his grandfather's
place by Thimba and Mpateni.
[85]
On the one hand, the accused claims that he
was simply taken to his grandfather's place without being told he was
being taken there
and for what purpose.
The
accused further claims that at his grandfather's house the police
simply spoke with his grandfather and thereafter simply proceeded
to
his bedroom without first obtaining consent from him [the accused].
On the other hand, the police maintained
that from the police station the accused had consented to give them
the clothing.
For
that matter, in their evidence the two police officers concerned
never relied on the consent of the grandfather to obtain the
accused's clothing from the bedroom.
Moreover, it is the version of the police
that it was the accused who went to the bedroom, took the clothing
and handed it to them.
[86]
In this trial-within-a-trial at hand, the
State presented two witnesses.
I
did not get the impression that they were colluding against the
accused.
For
instance, Mpateni testified that he was not present when the accused
gave Thimba consent to search.
Similarly,
Thimba testified that he did not hear the conversation between the
accused and Mpateni
en route
to
the house of the accused's grandfather.
Clearly Mpateni and Thimba did not give a
photocopy version of each other's testimonies.
Plainly, the two state witnesses did not
tailor or shape their testimony so that such testimony is consistent
and fits with the
testimony given by the other witness.
In my mind this is the hallmark
of the truth in their testimony.
The evidence of Mpateni supports the
testimony of Thimba that consent was obtained from the accused.
They also corroborated each other regarding
what happened at the house of the accused's grandfather.
[87]
What I find striking about the testimony of
the accused is that he [the accused], testified that if Thimba had
asked for consent,
he would have given it.
By this testimony the accused admits that
he was amenable to give consent.
This
testimony of the accused cannot be looked at in isolation.
The evidence also tends to show that the
accused, if he was asked, he would have given his consent for the
search.
As such
this evidence could be viewed as supporting the State's version that
the accused was cooperating all along.
For
that matter, the accused also agrees that he was cooperating.
If the accused was showing signs of
cooperation, what then would make the police to play secrets with the
accused?
Clearly
if the accused was cooperative, there was no reason for the police
not to play open cards with the accused.
The evidence of the state witnesses that
the accused gave his consent makes sense and accords with the version
of the accused that
he would have given consent if he was asked and
the fact that he was cooperative with the police.
[88]
To begin with, it goes without saying that
when a house has multiple occupants and the affected occupant is
present, the police
cannot obtain consent to search the room of an
affected occupant from one of the other occupants of the house when
the affected
occupant is present.
The
consent to search his/her room should also be obtained.
Clearly the consent to search may be
obtained from other occupants when the affected occupant is absent.
In the instant case, the
accused was present at his grandfather's
house, therefore the accused's consent to the search could not have
been dispensed with.
[89]
It is
significant
to note that
the
evidence
of
Mthimba
reveals
that his interview
with
the
accused
stemmed
from
the
fact
that
he
had
earlier
on watched a crime scene video footage
depicting a person walking with a child wearing a particular garb.
Therefore, he knew, even before he had
spoken to the accused, as to what type of clothing he was looking
for.
On the
accused's version the police did not tell him where they were going,
as he only realised where they were
going
when they arrived
at his grandfather's
place. The corollary of this is that on the
accused's own version the police independently knew the location of
the residence.
The
question that aptly arises is why the· police would take the
accused to his grandfather's
house
if they already knew where they could possibly find the garb they
were looking for and they also
had
an idea what the person seen on the footage walking with the child
wore.
In
my view the removal of the accused from the police station for
purposes of getting the clothing on its own strongly suggests
and
supports the version that his [the accused's], consent to get his
clothing was obtained even before they left for his grandfather's
place. This I say because, given the fact that Thimba already knew
what he was looking for, it would have been quite pointless
to take
the accused with to his grandfather's house if the police did not get
consent or the required accused's consent.
[90]
Even on the accused's own version his role
during the whole exercise of getting his clothes was limited only to
the aspect of confirming
whether the clothes discovered by the police
in his room were the correct clothes.
It
thus seems obvious to me that in the circumstances of this case the
police did not need the confirmation of the accused, hence
I find
that in the context of this case if the police did not seek the
consent of the accused first, it would have been
pointless
then
for
the
police
to
take
the
accused
with
them
to
the grandfather's place.
[91]
In other words, the accused wants to create
an impression that he was simply handcuffed, driven to his
grandfather's house without
being told that they were going there and
no-one in the car they were travelling in said anything to him.
This is despite the common-cause
evidence that the accused was cooperating
with the police, sat with Mpateni at the back of the car and that
Mpateni was known to
the accused.
[92]
Additionally, the accused testified that at
his grandfather's place he was left in the living room and the police
simply went to
his bedroom and proceeded to search his room on their
own.
In addition
to that, they searched the accused's room without the assistance of
the person they brought there. This incredible version
of events by
the accused became even more far fetched when he testified that
he was left in the living room.
Why
would the police go an extra mile and take an extra precaution of
handcuffing the accused when travelling with him in a car,
yet then
both leave the person unattended at his own home?
This is totally unlikely.
[93]
In the context of this evidence
led in this trial-within-a-trial it is
unlikely that the police would act in such a manner.
Such an unlikely situation, if indeed
happened, may be indicative of sloppy police work.
It would make no sense to remove from
detention a person who is suspected of committing very serious
crimes
to
simply
leave
him
unattended
in
his
own
home
and neighbourhood without even saying
anything to him.
For
instance, it's unlikely that the police would not have considered
their safety and for that matter the safety of the accused.
[94]
The claim that the police would ignore the
subject matter who was in a better position to help them and go and
seek consent from
the grandfather is a blatant, outright lie.
The logic and the lack of it in this claim
by the accused is colossal.
In
addition, I find lt highly improbable that the accused did not hear
the conversation between the police and his grandfather whilst
they
were talking in his living room, particularly in the light of the
accused's testimony that he did not know why he was taken
there in
the handcuffs.
Meanwhile,
the accused made no inquiry concerning the actions of the police.
This is just a shocking lack of curiosity
about a lot of important details.
[95]
This Court rejects the version of the
accused that he chose to shut his ears and eyes because of shock and
trauma.
According
to human experience and logic, the lack of curiosity from the accused
is inconsistent with the conduct of a person who
was traumatised and
shocked by what was unfolding in front of him.
Surely, in the circumstances as described
by the accused, the normal human reaction would dictate that a person
be curious as to
what it was the police wanted from his home and why
he was brought there.
For
that matter, if he did not know why the police were there with him,
why he did not ask them.
[96]
The accused's lack of curiosity does not
inspire belief in his version. I find the version of the accused
unsatisfactory and incredible
on that score.
I also find it unlikely that none of the
police would say anything to the accused during their trip to his
grandfather's place.
Moreso, if the accused was cooperating with the
investigation.
I
am unable to accept the accused's evidence in this regard.
His evidence lacks the ring of truth.
