Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 1086South Africa
S v Moodley (A62/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1086; 2026 (1) SACR 62 (GJ) (28 October 2025)
Headnotes
in her submissions that she should be granted bail on the following:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Moodley (A62/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1086; 2026 (1) SACR 62 (GJ) (28 October 2025)
S v Moodley (A62/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1086; 2026 (1) SACR 62 (GJ) (28 October 2025)
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sino date 28 October 2025
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# Further corrected 30
October 2025 – Kuny J
Further corrected 30
October 2025 – Kuny J
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO
:
A62/2025
DATE
:
2025-10-15
- REPORTABLE:
NO
REPORTABLE:
NO
- OF
ONTREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
OF
ONTREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
- REVISED
REVISED
DATE
28 October 2025
In
the matter between
STATE
and
TIONA MEGAN
MOODLEY
Accused
EX TEMPORE
JUDGMENT
KUNY
J
:
1.
The appellant Tiona Megan Moodley is a
25-year-old Indian woman. She is accused 2 in a pending case against
her and accused 1, Darryn
Gavin Wilken.
2.
The state has preferred charges
under
section 19A
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual
Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007
as amended.
It is not alleged that the appellant and accused 1 created, made or
produced child pornography. The offence related
to the online
distribution and sale of child sexual abuse material.
3.
There are also charges under the
Prevention
of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
relating to the acquisition,
possession or using the proceeds of unlawful activities. The
state relies in this regard on
section 6
, alternatively
section
4(b)(a)
of the above Act. There is also a charge of fraud, possession
of stolen property and the possession and use of drugs.
4.
The state submits that the charges that
relate to the dissemination of pornography are schedule 1 offences.
However, it is submitted
that the charges that relate to
contraventions of POCA are schedule 5 offences and accordingly, that
the provision of
sections 60(11)(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act of
1977
applies. This section places an onus on the accused to
adduce evidence which satisfies the court that the interest of
justice
permits his or her release on bail.
5.
The state filed an affidavit before the
lower court of Warrant Officer Boshoff opposing the grant of
bail to accused 1 and
the appellant. Warrant Officer Boshoff is
stationed at the SECI unit in Johannesburg. He is the investigating
officer in the matter.
He explains in his affidavit as follows:
5.1
The investigation originated
when an under aged girl in the United States of America reported a
case of ‘sextortion’
to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI).
5.2
The FBI Cyber Investigation
traced the offence to an online pornographic website known as
“DankmegaZ” which was found
to host extensive child
sexual abuse material.
5.3
The administrator of the site
was identified as a South African national, confirmed to be accused
1.
5.4
The USA police authorities
conducted undercover operations and made control purchases of child
pornography from the DankmegaZ website.
5.5
After establishing that the
website administrator was located in South Africa, the information
was forwarded to the South African
Police Services.
6.
Warrant Officer Boshoff details in
his affidavit the fact that accused 1 was difficult to trace. He was
eventually found and arrested
at his residential address and business
premises, also occupied by the appellant. The police found at the
premises a digital infrastructure
used to run the alleged illegal
online business distributing child pornography. Digital devices,
storage media and records seized
linked accused 1 directly to the
website operations.
7.
Warrant Officer Boshoff alleges that
subsequent investigation revealed that the appellant played a major
role in the daily operations
of the website and the associated
business. Her electronic devices were seized and analysed and
this showed that the appellant
had attempted to delete or destroy
evidence after the arrest of accused 1, in order to conceal her role
in the running of the website.
Fortunately however, investigators
were able to secure and mirror the incriminating data on alternative
devices before the information
could be erased. The appellant was
arrested thereafter once her active involvement had been confirmed
through the recovered evidence.
8.
The state alleged that the appellant and
accused 1 are “unseen predators” who operated behind a
digital veil, profiting
from the exploitation and abuse of children.
9.
In opposing the grant of bail to the
appellant the state relies heavily on the submission that it has a
strong case against her.
It also alleges that she and accused 1
made use of cryptocurrency and that if she is released, the appellant
will be able to access
crypto wallets and make use of funds that the
state contends are the proceeds of crime.
