Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 581South Africa
S v Mbanjwa and Another (SS16/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 581 (11 July 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Mbanjwa and Another (SS16/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 581 (11 July 2022)
S v Mbanjwa and Another (SS16/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 581 (11 July 2022)
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sino date 11 July 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: SS16/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
And
JABULANI
MICHAEL MBANJWA
ACCUSED 1
NHLANHLA
FORTUNE
KUBHEKA
ACCUSED 2
JUDGMENT
MATJELE
AJ:
INTRODUCTION
1.
In this matter Mr. Jabulani Michael Mbanjwa
(Accused 1) and Nhlanhla Fortune Kubheka (Accused 2) are facing five
charges, namely:
counts 1 and 3 of kidnapping S [....] 1 D
[....] and M [....] 1 G [....] M [....] 2; counts 2 and 4 of
murder of the
two same people read with section 51(1) of Act 105 of
1997; and lastly count 5 of obstructing the course of justice by
hiding the
bodies of the deceased with intent to distort truth as to
the circumstances surrounding the death of the deceased. All these
offences
are alleged to have taken place on or about the 27
th
July 2019 at King’s Hotel situated at [....] P [....] Street,
Germiston in the district of Ekurhuleni. The state alleged
that all
five counts were committed in furtherance of common purpose it not
being known who the other parties are.
2.
Competent verdicts in terms of section 258
of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA) in respect of murder
counts 2 and 4 were
read to the accused, and both confirmed they
understand. In respect of counts 1,3 and 5 the provisions of section
270 CPA relating
to counts where no competent verdicts are specified,
was read for the accused, and they both confirmed they understand.
3.
Both the accused pleaded not guilty to all
counts preferred against them. Adv. Seoka for accused 1 confirmed the
pleas to be in
accordance to his instructions. No plea explanation
was tendered as the accused exercised his right to remain silent.
4.
Adv. Mthembu for accused 2 also confirmed
the pleas of his client to be in accordance with his instructions.
His client’s
section 115 statement is that in respect of counts
1,3 and 5 his client did not participate and knows nothing about
them. In respect
of counts 2 and 4 he acted under duress as he was
forced by accused 1 to stab both the deceased. He admits to
participating in
the stabbing.
5.
Admissions were made in terms of
Section
220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, signed by both legal
representatives and both accused persons, and these were as follows:
5.1
The deceased person is S [....] 1 D [....]
, a male person who died on the 28
th
July 2019 as a result of multiple deep incised wounds on the neck and
chest (thoracic), sustained at [....] P [....] Street Germiston,
Kings Hotel.
5.2
Another deceased person is M [....] 1
G [....] M [....] 2, a male person who died on the 28
th
July 2019 as a result of multiple deep incised wounds on the neck and
chest (thoracic), sustained at [....] P [....] Street Germiston,
Kings Hotel.
5.3
On the 28
th
July 2019 they were both declared dead by GD Gibson, an emergency
service practitioner, with declaration of death forms, marked
exhibits B1 and B2.
5.4
Dr. Molefe Isaach Kolodi conducted post
mortem examinations on both bodies of the deceased marked DR 1907/19
and DR1908/19 respectively
on the 31
st
July 2019, and recorded findings on the medico-legal reports marked
exhibits C1 and C2, each supported by an affidavit in terms
of
section 212(4)
& (8) CPA sworn to by Dr. Molefe Isaach Kolodi in
respect of the post-mortem examinations. The cause of death in
respect of
each of the deceased was determined to be: “MULTIPLE
DEEP INCISED WOUNDS TO THEIR NECKS AND CHESTS (THORACIC)”.
5.5
From the time the deceased were stabbed at
Kings Hotel until such time that Dr. Kolodi conducted post mortem
examinations thereon
on the 31
st
July 2019 the bodies on the deceased sustained no further injuries.
5.6
The facts and findings of the post mortem
reports marked exhibits C1 and C2 are true and correct.