[97]
I
am
not
unmindful
to
the
fact
that
at
times
a
version
that
sounds
inherently improbable may in actual fact be the truth. Having said
that, I cannot ignore the numerous glaring improbabilities
that exist
in the accused's version in that trial-within-a-trial.
Similarly, I found the version of the
accused to be scant and not forthcoming when he testified about the
journey to his grandfather's
house and what happened at his
grandfather's house.
The
evidence in this particular inquiry manifestly shows that the police
obtained the consent of the accused.
I
have no difficulty in accepting that.
The
incredible version of the accused then stood to be rejected, as this
Court did.
[98]
Following my ruling in the
trial-within-a-trial concerning the consent to search, Sergeant
Thimba came back and testified in the
main trial.
He testified that the accused pointed a
pair of shorts and a sweater.
The
sweater was on something that looked like a cover and the shorts were
on top of the bed.
He
then took the items and placed them in a plastic bag.
He then registered the items in the SAP.13
Register.
He
testified that the items he retrieved from the bedroom of the accused
were a blue basketball
shirt with the number seven at the back and
it had an inscription in front, "Hout Bay Snipers".
[99]
The second item from the house of the
accused was a green basketball pair of shorts with white stripes and
number 36, Exhibit "5".
The
State then produced two garments in Court; the shirt. had the number
7 both in front and at the back.
The
shirt's armholes
had
white borders.
It
also had a V-neck and at the bottom of the V there is a horizontal
white line.
[100]
Thimba also testified that the shorts which
he obtained from the accused are differently coloured to the shorts
he saw when he watched
the video footage of the crime scene.
He testified that the shorts that were worn
by the person on the footage were greyish or towards black in colour.
The top which he got from the accused did
match what he saw on the footage.
He
did not look for the matching shorts which he saw on the footage, as
he was not at the accused's place to search but to go and
collect.
[101]
Then the State proceeded and called
Captaln
Phillips,
who testified that he was
requested to go to Hout Bay Police Station to see Warrant officer
Oosthuizen, the erstwhile investigating
officer of this matter and
who has since passed away.
He
was informed that the suspect wanted to confess.
He then went to the cell and found the
accused.
[102]
Counsel on behalf of the accused at that
point raised an objection to the effect that when the confession was
obtained, the accused
was never informed of his constitutional
rights.
The State
submitted that the evidence it intended to lead was that of a
confession and pointing-out.
This
Court then ordered
that
a
trial-within-a-trial
be
conducted
to
determine
whether
the
constitutional
rights
of
the
accused
were
explained
to
him
before
the confession and pointing-out were taken.
Trial
within
a
trial
in respect of confession and pointing out.
Evidence
pertaining to the pointing out
[103]
Mpateni
also
came
back
and
testified
that
after
they
seized
the garments, Exhibit "5", at the
accused's place, they went back to the police station and the accused
was taken back
to the holding cell where the suspects are kept.
[104]
When the investigating officer returned
from the scene where the body was found on the very same Friday, 28
February 2020, the accused
told him something.
He relayed the information he obtained from
the accused to the investigating officer.
The investigating officer then instructed
him to arrest the accused.
At
this point, he placed the accused under arrest and he read him his
constitutional rights as contained in the SAP.14(A) form,
Exhibit
"O".
The
accused understood his rights and they both signed the SAP.14(A) form
and he handed him [the accused], a copy.
[105]
It was also his testimony that on Sunday,
01 March 2020, the accused claims he was given a stack of forms to
sign.
He was not
on duty.
[106]
Captain Phillips testified in this
trial-within-a-trial that on a Friday around 5.00 P.M., he found the
accused at Hout Bay police
station and he introduced himself to the
accused.
When he
started to explain to the accused his constitutional rights, the
accused told him to stop and the accused informed him that
his rights
were already explained.
He
then asked the accused if he understood his rights.
The accused confirmed.
[107]
Nonetheless, he explained to the accused
that he had a right to an attorney and if he cannot afford one, he
can apply for a Legal
Aid attorney at the State's expense.
The accused indicated that he does not need
an attorney.
He
also informed the accused that everything he says to him can be used
as evidence against him.
He
also told the accused that if he does not want to speak, he can
decide and he would leave immediately.
The
accused then said to him,
"Ek
is
sorry."
[108]
He told the accused that his confession
would be taken by somebody else and that it's going to be done in
front of a camera.
He
also informed the accused that he would be taken to a district
surgeon.
The
accused out of the blue asked him how many people were outside the
police station.
The
accused told him that he feared for his life.
He then informed the accused that he would
arrange that he be taken to a different police station, Claremont
Police Station.
The
accused begged to be taken to another police station. According to
him, approximately
50
people were standing outside of Hout Bay Police Station.
He then made arrangements for the taking of
the accused's confession and pointing-out and for the video
recordings.
He
also arranged that the accused be seen by a district surgeon and for
the transfer of the accused to Claremont.
[109]
He
made
all
the
arrangements
and
on
Sunday
he
once
again explained the rights to the accused
and took the warning statement of the accused.
In his warning statement the accused
intimated that he would stay with what he stated in the confession.
The accused signed his warning statement
[Exhibit "M"].
[110]
Colonel Ngxaki
testified that he was a Branch Commander for
the detectives in Elsies River. On 28 February 2020, around 5.00 P.M.
he received
a call from Captain Phillips requesting him to assist
with the pointing-out. He was informed that the accused was still
busy with
the confession. He then suggested that he should conduct
the pointing-out on 29 February 2020.
[111]
On 29 February 2020, he went to Hout Bay
and he was in possession of an unfilled pointing-out form.
He introduced himself to the accused.
The photographer took photos of the blank
pointing-out form.
He
also testified about the process he followed in filling out the form
with the accused.
It
was his testimony that the constitutional rights of the accused were
also explained to the accused in both isiXhosa and English.
[112]
It was
his
testimony
that
during
the
process
of
filling out the pointing out form the
photographs of the accused were also taken to show that the accused
did not have any
injuries.
According
to him the pointing-out form illustrates the entire process he
underwent with the accused.
He
also testified that the accused was calm and he was ready to do the
pointing-out.
He
also confirmed
the
photographs
that
were
taken
during
the
entire
process
of the pointing-out.
[113]
Sergeant Dean Luke Abrahams,
stationed at Local Criminal Records as a
photographer. On 29 February 2020, he was called to assist with the
pointing-out.
They
arrived at Hout Bay Police Station around 8:20 A.M.
They decided to take photographs instead of
video, because they were of the view that the pointing-out was going
to be long.
The
process with the accused included taking photos of blank forms and
photos of the accused.
He
testified that it was unusual for him not to capture the pointing-out
process on a video.
[114]
It was also his testimony that for the
pointing-out they had to go to three locations.
He does not think that his camera's battery
life would have lasted that long.
He
cannot recall everything that happened there, but what comes to mind
is the suspect, the accused.
He
testified that he could remember what the accused said to them as
they did the pointing-out.
He
could tell the suspect was well-versed in English.
That's a brief summary of his testimony.