10.
The appellant relies in summary in her
submissions that she should be granted bail on the following:
10.1
She submits that her personal circumstances
warrant the grant of bail.
10.2
She has no previous convictions and there
are no pending cases against her.
10.3
She is able to rely on her family support,
and her aunt and uncle have undertaken to provide her with a place to
stay if she is
released on bail.
10.4
An amount of ten thousand rand is tendered
in respect of bail.
10.5
The applicant submits that accused 1 was
the primary predator and controller of the relevant operations.
10.6
The appellant argues that the state’s
case against her is weak and that there are no direct allegations
that she transmitted,
offered, procured, accessed, downloaded,
possessed or benefited from child pornography.
10.7
She avers that she has no disposition to
violence and poses no threat to public or individual safety.
10.8
She emphasises that she voluntarily
surrendered herself to the police on 23 January 2025 after she had
been contacted by the investigating
officer and that she has
cooperated with the police since accused 1 was arrested on 17 January
2025.
10.9
Appellant undertakes not to contact or
interfere with witnesses and not to access any relevant online
platforms. She asserts that
she has no access to evidentiary material
as all devices were seized and forensically examined. She further
notes that the state
returned her cell phone after she voluntarily
handed it over. (It was revealed in argument that the
appellant’s mobile
phone has since been returned to the police
and is being held in custody as an exhibit).
10.10
The appellant alleges that she was in a
“misogynistic relationship” with accused 1 and that he
controlled her bank accounts
and directed the payment of monies.
10.11
When accused 1 was arrested, he transferred
an amount of a hundred and ninety-eight thousand rand to her.
The appellant submits
that this money was given to her as payment for
legal fees that would be incurred after accused 1’s arrest.
- Finally,
the appellant contends that the prosecution of this case will not
be completed anytime soon. She submits that her continued
detention
whilst awaiting the completion of the trial would be unjust.11.
In my view, there was sufficient evidence to conclude that the
appellant is not a flight risk.
Finally,
the appellant contends that the prosecution of this case will not
be completed anytime soon. She submits that her continued
detention
whilst awaiting the completion of the trial would be unjust.
11.
In my view, there was sufficient evidence to conclude that the
appellant is not a flight risk.
11.1
She is a young South African citizen who
has concrete ties to South Africa.
11.2
She has a verified place or residence where
she will stay if released on bail. The state has satisfied
itself of the address.
11.3
She has the support of her family although
this may have been complicated by adverse publicity that surrounded
this case.
11.4
She states that she does not have foreign
assets or ties that would induce her to flee from South Africa.
11.5
She surrendered herself to the police
voluntarily when requested to do so after accused 1 was arrested, and
she appears to have
cooperated with the police.
11.6
The likelihood that she may flee can
further be reduced by suitable bail conditions that require her to
surrender her passport and
to report to her nearest police station.
12.
I do not regard the fact that the appellant
may have deleted certain information from her devices as a reason to
refuse bail.
The police are already in possession of the
evidence they need to prove the unlawful activities that were
allegedly engaged in,
and they have forensically secured the devices
and data that were allegedly used in the commission of the offence.
13.
Although the state alleges that there are
crypto wallets that she can access, there is no concrete evidence
that such wallets exist.
The appellant denies that she had access to
crypto wallets. She states however, that if there is any evidence of
crypto wallets
he will cooperate with the state in securing these
wallets.
14.
The
state did not rely on the fact that the appellant was a flight risk.
It primarily relied on the fact that on the evidence in
its
possession it was likely to secure a conviction against the appellant
and that she was facing a custodial sentence because
of the
seriousness of the offence.
15.
I agree that the state has
prima
facie
evidence linking the appellant to
a website that is alleged to have disseminated and sold pornography.
On the evidence of
Warrant Officer Boshoff child pornography
was hosted on this website. However, the fact that the state
has a good case against
the appellant, in itself, is not sufficient
to deny he bail.
16.