5.7
The contents, correctness and chain in
respect of photo album containing photos 1-31 compiled by Sgt
Matsobane H. Maphakela marked
as Exhibit D, depicting the crime scene
and where the bodies of the deceased were found at [....] P [....]
Street, Germiston. Also
photo album containing photos 1-133 compiled
by Cst. Thabo David Masemola stationed at the local criminal record
centre in Germiston
marked exhibit E, depicting deceased’s
bodies during post mortem examination conducted at Long Street,
Germiston Government
mortuary.
5.8
Warrant officer Motjile Chriswell Makapan,
a forensic analyst at Forensic Science Laboratory matched the blood
stains sample from
Accused 2’s trouser with the sample from
deceased DR 1908/19, M [....] 1 G [....] M [....] 2, and
it matched
according to biology report Exhibit F.
5.9
SAPS arrested accused 2 on the 29
th
July 2019, and accused 1 on the 30
th
September 2019.
6.
State submitted an address in terms of
section 150
CPA.
7.
Oral evidence was heard by the court from
the following witnesses for the state: Z [....] 1 L [....] H [....],
Dr Molefe Isaac Kolodi,
B [....] M [....] 3 K [....] 1, W/O Oduetse
Chriswell Makapan, Sgt Samuel Mashinini, Sgt Hector Mavundza, Sgt
Matsobane Maphakela
and W/O Merinah Ntunguvhadzeni Netshidzati. Both
accused testified and only accused 2 called a witness, S [....] 2 Z
[....] 2.
8.
Over and above the above mentioned exhibits
submitted with
s 220
admissions, the court received the following
documentary evidence: Accused 2’s warning statement and police
statement marked
exhibit G; Zolisa H [....]’s police statement
marked exhibit H; and B [....] M [....] 3 K [....] 1 ’s police
statement
marked exhibit I.
9.
After all evidence was heard, counsels for
the state and defence submitted heads of argument, which they
elaborated briefly on in
court, through which the state is arguing
that it has discharged the onus on it to prove its case beyond
reasonable doubt and both
accused must be convicted of all five
counts each as charged. On the other hand, each of the defence
counsels argued on behalf
of each of their clients that they be
acquitted in the matter as the state has not proven its case beyond
any reasonable doubt.
Adv. Mthembu argued accused must be convicted
of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm only in terms of
his admissions.
Evidence:
10.
In summary, the state first called
Z
[....] 1 H [....]
, who testified that
he knows both accused persons. At the time of the commission of these
offences he was staying with accused
1 in his flat or room at Kings
Hotel for six months at that time. He knows accused 2 from when they
were at school using the same
transport mode. They later became
friends as they belonged to the same group of ‘Izikhothane’,
which group specialising
in wearing expensive clothes and dancing.
11.
On the evening of Friday the 26
th
July 2019 he and accused 1 were at his place, called “umhlaba
wamaqiniso”, meaning “the land of truths”.
The two
deceased in this matter, whom he called Virus (G [....] M
[....] 2) and Teaspoon, arrived with two cell phones that
they were
selling. On accused 1’s instructions he left with one of the
deceased, G [....] M [....] 2, to go sell the
two phones. They
managed to sell one phone for R450, and they used R50 to buy a drug
called crystal meth. On their return at accused
1’s place they
smoked these drugs and they gave accused 1 R100. While they were all
four smoking around 7 or 8pm he then
went out to ‘hustle’
or ‘spin’, which means to go out to steal. He returned
with a stolen bicycle which
he brought to accused 1`s room between
10pm and 12am. He left again to go spin.
12.
Upon his return he found a lady called B
[....] with the three men he earlier left in the house, and this was
around dawn in the
morning. He came back with two designer jackets.
By then virus and Teaspoon were quiet. He again went out after he had
been given
a R40 from B [....] to buy crystal meth drugs.
13.
He returned from buying crystal meth and
while they were smoking it the owners of the phones the deceased had
brought the previous
night arrived knocking at accused 1’s
place. Accused 1 and the two deceased spoke with them outside. Upon
their return accused
1 was very angry asking the 2 deceased where the
starter packs or memory cards of those phones were.