The
evidence pertaining to the confession
[115]
Lieutenant Colonel Monakele Nonkula
testified that he is a retired police officer.
When he was in service, he was stationed at
Muizenberg Police Station as a Branch Commander of the detectives.
During the period of his service, he did
about 25 confessions and pointing outs.
[116]
He testified that he received a call from
Captain Phillips to assist with the taking of the accused's
confession.
On
the very day, 28 February 2020, he was
asked
to
assist
with
the
confession,
he took
it
from
the
accused
at
Claremont Police Station.
[117]
On his arrival at Claremont Police Station,
he went to the boardroom, where he found the video operator.
When he arrived the video operator had
already displayed his equipment and was only waiting for him to tell
him where to place everything.
After
the videographer told him that they could begin the accused was
brought in.
[118]
They started with the confession process at
8:30 P.M.
The
accused appeared relaxed and answered questions normally.
The accused's confidence was very high.
They spoke to each other in isiXhosa.
He read to him his rights as indicated in
the confession form.
He
was satisfied that the accused understood his constitutional rights
and that he was making the statement freely and voluntarily.
[119]
The accused told him that he wanted to
speak because he regrets what he did.
After
they were finished with the document, the accused appended his
signature and thumbprint to the documents.
Whenever there was a correction or deletion
made, the accused and him initialled the particular paragraphs.
He thinks the process lasted for two hours.
He specifically recalls the accused because
of the statement he made.
Shortly,
that was his testimony.
[120]
Sergeant Siyabulela George
testified that he is attached
to the Cape Town Local Criminal Record
Centre as a photographer, videographer and a fingerprint expert.
In this matter, he was requested to help
with a confession which was going to be taken by Colonel Nonkula.
A confession was going to be taken at
Claremont Police Station.
He
arrived there at 8:30 P.M.
After
he was allocated a room, he set up his equipment.
The colonel arrived first and after the
arrival of the colonel the suspect was called in.
His role during the confession was to
capture the confession process on a video.
[121]
He is adamant that during the process the
accused was advised of his rights.
According to him the process starts with
explanation of rights.
Once
a suspect indicates that he/she wants legal representation, the
process stops immediately.
They
would not carry on if the rights are not explained.
If the rights were not explained, it would
have been unusual and he would have remembered that.
He does not believe what the accused is
claiming. According to him the accused is lying to his legal
representative.
He
testified that the suspect was willing to proceed, as he wanted to
explain himself.
[122]
He maintains that from the beginning. until
the end the confession process was never interrupted.
They completed the process at 11:00 P.M.
The duration of the entire process was approximately three hours.
The communication between the colonel and
the suspect was flowing.
He
knows what he is testifying about because of his observations.
He can recall that the rights of the
accused were read to him.
[122]
After the recording he went back to his office. The following morning
when he was supposed to present his
confession recording for
inspection, he realised that the SD card, also known as a memory
card, did not show any recordings. It
turned out that the memory card
was corrupted. It was his testimony that before he left for the
confession, he checked everything
out to make sure that everything
was working okay for the recording. During and after the recording of
the confession the camera
did not give him any indication that there
was a problem.
[124]
He testified that, though his role
during the confession process is to capture the confession on a
video, in fact, when he makes
the video recordings of the confession
proceedings, he also recalls what happened during the process.
Briefly, that was his testimony
and that concludes the evidence which
was led in this particular trial-within-a-trial by the State.
[125]
The accused
then
testified after the State had closed its case in the
trial-within-a-trial concerning the admissibility of the confession
and
pointing out.
The
accused started testifying about the confession.
According to him the only papers Colonel
Nonkula had in his possession were the ones that he, Nonkula, wrote
in the statement that
he [the accused], gave.
He does not recall Nonkula having a portion
of papers with constitutional rights on.
Nonkula did not ask him many questions.
He was the one doing most of the talking.
After he related to Nonkula everything, Nonkula read the statement
back to him.
He
then signed that statement at the back.
He
agrees that all the other signatures appearing on the confession form
are his but he does not remember signing any other papers
with
Nonkula.
[126]
According to him his signature was
appended on the papers afterwards on a Sunday at Hout Bay Police
Station when Captain Phillips
and Captain Oosthuizen gave him a bunch
of papers and asked him to sign.
He
suspects that the signed documents on Sunday pertaining to the
confession formed part of the papers that were given to him by
Captain Phillips and Captain Oosthuizen.
[127]
As far as the pointing-out is
concerned, the only thing he remembers doing with Colonel Ngxaki is
when he told him to take off his
clothes and the photos being taken
before they went for the pointing-out.
He
did not sign any form before the pointing-out.
He does not recall being read or answering
any questions pertaining to his constitutional rights.
[128]
He denies that Sergeant Mpateni gave
him an SAP.14 form [Exhibit O].
According
to him it is also not true that Mpateni read him his rights.
[129]
Similarly,
he
denies
that
Captain
Phillips
explained
his
rights. According to him, Captain Phillips
only explained to him about making a confession and a pointing-out.
He did not mention anything about rights.
Captain Phillips did tell him that he would be taken to a district
surgeon before and
after the pointing-out.
He never told Captain Phillips that
"Ek
is sorry." That's a brief synopsis
of the accused's testimony.
Reasons
for the rulings pertaining to the confession and pointing out.
[130]
As already intimated, insofar as the
admissibility issues raised in this trial-within-a-trial are
concerned, this Court has already
overruled the accused's objection.
The corollary to this is that this Court
was satisfied that the constitutional rights of the accused were
explained to him before
he made the pointing-out and the confessions.
The reasons for this finding are as
follows.
[131]
First and foremost, though the
various State witnesses gave independent accounts of what they
individually did as far as the accused's
statements are concerned,
the evidence of the State witnesses is seamlessly connected and made
sense.
Each
witness's testimony tended to throw some light on the testimonies of
other witnesses, because their evidence was inter
related.
In other words, the evidence of one witness
tended to verify the other witnesses' testimony.
As such there was enough confirmatory
evidence to give the testimony of these witnesses some weight.
[132]
In essence, this Court was convinced
that there were smaller chances of fabrication.
For instance, Sergeant Mpateni testified
that he explained to the accused his constitutional rights.
Then Captain Phillips, who came to the
picture after the arrest of the accused by Mpateni, testified that
when he was about to explain
the rights of the accused, the accused
told him that it was not necessary, because his rights were already
explained to him.
The
evidence of Captain Phillips in this regard inadvertently supports
the evidence of Sergeant Mpateni that he [Mpateni], had read
the
accused's rights during his arrest.
[133]
The accused would like this Court to
believe that this part of Captain Phillips's testimony is a mere
fabrication.
Captain
Phillips testified that, albeit the accused told him this [that he
was already informed of his rights], he continued and
explained the
accused's constitutional rights.
[134]
In the grand
scheme
of
things,
had
Captain Phillips testified
that
he did not
continue to explain the accused's rights because the accused told him
that his rights were already explained, then his claim that
the
accused said he was informed of his rights would have been a critical
piece of evidence.