In the judgment of
Michael
Harry Lomas v
S (SS36/2024)
(17 March 2025)
my brother Strydom J, in deciding whether to grant bail, accepted
that the state has a strong case against the accused. He
went
so far as to say that the evidence produced by the state stood
uncontested and that upon conviction, the accused was facing
a
mandatory sentence of fifteen years. The court nevertheless found the
accused was not a flight risk and granted him bail.
17.
In my view, the court a quo conflated the
allegations against the accused 1 with the allegations against the
appellant. The evidence
points to the fact that whilst the appellant
was involved in the administration of the offending website and
probably had received
monies obtained through the sale of
pornographic material, she was not the primary offender.
- There
are no minimum sentences applicable in this case, and although the
charges against her and accused are serious, it is not
a foregone
conclusion that if convicted, the appellant will necessarily receive
a custodial sentence. It would not, in my view,
be in the interest
of justice to deny her bail. During the course of argument, Ms Ryan,
who appeared for the state, informed
the court that the
investigation has proceeded and come to a conclusion.
There
are no minimum sentences applicable in this case, and although the
charges against her and accused are serious, it is not
a foregone
conclusion that if convicted, the appellant will necessarily receive
a custodial sentence. It would not, in my view,
be in the interest
of justice to deny her bail. During the course of argument, Ms Ryan,
who appeared for the state, informed
the court that the
investigation has proceeded and come to a conclusion.
- In
further argument that was heard by the court just before it was
about to deliver its judgment, the court drew Ms Ryan’s
attention to the fact that the initial bail application was heard in
February 2025. Some eight months have lapsed since this
bail appeal
has been heard. The state was invited (before the handing down of
this judgment), to submit a further affidavit disclosing
any new
information in the state’s possession that may affect the
court’s decision in granting bail. Ms Ryan
informed the
court that she did not believe this was procedurally correct and she
declined thecourt’s invitation in
this regard. She only made further submissions to the court that the
proposed amount of bail offered
by the appellant was not
commensurate with the seriousness of the offence, and she asked that
bail in the amount of fifty thousand
rand be set. Whilst
taking cognisance of the seriousness of the offence, I am of the
view that bail should not be set at
an amount that would effectively
deprive the appellant of the opportunity to be released on bail.
In
further argument that was heard by the court just before it was
about to deliver its judgment, the court drew Ms Ryan’s
attention to the fact that the initial bail application was heard in
February 2025. Some eight months have lapsed since this
bail appeal
has been heard. The state was invited (before the handing down of
this judgment), to submit a further affidavit disclosing
any new
information in the state’s possession that may affect the
court’s decision in granting bail. Ms Ryan
informed the
court that she did not believe this was procedurally correct and she
declined the
court’s invitation in
this regard. She only made further submissions to the court that the
proposed amount of bail offered
by the appellant was not
commensurate with the seriousness of the offence, and she asked that
bail in the amount of fifty thousand
rand be set. Whilst
taking cognisance of the seriousness of the offence, I am of the
view that bail should not be set at
an amount that would effectively
deprive the appellant of the opportunity to be released on bail.
- In
all the circumstances, in my view, the magistrate erred in finding
that it would not be in the interest of justice to admit
the
appellant to bail.
In
all the circumstances, in my view, the magistrate erred in finding
that it would not be in the interest of justice to admit
the
appellant to bail.
- The
appellant has agreed to subject herself to stringent bail
conditions. The bail application in the lower court was heard
decided in February 2025. It may be that since then, the state has
been able to obtain further information from electronic devices
used
by the applicant and accused 1 to operate the alleged illegal
website. Such information may reveal the existence of crypto
wallets
and cryptocurrency. The search for and processing of such
information requires special forensic skill in computer technology.
If further information is available that requires that appellant’s
co-operation with the handing over of passwords, log
on details,
crypto currency serial numbers and other information, the appellant
has undertaken to cooperate with the investigating
officer. If
she does not cooperate, the state can again approach the court for a
reconsideration of bail. I propose to
include, as part of this
order, a digital lockdown on the appellant that will prohibit her
from accessing the internet. The defence
acknowledges that such
lockdown would be difficult to monitor and check up on. This may be
so. Before the appellant is released
she must sign a declaration
that she undertakes and swears that she will abide by the conditions
relating to the prohibition
against her accessing the internet. She
must acknowledge that if she breaches these conditions her bail may
be revoked and she
may be returned to prison pending the
finalisation of her trial.