14.
Accused 1 then sent Z [....] 1 to call
accused 2 and Bongi. He only found accused 2 about an hour later and
did not find Bongi.
When he returned with accused 2 they met Accused
1, Teaspoon and Virus at a corner-shop belonging to some Pakistani
people. They
then returned to the flat with him in the front as told
by accused 1 to make sure Teaspoon does not runaway, while they come
from
behind them on the way to accused 1’s place, which is
upstairs. This sequence of walking is however different from the one
observed by the defence witness, S [....] 2 Z [....] 2 though he also
confirmed all five went past him while he was washing his
vehicle
‘
enroute
’
to accused 1’s place.
15.
He then took the bicycle and left passing
all the four at the gate while going to BP garage to pump it. From
the garage he went
to sell the bicycle at Elsburg for R500. Bought
two bags of crystal meth drugs costing R300, which he went to smoke
it elsewhere.
He returned to the flat around 1pm where he found both
the deceased already tied both arms from behind with wire and lying
on their
stomachs, and K [....] 2 seating down with his hands tied
too at the back towards the right side, looking distressed. There was
also Gift and another male unknown to him. Accused 1 was holding a
table knife about 45cm long, the type used in butcheries, visible
in
photos 27 and 28 of exhibit D. And there were other knives on the
floor.
Gift
was packing some bricks to sit on, after he had used one to assault K
[....] 2 on the left eye. The deceased’s clothes
were torn and
they also looked like they had been assaulted as they were in pains,
Teaspoon having a swollen face.
16.
At around 3.30 to 4 pm he left one R150 bag
of drugs and left under the pretext that he was going to buy a
straight of alcohol,
just to be out of the situation in accused 1’s
house. Accused 1 told him to make it quick so they may assault the
deceased
well while drunk. He later met accused 2 around 7 pm who
told him he was going to buy mandrax, and also told to call the
witness,
Z [....] 1 back accused 1’s room. He told him not to
inform accused 1 that he saw him, and he even advised accused 2 not
to return there. This is corroborated by Accused 2 in his evidence.
17.
He did not witness any assault nor
stabbing, and he left the deceased at accused 1`s house tied but
still alive at the time. He
was then arrested with accused 2 on a
Monday, the 29
th
July 2019.
18.
The second state witness was B [....]
K [....] 1 . She knew both accused 1 and 2 in the matter. She also
knew Z [....] 1 H [....]
who testified before her in this case. She
had previously been in a ‘friends with benefits’
relationship with accused
1, before she was in a relationship with
one Thabo who is also a friend of accused 1.
19.
During her evidence she admitted that she
could be mixing dates, but the sequence of events is accurate. She
stated that on Friday
morning she went to accused 1`s place and she
offered him R40 and he was going to add some money to buy drugs.
Accused 1 gave the
money to Z [....] 1 who then left to buy crystal
meth drugs. In accused 1`s room he found him with two boys who would
later be
assaulted and stabbed in her presence. She corroborates Z
[....] 1 except that she says it was Friday morning, whereas Z [....]
1 said it was Saturday morning. The latter makes sense, as the
deceased Teaspoon and Virus only arrived in accused 1’s flat
on
Friday evening, and not morning.
20.
They all smoked these drugs, likewise these
two deceased were already busy smoking when she entered. When she was
done she left
the room and went to a betting place and later to a
club. She returned to accused 1`s room around 3 am in the following
morning.
This would obviously be Sunday morning, and not Saturday
morning a B [....] originally stated. B [....] went on to say, when
she
returned Accused 1, who opened the door, had the knife depicted
in photo 27 and 28 of exhibit D in his possession. She referred
to is
as a sword.
21.