[135]
However, considering Captain
Phillips's testimony, its mention [that the accused informed him
that, he had already been informed
of his rights], does not appear
that it was necessary.
In
fact, in the present case, its mention is not sufficient to rise to
the level of significance.
It
had peripheral significance. Thus, it was not even necessary for
Captain Philip to even refer to it if it was a mere fabrication.
This piece of evidence indicates that
Captain Phillips's evidence includes a level of detail in it.
In my view, this particular fact also
demonstrates that Captain Phillips's evidence was not fabricated.
[136]
Furthermore, Mpateni's evidence is also
supported by Exhibit "O" [the SAP.14(A) form which contains
the rights read to
the accused].
Much
was made of the time as to when Mpateni explained to the accused the
rights contained in Exhibit "O".
However, sight cannot be lost of the fact
that the accused's signature is appended to Exhibit "O".
The signature of the accused in Exhibit "O"
is a sufficient corroboration, as it confirms a material point in
this case.
Of
course, the accused wants this Court to believe that Exhibit "O"
was amongst the stack of documents he was told
to sign on
the
Sunday.
Mpateni's
unchallenged
evidence
is that he did not work on that Sunday.
[137]
I am mindful of the fact that dates can be
fabricated.
I do
not believe, however, that Mpateni had a reason to lie in this
regard.
It does
not make sense that Exhibit "O" would be attributed to
Mpateni if he did not explain the rights of the accused
to him.
I thus do not attach any significance to
the discrepancies and recollections of the time related to Exhibit
"O".
[138]
For
that
matter,
what
could
have
led
Mpateni
to
fail
to
explain
the accused's rights when he arrested him,
particularly someone who was very cooperative.
For that matter, Mpateni was not the
investigating officer of this case.
The
evidence in this matter also shows that Mpateni was not prone to
exaggeration.
Any
suggestion that Mpateni has fabricated evidence in this matter is
simply too far-fetched to deserve any level of credence.
[139]
More importantly, Mpateni's evidence is
full of details, explaining how he got to be the one who arrested and
explained the constitutional
rights of the accused.
There are other pieces of evidence that
convinced this Court that Mpateni was being truthful when he told
this Court that he read
the accused his rights.
Additionally, the evidence of the various
state witnesses cannot be viewed in isolation of another, as
intimated before.
[140]
The version of the accused suggests that
there was a deliberate act not to explain his rights and to make him
sign documents
to
suggest
that his
rights were explained.
Equally,
the accused's version suggests that there was a conspiracy or
collusion on the part of the Hout Bay police and the other
officers
who were involved in taking the statements and photographs not to
inform him of his rights.
The
question that begs is why Captain Phillips would be part of this
deception.
[141]
Notably, Captain Phillips testified that he
arranged different officers for the confession and pointing-out.
Surely, if Captain Phillips wanted to cut
corners by ignoring the accused's constitutional rights, why would he
go to the length
of arranging photographers and officers to take
statements?
[142]
It also makes no sense why Phillips would
do everything by the book and follow the procedures with precision in
obtaining, for instance
taking the accused to the district surgeon
and arranging photographers and high-ranking officers from other
police stations to
take the accused's statement, yet the high-ranking
officers he secured would intentionally disregard the most integral
part of
the process:
to
explain the accused's rights.
[143]
Remarkably, what is lacking in the version
of the accused is that there is nothing which informed the police to
act in such an underhanded
way. Moreso, if it is common cause that
the accused cooperated with the police. Even on the accused's version
he was willing to
make the statements.
[144]
The common thread in the testimony of the
State witnesses is that the accused
is
an
intelligent
person.
The
accused
is
clearly
not
illiterate.
He
joined the workforce and can also eloquently express himself in three
languages.
Yet,
he would like this Court to believe that at all relevant times he was
unaware of his constitutional right to legal representation
and
against self incrimination.
[145]
Additionally,
it
makes no sense that the police would elicit
a signed document of rights only after they
obtained what they termed as a confession and the pointing-out.
It is highly improbable that they would do
things in such a fragmented nature and piecemeal fashion.
Surely, if they did this, they would also
be risking a chance of not getting the signed document.
[146]
In this case, looking at the evidence
presented by the State, it is clear that the evidence of the
prosecution was sufficiently
corroborated.
Sergeant George corroborated Colonel Ngxaki
that the rights of the accused was explained before the statement of
the accused was
taken.
[147]
As far as the pointing-out is concerned,
Colonel Nonkula is a single witness, but the signed documents lend
credence to his testimony.
Moreover,
the accused does not deny that there are corrections and deletions in
the form taken by Colonel Nonkula.
He
also admitted that he initialed the paragraphs with the deletions and
corrections.
Why
would an intelligent person like the accused do that if he was not
aware of what he was doing?
Significantly,
besides the signatures and initials of the accused on the form used
by Colonel Nonkula, the very same form contains
a thumbprint.
The version of the accused does not cater
for the thumbprint.
It
also does not reveal or explain why an
obviously literate and well-spoken accused
did not take time
to
assess the contents of the stack of papers put before him.
[148]
Importantly, if his version does not
suggest any form of coercion on the part of the police, who placed
the supposed stack of papers
before him, why then did he sign the
papers and also put his thumbprint on them?
The version of the accused that he was
simply given the document to sign does not make any sense at all.
[149]
In the circumstances, the version of the
accused that his constitutional rights were never explained is simply
too far-fetched to
deserve any level of credence.
These aforegoing reasons are the reasons
why I found that the accused knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily
waived his right
to silence and his right to legal representation.
After my ruling the confession and the
pointing-out evidence were admitted as evidence.
The State then closed its case in the main
trial.
[150]
The accused then came and testified in his
defence.
He
vehemently denied the allegations levelled by the State against him,
particularly the rape allegation.
He
maintained his version that he parted ways with the child whilst the
child was still alive.
He
testified further that on 27 February 2020 whilst at the training in
Silikamva he heard for the first time that the police were
looking
for S[...].
When
he heard this, he was with his colleague, Ronald.
After they were done with the training, he
parted ways with Ronald.
Ronald
went to the training at the sport complex and he went to his
grandfather's place.
[151]
His grandfather also informed him that the
police officers are looking for him.
He
then went to the police station.
At
the police station he saw a police van with Constable Mpateni and two
ladies in it.
One
of the ladies was a police officer.
The
van was on its way out.
[152]
The van stopped at the main gate and asked
if he was Marvin.
They
then asked to go with him to his grandfather's house and he left with
them. They did not tell him the reason why he should
go with them.
They just told him that they are going to
his house.
[153]
The
S[...]'s
father
was
not
part
of
the
trip.
He
would
have
remembered if he was there.
At
some point in the trip, the police searched his house. After the
police searched his house, they left, and he left for the basketball
field.
[154]
The next morning around 8:30 A.M., Mpateni
and a lady officer came to his house and took him to the police
station for questioning.
On
their arrival at the police station Mpateni placed him in the holding
cells.