The
appellant has agreed to subject herself to stringent bail
conditions. The bail application in the lower court was heard
decided in February 2025. It may be that since then, the state has
been able to obtain further information from electronic devices
used
by the applicant and accused 1 to operate the alleged illegal
website. Such information may reveal the existence of crypto
wallets
and cryptocurrency. The search for and processing of such
information requires special forensic skill in computer technology.
If further information is available that requires that appellant’s
co-operation with the handing over of passwords, log
on details,
crypto currency serial numbers and other information, the appellant
has undertaken to cooperate with the investigating
officer. If
she does not cooperate, the state can again approach the court for a
reconsideration of bail. I propose to
include, as part of this
order, a digital lockdown on the appellant that will prohibit her
from accessing the internet. The defence
acknowledges that such
lockdown would be difficult to monitor and check up on. This may be
so. Before the appellant is released
she must sign a declaration
that she undertakes and swears that she will abide by the conditions
relating to the prohibition
against her accessing the internet. She
must acknowledge that if she breaches these conditions her bail may
be revoked and she
may be returned to prison pending the
finalisation of her trial.
- In
the circumstances, I make the following order.
In
the circumstances, I make the following order.
1)
The appeal is upheld.
2)
The decision of the court a quo refusing to
admit the appellant to bail is set aside.
3)
The appellant is granted bail in the amount
of fifteen thousand rand subject to the following conditions:
3.1) The appellant
must surrender her passport to the investigating officer.
3.2) The appellant
shall reside at 4[…] A[…] P[…] Street, E[…]
P[…]rk, Pretoria and shall
not be permitted to leave Gauteng
without the written permission of the investigating officer. If the
appellant changes her residential
address she shall first inform the
investigating officer and seek his written permission.
3.3) The appellant
shall surrender any electronic devices owned by her that are capable
of accessing the internet, including
any smart phone that is capable
of accessing the internet via WIFI or LTE, 3G, 4G or 5G.
3.4) The appellant
may possess and use a basic cell phone that is capable of GSM
communication provided that such a device
is not capable of accessing
the internet and is not capable of operating digital communication
platforms such as WhatsApp, messenger,
telegram and the like.
Appellant shall be required to provide the investigating officer with
her cell phone number and the
sim card number and details of the
network used.
3.5) The appellant
shall not access the internet through any other person’s
computer, laptop, tablet or similar digital
device for the purposes
of browsing the internet, interacting with social media of any kind
and sending emails or digital messages
in any other form.
3.6) The
investigating officer or an expert in the services of the SAPS may
monitor the appellant’s communication via
any permitted
electronic monitoring device, in order to ensure that she complies
with this order.
3.7) The appellant
shall not communicate with any state witness or potential state
witnesses. If she does not know whether
a person is a potential state
witnesses, she must approach the investigating officer for
confirmation that she may communicate
with such person.
3.8) If any further
information becomes available to the state from forensic analysis of
devices in its possession the appellant
shall cooperate with the
state in handing over passwords, log-on details, crypto currencies,
serial numbers and if she not able
to do so, to provide any further
information at her disposal as to how these can be obtained.
3.9) The appellant
shall not visit or communicate directly or indirectly with accused 1,
but may do so through her legal representative
only.
3.10) The
appellant shall report to Garsfontein police station twice a week on
Tuesday and Friday between the hours of six
AM and eight PM.
3.11) Before
the appellant is released on bail she shall sign the following
declaration.
“
I
swear and undertake that I shall comply with the above conditions and
I acknowledge that if I breach any of these conditions,
my bail may
be revoked and I may be required, upon the order of a competent
court, to be reincarcerated pending the finalisation
of my trial.
- -
- - - - - - - - - -
…………………………
KUNY J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DATE
:
28 OCTOBER 2025
JUDGEMENT FURTHER
CORRECTION FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS ON 30 OCTOBER 2025
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