B [....] states that during this time she
noticed the two deceased who on the ground, tied. Accused 2 was
present, and at one time
stabbed both of them at random even though
she does not see where exactly, as she was busy with her phone,
deliberately distracting
herself from the situation she found in that
room. At some stage accused 1 instructed accused 2 to take the phone,
she voluntary
handed the phone to accused 2 even before he could ask
for it. This is different from her police statement: she resisted and
accused
2 took it by force. She did not hear if there was any
conversation between accused 2 and 1 as to what was to happen with
the deceased.
According to her it was only accused 1 and 2 who were
assaulting the deceased and there was also K [....] 2 among them.
22.
It became however apparent that she was
arrested because she was saying nothing about the assault to the
deceased. Except for admitting
that Z [....] 1 was in and out of the
house, however she denies having seen him come with the bicycle and
also denied having seen
Z [....] 1 coming with two designer jackets.
This obviously took place the previous day.
23.
She left in the morning having been handed
over by accused 1 to his neighbour for her to wait there. She left
that person under
the guise that she was going to buy cigarette, and
she fled to her friend’s place where she spent the whole of
Sunday. On
Monday she was told about the arrest of accused 2 and Z
[....], and she thought accused 1 was arrested too, and she decided
to
go to the police.
24.
She admitted that she had been warned
before about her relationship with accused 1, as the latter
dangerous. She believed when it
happened to her and saw the stabbing
of the two deceased. She also confirmed seeing accused 2 at the time
he was injured, and he
informed her he was injured by accused 1.
25.
Dr Isaac Molefe Kolodi
testified
that bodies DR 1907& 1908/ 2019 died as a result of
multiple deep penetrating incised wounds to the necks and
chests
(thoracic). The total number of wounds observed on both bodies was 94
caused by a sharp object. The one shown on the photos
27 & 28 of
exhibit D, his reply was that it is conceivable that object was the
one used to inflict those wounds. It is possible
he said.
26.
Warrant Officer Oduetse Chriswell
Makapan
, from forensic laboratory
specialising in DNA analysis. He analysed the exhibits that were
submitted to the laboratory. Briefly,
the results revealed that one
of the strings that tied the deceased that had DNA of body DR1907/19
reference 15D2AA1731”
(PA4002578881) matched the DNA of accused
1, reference sample “MJ Mbanjwa:17DBBE2194”. Also the
swabs taken on the
sharp object on photos 27 and 28 reference
14DCAS2568 (PA 5001503733), match with the DNA sample coming from
accused 1 reference
sample “MJ Mbanjwa:17DBBE2194”.
Accused 1’s DNA was also found in a mixture of results on a
wire string referenced
FPD-00257, used for restraining upper and
lower limbs of body the 20 years old DR1907/2019. This is where W/O
Makapan stated that
the said string could have been handled by more
than one person hence several stri-loci numbers in the results, but
they include
accused 1’s DNA in that mix, but exclude accused
2. The other donor is someone else not before court.
27.
The DNA from the pants of accused 2,
reference [....] matched the body sample of deceased DR1908/19.
This formed part of accused
2’s formal
section 220
CPA
admissions. However, in respect of the ropes tying the upper and
lower limbs of body DR1908/19 reference [....] no DNA was
obtained.
28.
Sergeant Samuel Mashinini,
testified
that on the 28/07/2019 whilst was on duty received the call from a
person who wanted to remain anonymous reporting about
the crime that
had happened at Kings Hotel. He and Sgt Maluleke went to the Kings
Hotel and found residents who also refused to
reveal their names.
They reported that, they have heard unusual cry of a person for help,
which came from the first floor. The
police were taken to first floor
and showed a certain room from which the cries were coming from the
previous night. The police
entered the room as the door was not
locked. Their attention was caught by the prints of blood on the wall
and remaining blood
on the floor corner. The owner of the room was
not there. The floor was made of wooden floor and had a trap door
leading underneath,
which was on the roof of a shack that is on the
ground floor. Sergeant Maluleka followed the blood traces through
this hole and
he saw the two feet of a person between a wall and a
shack. They found a way of accessing where the bodies were from the
ground
floor with the help of one of the residents who had a key for
one of the rooms on the ground floor. They had to break the wall of
the shack on the ground floor with the permission of the owner, in
order to access the section where they saw the feet. They then
discovered two dead bodies which were tied on their hands and feet.