[155]
Thimba came twice to his holding cell to
ask him questions.
On
the second occasion Thimba asked him about the clothes he wore the
previous day.
He
told Thimba that he was wearing a basketball sweater, shorts and
tekkies.
Thimba
and Mpateni took him to his home.
After
they took the clothes,
he
was
wearing,
Thimba
took a
picture
of his ID
with his [Thimba's] phone camera.
[156]
On their return to the police station an
unknown police officer told him that he was a suspect, because he was
the last person to
be seen with S[...].
He
testified that what is contained in Exhibit "Q" [the
confession], is what happened according to him.
He stated that he agrees with everything
material mentioned in Exhibit "Q".
When he was asked about the pathologist's
finding that a ligature was used to strangle S[...], he responded
that he does not dispute
the doctor's professional opinion, but he
has already put his version on his statement as to what happened.
[157]
During cross-examination when the State
asked the accused if he had killed S[...], he responded by saying, "I
am not going
to comment on that question."
The Court then asked him what he meant by
that and he responded by saying, "I am going to remain silent
and not comment on
that."
The
Court further asked him if he chooses not to answer the question and
he replied, "Yes."
[158]
He testified that when he was with S[...]
he was wearing his basketball kit.
It
was a vest, shorts and tekkies.
The
vest was sleeveless and was blue-and-white in colour.
The vest had the number seven in white.
It also had a basketball team name on it,
Hout Bay Snipers.
The
vest also had basketball flames on it.
On
the day of his arrest, he was wearing
navy-blue flip flops.
Later on, he said the colour of the flip
flops he was wearing was black.
[159]
On the day S[…]
went
missing,
he [the
accused]
left
his home
just before six and arrived at the training
at six.
He
further testified that on the 26th of February 2020, the day S[...]
went missing, he coached the under-12s with Brian. S[...]
was also
training on the court with the ladies under-12s. According to him he
did not coach for long, because he came late and
he had to leave
early because he had to go to buy an asthma pump. He thinks that he
assisted with coaching for about 20 minutes.
He thinks he left around
6:15 P.M. 6.20 P.M., but it was close to the time they finished
training. He asked Bryn what time it was,
and Bryn gave him the time.
After he had obtained the time from Bryn, he sat for about two to
five minutes.
[160]
He then saw Biagi, whom they coached at the
international school, coming to the skateboard park.
Biagi said he was on his way home.
He then got a lift from him.
When he was asked by Ms Ajam on behalf of
the State whether he was alone, he replied, "Yes, that is
correct", and then
again said, "I was with S[...]."
He testified that S[...], who was in a
happy mood, came when he was still busy talking to Biaji.
It is his testimony that S[...] asked,
"Coach, where are you going?" He told him that he was going
to Clicks. S[...] wanted
to accompany him and he did not see any
problem with that.
[161]
He introduced S[...] to Biaji and said he
was one of the children that was playing basketball.
He also testified that Biaji and S[...]
greeted each
other.
S[...] spoke English.
Furthermore,
he
testified that
they arrived at Clicks.
When
they arrived at Clicks it was a little bit dark.
They left Clicks just before seven on foot
to get to Clicks from the sports complex.
On foot to get to the Clicks from the
sports complex takes about 30 to 45 minutes.
The shortest route for him would have been
the horse-trail path.
According
to him the horse-trail path would take 25 to 30 minutes.
He also testified that the horse trail is
the quickest road he had used from Mandela Park to Main Street. It
was also his testimony
that when you take the Main Road there is a
lot of traffic and there are cars that pass by and a person also
passes traffic lights.
However, when you take the horse trail, you
just go straight.
He
further testified that while they walked on the horse trial he cannot
recall if they took other paths.
[162]
He did put his arm around the shoulder of
S[...] while they walked on the horse trail.
Both he and S[...] exited the horse trail
and went to lmizamo Yethu.
They
walked together until the road separated.
S[...] took his street, and he also went to
his.
He knew the
address where S[...] stayed but did not know the actual house on the
street.
They
parted ways at the stop sign, because he knew that S[...] was not far
from his home.
He
denies that he is the person depicted on Exhibit "J" and
the video footage walking with S[...] and the first child.
He testified that because the picture is
not clear he would not say it's him and S[...].
Basically, the accused vehemently denied
all the allegations levelled against him by the State.
[163]
That's a brief synopsis of the evidence of
Mr Minnaar.
After
his testimony
the
case
of
Mr
Minnaar
was
closed
without
calling
any
further
witnesses.
That
then concludes the evidence which was led in this trial.
Analysis
[164]
At issue in this matter is whether the
accused was involved in the commission of the offences as alleged by
the State.
In any
criminal trial, the default position is that the accused person is
presumed to be innocent.
It
must always be borne in mind that an accused person has got a
legitimate expectation of being afforded protection by the courts
from wrong convictions.
The
presumption of innocence is there to
inter alia
protect an
accused person from a wrongful conviction. The law is settled that
from the beginning and throughout the stages of every
criminal trial
the presumption of innocence remains with the accused until his guilt
is established beyond reasonable doubt.
[165]
Thus, in order for the State to defeat the
hurdle of the presumption of innocence it bears the onus to present
evidence that would
be sufficient to prove guilt of the accused
beyond a reasonable doubt.
However,
it is well established that there is no obligation on the State to
close every possible avenue of escape which may be open
to an
accused. We must also constantly remind ourselves that the burden of
proof that rests with the State does not apply to individual
parts of
the evidence but to the entire body of evidence.
It
is also trite that the accused does not have any burden to prove his
innocence in order to avoid being convicted. If the accused
offers a
reasonable possibly true version he should be acquitted. If at the
conclusion of the trial, there is doubt, that doubt
should be
resolved in favour of the accused.
[166]
In this instant case there is no eyewitness
account to the crimes that were committed on S[...].
Put differently there is no eyewitness
testimony that the accused is the person who caused what ultimately
happened with S[...].
This
is why the State is partly relying on circumstantial evidence to
prove the guilt of the accused.
[167]
Furthermore, it is settled that the guilt
of an accused person cannot be based upon circumstances that raise
merely suspicions,
assumptions, surmises, guesswork or a probability
of guilt or even for that matter out of fear that the accused might
have committed
the crime.
[168]
The State in this matter presented
different types of evidence in its endeavours to unmask the killer of
S[...].
First and foremost, there
is a timeline that was established from the CCTV footage. At this
juncture I would like to quote in verbatim
what was stated by the
defence regarding the footage. The following was submitted by Mr
Brand, counsel on behalf of the accused:
"We were placed in
possession of copies of the CCTV camera footage of the cameras that
are operating in the wetlands or reeds
area that we have come to
learn of in this evidence that are operated by the security company
as alluded to by my learned colleague
and which routinely view the
area and these copies of these videos were handed to us. From that
analytic of the service of the
police zoomed in on certain parts of
the footage and made still photographs of certain scenes or images
that appear from the CCTV
footages and if I understand correctly, it
is those images that my colleague seeks to hand in as an exhibit. As
such, and I can
already state now regarding the actual CCTV footage
itself the state seeks to hand that into evidence or refer to it..."