29.
The sharp object on photos 27 and 28 of
exhibit D, which he referred to as a spear, was found in the roof of
the shack on the ground
floor. It was removed from there and placed
where it could be easily accessible, which was on the floor of the
room upstairs (the
crime scene). The sharp object had blood on the
blade as well on the handle.
30.
The police called the people from the
pathology department, who arrived and declared the two persons as
dead. The photographer was
also summoned from the Local Criminal
Record Centre and arrived and took the photos on exhibit D.
31.
Nothing much came from cross examination by
accused 1 counsel except that the two witnesses had said it was a
knife that is on photos
whereas he is saying it’s a spear. The
witness maintained that it’s a
spear
.
Accused 2’s legal representative did not cross examine.
32.
Sergeant Hector Mavhundza
came to testify. He said, he was called by Sgt
Maluleke. He arrived at the scene of the crime at Kings Hotel, he
found two dead
males tied with ropes on the ground floor. He referred
the sharp object found as the
dagger
.
Under cross examination by accused 1’s legal representative it
was put to him that it’s possible that the crime scene
was
tempered, he said not in his presence. Whilst accused 2’s legal
representative asked him why he does not remember where
exactly was
the dagger found. He said the time has lapsed, the incident happened
long time and it should be born in mind that he
might have attended
3-4 crime scenes at that point in time.
33.
Witness
Sgt.
Matsobane Maphakela
attended the crime
scene at Kings Hotel coming from the local criminal record centre in
Germiston, and took all photos in exhibit
D at 12:10 am. He found
other police officers in the scene already. He found two dead bodies
with their hands and feet tied, with
the strings or ropes. On the
floor he found the knife or sword with a handle with insulation tape.
He estimated the length that
sharp object to a meter. He said the
knife was on the room on the first floor, and not where he found the
bodies. In the morning
he took the swabs from the knife and the
exhibits were sent to the forensic laboratory. He booked the knife or
sword into SAP13,
1351/2019. Under cross examination by accused1
legal representative he said the deceased were tied with ropes or
strings and one
was tied with the wires. Put to him that he was
assisted by the prosecutor to say the wire was used too to tie the
bodies, he responded
that the photos he took show that bodies were
tied with wires. Put to him that no evidence proved that the knife
was on the other
room, he replied by saying it was pointed to him
there and he does not know who put it there. It was said that Sgt
Mashinini said
the knife was on top of the roof. He replied by saying
that Sgt Maluleke explained to him that the knife was removed from
the original
position since he would unable to take its picture in
that position. Put to him that the crime scene was tempered or
tainted, he
stated that the person removing the knife had worn the
gloves. The witness was told that he kept on trying to fix the
version.
There was no cross examination by accused 2 counsel. The
court clarified from him whether the sharp object he said it was
about
a meter is the one which is depicted on photo 27-28 of Exhibit
D, he confirmed same.
34.
Warrant officer (W/O) Merinah
Netshidzati
testified she made
follow-up with B [....]’s rape allegation but she did not meet
with person whom B [....] alleges she first
reported this allegation
to. B [....] informed her that the said witness was in homelands.
When the warrant officer persisted on
this she got a response from B
[....] that the said witness said she was scared of accused 1
therefore she doesn’t want to
be involved. When she insisted
for B [....] take her to the person she told her the person has
relocated. She ended up no longer
finding B [....] herself. The
warrant officer eventual got promoted to work in Dobsonville SAPS and
a new investigating officer
took over the case. The next time she
re-surfaced was when she was scared because there were people who had
threatened her not
to testify against accused 1.
35.
She could not find K [....] 2 because when
she looked for him K [....] 2 ’s mother informed her that he
had since moved to
KwaZulu-Natal because he is scared of accused 1.