The most important part
of the citation is as follows:
"... we do not have
any objection to that, either the footage or the still images taken
from the footage to be presented as
evidence in this court."
The above submissions
clearly demonstrate that the defence did not object to the
presentation of the CCTV footage.
[169]
In addition, the following interaction
occurred during the handing in of memory sticks pertaining to the
footage of the scene of
the crime.
I
quote again from the record:
"MS AJAM: Yes there
are three memory sticks which are referred to and in addition to what
is stated there further under paragraph
8 the statement says that the
same exhibits, the three memory sticks, were placed in a sealed
evidence bag with reference number
(...) and handed to the
administration of the Forensic Science Laboratory for safe keeping
(...) effectively the memory stick refer
to footage retrieved from
the security cameras at the scene(...)."
Ms
Ajam further states:
" ... of the crime.
COURT: Of the scene of
the crime?
MS AJAM: Effectively the
horse trail and Manchester Road and the surrounds. They span the time
of the incident alleged and sometime
before and sometime after.
COURT: So the importance
is the timeline?
MS AJAM: Yes, it is
important for various levels. They are also the footage upon which
the still images contained in EXHIBIT J were
obtained (...)
MS AJAM: Defence counsel
were provided or made their own copies from the original in the
presence of the state and are satisfied
that the exhibits can be
handed up as exhibits in this matter.
COURT: Alright and the
contents thereof? MS AJAM: And the contents thereof(...)
MR BRAND: Yes(...) we
have no objection from our side if the three memory sticks as
reference in paragraphs 3.1, 3.2, 3.3 of EXHIBIT
J be handed in as
exhibits by consent."
[170]
There is no better and meaningful indicator
than
the above to
show that the CCTV footage was admitted into evidence by consent.
Thus, it can never be
successfully
argued
that
Exhibit
"3"
and
Exhibit
"J"
were
ever
placed
in
dispute.
[171]
Having said that, there is also the
testimony of Claassen which also created a timeline from the CCTV
footage of the movement of
the suspect in the wetland.
The timeline created by his testimony is as
follows:
1.
A
timestamp
6:03
P.M.,
the
footage
from
the
Manchester
CCTV camera,
depicts the suspect and an unknown child walking towards Manchester
Road.
2.
At timestamp 6: 34 P.M. the same
individuals are captured by the camera that faces towards the
footpath in the direction of Mandela
Park.
The camera captures them coming from
Princess Road towards Mandela Park and the skateboard park.
This is the last image of the two
individuals [the suspect and the small child], in the footage.
3.
At 7:13 P.M., the suspect with the
second child are depicted walking from Princess Road direction
towards Mandela Park.
4.
7:14 P.M., the footage depicts the
suspect walking on the horse trail towards Mandela Park with the
second child.
5.
7:16 P.M., the footage shows the boy
running towards Princess Road, and
few
moments
later
the
suspect
also
appears
in
the
footage running behind the boy.
6.
7:22 P.M., the footage
depicts the boy and the suspect coming back
from Princess Road in the direction towards
Mandela Park.
7.
7:23
P.M.
the
footage
shows
the
suspect
and
the
boy
entering
the
footpath towards the crime scene.
8.
At timestamp 7:25:19 that was the
last sighting of the boy (the second boy) and the suspect on the
footage disappearing in the reeds.
[172]
The above timeline places the person
wearing a blue vest with number 7 on the
back
on
the
horse trail.
First
session
between
6:03
P.M.
and
6:34 P.M. And the second session between 7:13 P.M.
and 7:25 P.M.
[173]
The evidence also shows that the person
wearing the blue vest with number 7 had access to S[...], due to the
fact that it is not
really in dispute that the second child seen on
the footage is S[...]. The evidence also indicates that the man
wearing the blue
vest was at the crime scene at the time of the
criminal event and this access to S[...]afforded him the opportunity
to commit murder
or kill S[...].
Essentially the man wearing a blue vest is
placed at the scene of the crime by the timeline.
[174]
On the other hand, the accused had access
to S[...] due to the fact that he went with him to Clicks and walked
with S[...] on the
horse trail, at the critical time.
[175]
Furthermore, in this matter the following
issues are common cause:
1.
The accused was wearing a blue vest
on 26 February 2020 when he
was
walking with S[...] on the horse trail.
2.
The accused was with S[...] just
before 7 PM and after 7 PM.
3.
The accused was with S[...] at
Clicks just before 7.
4.
The accused was present in the horse
trail for about 25 to 30 minutes.
5.
The accused and S[...] were walking
together in the horse trail after 7.
6.
The accused did place his arm around
the shoulder of S[...] whilst they were walking on the horse trail.
7.
The accused does have flip flops
that are shaped like the ones worn by the man wearing blue vest on
the CCTV footage.
8.
S[...]'s body was found on the horse
trail.
[176]
Mbulawa
and
Nongamashe
corroborated
each
other
that
on
the
day
S[...] went missing the accused did not coach the children.
Though they contradict each other as to
which gate the accused stood at, they, however, corroborate one
another that they saw the
accused standing at the sports complex
gate.
The
contradiction pertaining to whether the accused stood at the small or
big gate is not really material as it only affects detail.
For that matter such contradictions are
expected when a witness is testifying about incidents, they never
imagined that they would
be expected to recall.
[177]
For that matter, I did not get the
impression that they wanted to give evidence in this court that would
cast the accused in a bad
light.
After
all there is sufficient evidence in this matter to support their
testimony that the accused did not coach the children on
the day in
question and this would be revealed further in this judgment.
[178]
The
following
evidence
reveals
how
unreliable
and
materially
inaccurate the evidence of the accused was.
In
the first place, it is significant to note that, the accused
testified that on the day he went with S[...] to Clicks, S[...]
was
part of the children practising on the basketball court. But on the
other hand, Mbulawa was adamant in his testimony that he
had details
of children and parents belonging to their club and that S[...] was
unknown to him, and he was not part of their club.
This aspect of
Mbulawa's evidence was never challenged.
[179]
Secondly,
Biagi
testified
that
before
he
gave
a
lift
to
the
accused,
he saw the accused
coming
from
the side of
the
reeds towards
the
skateboard park and he greeted him when the accused went past him.
On the other hand, the accused gave a
contrary version of how he arrived at the sports complex and about
his first encounter with
Biagi.
He
testified that he was coming from his home.
In this matter it is common cause that the
reeds and lmizamo Yethu where the house of the accused is located are
on the opposite
side of the sports complex.
The testimony of Biagi places the accused
on a path coming from the horse trail before S[...] got to the car of
Biagi.
[180]
Similarly, Nogamashe testified that around
3:00 P.M., on Thursday 27 February 2020 when he was on his way with
the accused from
the High School training going to the sports
complex, they met up with S[...]'s family and the family was looking
for S[...].
They
then went with them to the neighbourhood watch and thereafter to the
police station.
On
the other hand, S[...]'s father, Mpateni testified that on Thursday
27 February the accused arrived at the police station with
S[...]'s
father and from there they went to his house to go and conduct a
search.
In this
regard Mpateni, S[...]'s father and Nogamashe corroborate each other.
Not
surprisingly the accused offered a diametrically opposed version of
Thursday events. According to the accused on Thursday when
he heard
that the police were looking for S[...] whilst he was at the training
with Nogamashe after they were done with the training,
they parted
ways. He went to his grandfather's house. At home he was told that
the police were looking for him and he went to the
police station.
[181]
Regarding the accused's visit to the house
of S[...]'s grandmother on Friday once again the accused gave a
different version of
the encounter there.
According to the accused when they got
there, they were received by the grandmother of S[...] who opened for
them and he spoke to
her outside the house. Yet S[...]'s father
maintained that he was the one who received the accused and his
stepfather.
He
even gave a plausible reason as to why this was the case.
He
testified that on that particular morning he slept in the dining room
as he dld not stay there and when there was a knock at
the door, he
was the first person to open the door. His evidence in this regard is
full of details. For instance, he testified
that when he opened the
door the accused stepfather was the first person to enter. The
stepfather told him that the accused asked
him to accompany him to
his mother's house. He even mentioned why they visited his mother's
place. As already stated, the evidence
of S[...]'s father is full of
details to be a mere fabrication.
[182]
Biagi testified that S[...] appeared
uncomfortable, did not engage at all, came with the accused to his
car, and was introduced
to him by the accused as his brother.
Contrary to this, the accused testified
that S[...] was in a happy mood, spoke with Biagi in English, S[...]
was the one who approached
him at the car of Biagi whilst he was
speaking to Biagi and wanted to leave with him.
He introduced S[...] to Biagi as one of the
players of the basketball.
S[...]
greeted Biagi.
Regarding
these aspects the accused when he testified,
he introduced
new
evidence
which
was never put to Biagi when he testified.
[183]
There is no meaningful reason why this
Court should not believe the testimony given by the State witnesses.
There are so many apparent features in the
evidence of the State witnesses that indicate why this Court should
believe them.
For
instance, the State witnesses corroborate each other.
Most of their evidence
was never challenged by the accused when
they testified.
[184]
It is plain that the accused blatantly lied
to this Court and tried to mislead the Court by tailoring his
evidence to try and contradict
the State’s version and to fit
events described by the State witnesses.
For
instance, during the pointing out interview, it is common cause that
the accused was wearing flip flops that are similar to
the ones the
individual on the video footage wore. The accused testified that on
Wednesday he was wearing
tekkies
as he went to the training.
Clearly, his evidence that he went to the training cannot be true
because both Nogamashe and Mbulawa
convincingly testified that he was
never on the training, he never participated in coaching the children
on 26 February 2020.
[185]
Additionally, all the State witnesses that
testified that the shortest route to Mainstream mall from lmizamo
Yethu is the route
through the Main Road. Their evidence in this
regard was not challenged yet when the accused came and testified, he
testified.
that the route through the horse trail is the shorter
route.
The
State
witnesses
also
testified
that
the
horse
trail
route
is
dangerous.
When
the accused was cross-examined by counsel on behalf of the State, he
wanted to deny that he testified earlier that bad things
can happen
in the reeds.
[186]
When Ms Ajam insisted that he testified
that bad things happen there, the accused simply retorted that "I
do not remember saying
such".
Ms
Ajam was persistent in putting to him that he said so. The accused
ultimately yielded and answered "yes, but I do not recall
saying
such".
It is
obvious here that the accused realised that it does not make sense to
choose a route which is dangerous with a child at that
particular
time.
He wanted
to change his evidence but, in this instance, he could not lie
through.
[187]
The accused was also caught in a lie when
he testified that after he obtained time from Bryn, he sat for about
two to five minutes.
He
then saw Biagi.
Biagi
said he was on his way home and he got a lift from Biagi.
Ms Ajam asked the accused if he was alone.
The accused interestingly answered yes that
is correct but immediately he changed his evidence and stated that he
was with S[...].
[188]
Clearly, the accused was a woeful witness.
He was even dismal in explaining how S[…]
trained with the team on Wednesday or which teams S[...] trained with
on Wednesday.
He
could not really explain what he meant by saying that he sat after he
asked Bryn for time.
He
even testified that at the time he said he sat he was actually
coaching.
When
asked by the counsel on behalf of the state as to what happened after
he finished waiting, he testified that he could not remember
everything.
[189]
His evidence regarding his encounter with
Biagi is also not clear.
His
evidence in most instances than not contained new evidence that was
not put to the witnesses.
For
example, it was not put to Mbulawa that the accused asked for time
from him.
The
evidence of the accused
is
all over the place.
[190]
Additionally,
the
accused through his testimony would like this Court to believe that
it is a matter of mere coincidences that:
1.
he has similar flip flops to the
ones worn by the individual on the video footage;
2.
that he admitted in his testimony
that on the horse trail he put his hand around the shoulder of
S[...];
3.
the suspect on the footage placed
his hand on the shoulder of the boy he was with and he admitted in
his evidence that he placed
his hand around the shoulder of S[...] as
they walked in the horse trail;
4.
that the suspect on the footage was
wearing a basketball vest similar to the one he was wearing on the
day S[...] went missing;
5.
that the basketball kit on
the footage is
similar to the one of
the
Snipers
basketball club [ accused's basketball club];
6.
that the vest
worn by the individual on the CCTV has a
number
7 on it,
and the basketball vest he wore on the day S[...] went missing also
had a number seven on it; and
7.
that the accused on his own version
he puts himself on the crime scene in the presence of S[...] at the
critical time.
[191]
As already alluded, the accused as a
witness did not strike this Court as an impressive witness.
I got the distinct impression that he was
deliberately lying to this Court.
I
also find it highly improbable to the point of being unbelievable
that the accused did not know where S[...] stayed yet on his
own
version he used to lend S[...] basketballs and S[...] used to train
with them.
For
that matter the evidence in this case establishes that the house of
S[...] was not that far from the accused's house.
Moreover, the evidence of Nogamashe that
the house of the accused and that of S[...] are two streets away from
each other and they
are in a straight line Nogamashe also testified
that a person from either yard can see another from their respective
yards.
This
evidence was not challenged.
[192]
The evidence of the accused that he could
not tell that the person on the video footage or on the still photos
was him and S[...]
because the picture was not clear is rather odd
because in the context of the video footage or the still images in
this case, I
would have expected the accused to say 'no that is not
me'.
This I say
because the pictures are not random but they are part of a continuous
scene which also includes the scene where the child
is being chased
by the individual wearing a vest.
[193]
I also found it very odd when during
cross-examination, the accused was asked if he had killed S[...] he
responded by saying "I
am not going to comment on that
question".
Surely
there was nothing difficult about that question.
It is rather quite odd that the accused who
does not want to associate himself with the person depicted on the
video footage when
afforded an opportunity to deny being the person
who killed S[...] who was found dead in the vicinity where he walked
with him
answers that he chooses to remain silent.
[194]
In my mind the answer which was given by
the accused was quite telling in the circumstances of this case,
particularly if regard
is had to the contents of his confession.
The contents of the confession of the
accused amongst others revealed the following:
"When
I arrived at the soccer field kids were already there training
basketball. I asked one of the kids who was there who
is not a member
of the basketball team but he liked to come now and again to play
basketball and sometimes he would come with his
friends to my place
to borrow a ball and they play on my street. He agreed to go with me
to buy the asthma pump. On my way out
from the soccer field I met
someone who used to be a player of the basketball at Hout Bay
International School. He was there with
two of his friends(...) by
the time I was going to buy the(...) I asked him if he could drive us
to the shopping centre (...).
He dropped us at the shopping centre
(...) we purchased the asthma pump and it was almost closing
time(...). On our way home we
took a road through the bushes. As we
were walking we were having a conversation which was about sex and
could see that he was
not really comfortable with having that
conversation. We went for two to three minutes without saying
anything. I leaned closer
to him and I put my arm around his
shoulder. We continued walking and I touched him inappropriately. He
asked me if I could remove
my hand which was touching him
inappropriately with but I still continued touching him. He said if I
do not stop touching him inappropriately,
he will report me to his
parents and the police. That is when I got scared. I could see that
he was serious. When I let him go,
he turned back to the direction
where we came from and started running. I realised that I could end
up in trouble and I chased
him. Eventually I caught up with him and I
grabbed him and we went to the direction which we first used to go
home. While we were
walking, I saw a passage like sort of a bush. I
told him that we should go inside there. As we got in we were both
scared. By the
time we were inside I tried to calm him down and
convince him that would (...) done anything to hurt him. He became
more scared
and started crying. He insisted that he will tell his
parents that I tried to rape him. After some time of back and forth
and him
crying he started to take off his clothes. That is when I got
scared and I was not thinking rationally. My first instinct was that
if we leave I would have been in trouble and be accused of rape l did
not do. This is when I put my hand around his neck and pushed
him to
the floor. We started fighting and he was scratching me with nails. I
continued choking him until he stopped moving. By
the time I realised
that he was not alive anymore I panicked and I started running
away(...)."
[195]
Different facets and aspects of this case
resemble pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Fitting them together they reveal
a perfect pattern,
related the identity of the culprit.
Importantly, part of the confession made by
the accused accords with the video footage. The confession
strengthens the State's case.
The confession together with other
evidence presented by the State, reveal beyond reasonable doubt the
identity of the individual
wearing the basketball vest on the video
footage.
The
confession also confirms the circumstantial evidence presented by the
State, that the person seen running from the footage is
indeed S[...]
and that the clothes that were found scattered near his body were
his.
The
confession also indirectly confirms that the underpants found on the
crime scene is that of S[...]. The confession further explains
why
S[...]ran away. The timeline which puts the accused right in the
middle of the horse trail at the time when S[...] was chased
is also
confirmed by the confession.
[196]
The evidence of Mbulawa that the accused
did not join the training that day is also confirmed
by the confession of the accused.
[197]
It
is
so
as
already
alluded
earlier
on
that
Biagi
testified
that
whilst
he
was at the skateboard park, he saw the accused
coming
from
the side of the horse trail.
I
have already found that the accused
has
been revealed
as
the person who is depicted on the CCTV footage.
In this Court's mind in the circumstances,
it is clear as daylight that Biagi is correct and truthful when he
testified that the
accused came on the side of the horse trail before
he asked him for a lift.
The
direct corollary of this is that the accused is once again the person
who was seen earlier on the video footage with a younger
child.
This is also confirmed by the placing of
his hand around the shoulders of the children when walking with them,
which probably qualifies
as a signature
modus
operandi.
[198]
It is so that the pointing out did not
produce any physical evidence but all the same it also confirms that
the accused was there
with S[...] when he died.
The evidence of Ngxaki clearly shows that
the accused showed him where he committed the crime.
[199]
All the state witnesses who testified in
this trial were impressive.
There
is absolutely nothing negative I can say regarding their credibility.
Their evidence as demonstrated is also
supported amongst others by objective facts.
[200]
When the evidence is viewed holistically, I
am satisfied that I can without any reservation rely on the
testimonies of the State
witnesses.
In
the face of the overwhelming incriminating evidence presented by the
State against the accused, the accused's attempt to poke
hole and
negate the State's case, failed dismally. He tried to create a false
plausible alternative to what happened with S[...].
It is also
noteworthy that during cross examination, whenever the accused was
trapped in evident irrationalities, he would rely
on memory loss.
[201]
I am convinced that the accused entirely
lied in this trial.
The
accused is unmitigated liar, who came up with a farfetched theory.
I formed the distinct impression that he is
someone who is always willing to make up stories whenever
it suited
his
needs.
I am even
starting to believe that the accused is beginning to believe his own
lies.
It appears
as if the accused cannot draw a line between the truth and the
falsehood anymore.
[202]
Even in the confession, the accused did not
honestly reveal everything that happened between him and S[...].
It is evident that in the confession, the
accused did not account straightforward and truthful. The other
evidence in this matter,
reveals that the accused in the confession
disclosed as little information as possible regarding his actions.
The contents of the confession evince the
accused's attempt to create a mitigated version to an extreme degree.
For instance, he
states that S[...] fought, cried and tried to run
away from him. But in the same breath, even though it is clear from
his confession
that S[...] was scared, the same confession reveals
that S[...] without being urged simply took his clothes off.
Who would do that? Particularly, a scared
child. The accused in the confession does not say anything about the
rape. When the evidence
is viewed wholistically, it is evident that
the accused in his confession failed to reveal pertinent information
he clearly had.
[203]
The version of the accused is not
reasonably possibly true.
I
reject his version as fabrication solely intended to mislead this
Court.
I am
satisfied that the State has succeeded in proving its case beyond
reasonable doubt.
I
am even satisfied in the circumstances of this case that the elements
of kidnapping were also satisfied.
Clearly,
the evidence in this case shows that S[...] was taken by force to the
bush and his freedom of movement was restricted.
[204]
Evidence further demonstrates that S[...]
did not want to go with the accused.
He
even ran away from him and the accused chased him and came back with
him holding him in his arm. This evidence alone proves that
S[...]
was restrained and was under duress. In other words, he was forcibly
confined. I am even satisfied that the State has proven
beyond
reasonable doubt that the accused raped and killed S[...].
He killed him by strangling him with a
ligature on his neck.
[205]
I
therefore
find
you
GUILTY
on
all
the
charges
which
were
preferred
against you by the State.
NZIWENI,
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the State
Adv
N Ajam
Instructed
by
National
Prosecuting Authority
Counsel
for Accused
Adv
B Brand
Instructed
by
Legal
Aid
sino noindex
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