She is the one who took exhibits that include ropes, strings and
wires from the
bodies of DR 1907 & 1908, and buccal samples of
the accused to the forensic laboratory for analysis, except for
accused 2’s
pants which were taken by her colleague officer
Netshiavha. It took time for her to arrest accused 1 as he was on the
run but was
helped by the fact that accused 1 was arrested by
Primrose SAPS for another different crime, where he was using other
names, calling
himself DeLong Jili. Through the fingers prints he was
eventually located and charged in court when he was appearing on
those other
matters. The witness knew the accused because he is the
type of person who is always in and out of Germiston police station
for
different offences. Asked if she had promised B [....] and Z
[....] 1 anything for them to testify for the state, she said no.
36.
Under cross examination accused 1’s
counsel verified who told her that accused was staying at Kings
Hotel, that being S [....]
2 Z [....] 2. She said she verified that
he was staying there even immediately after the incident as she would
receive a call he
is there, and when they arrive he has fled. Also
the accused when arrested for other crimes, he would normally provide
his Kings
Hotel address. under cross examination by counsel for
accused2 it transpired that accused 1 was once arrested for cases of
business
breakings and theft of out of motor vehicles. Did she
believe accused 2 when he implicated himself, Z [....] 1 and accused
1 in
a commission of crime, her reply was yes. Did she believe that Z
[....] 1 was implicated, she said yes. But Z [....] 1 was withdrawn
from this matter as an accused and testified as an ordinary witness
against both the accused, it was asked if he was promised something?
Why did he not testify as a
Section 204
witness? She replied that she
does not know why Z [....] 1 was no longer an accused person. That
decision was taken by prosecution.
Accused 2’s version put to
her that he stabbed the deceased under the instructions of accused 1
because he was scared of
him. Does the witness believe that version,
she said yes, because even other people said they are scared of
accused 1. She got
the information that the accused would come to
Kings Hotel at night, which corroborates what S [....] 2 Z [....] 2
testified, which
led to him fleeing to KZN.
DEFENCE CASE:
37.
Accused 1,
Jabulani
Michael Mbanjwa,
disputed that he was
at Kings Hotel on the weekend of July 2019. He says he was no longer
staying at Kings Hotel at that time as
he moved out on the beginning
of February 2019. He was assisted by a certain person called Grey to
transport all his goods including
the door of room from Kings Hotel
to Knights squatter camp, where he was now living in July 2019, the
time of this incident. His
reason for moving out then was because of
a certain Mr. Mkhize who was busy cooking false criminal cases
against him, which caused
his previous arrests. Even with the present
matter, it is one of the cases Mkhize crafted against him. The
witnesses in this matter:
Z [....], B [....] including accused 2 are
working together with Mr. Mkhize to falsely implicate him in these
crimes. He does not
know Z [....] 1 had never met him. He only met
him in police custody after he was arrested. He denies ever
assaulting him previously.
He denies ever staying with Z [....]. He
only knows accused 2 from a distance as he was a friend of his
nephew, Thando. He says
it is accused 2 who in fact reminded him of
such, when they met at the police station after his arrest. He denied
ever assaulting
accused 2 before. He confirmed knowing B [....] who
he alleged was his girlfriend but he last saw her in 2018. He denied
that B
[....] saw him stabbing the two deceased and/or being
possession of a big knife. He denied of knowing the sharp object
which is
depicted on photos 27& 28 exhibit D.
38.
He stated that he did not instruct accused
2 to rape B [....] as he was not there when such was happening.
Furthermore, he would
not instruct someone to rape a person he was
once involved with. He does not know the deceased persons as he was
given the photo
albums to peruse. Mr. Mkhize was not a caretaker but
an outsider who came to open a panel beating business at Kings Hotel.
He then
also asked for a place to stay for his employees at Kings
Hotel. Accused 1 denied that Mkhize was the caretaker of the
building,
but rather accused 1 used to be a co-caretaker with his
uncle Zulo.
39.
He was cross examined by Adv. Mthembu for
accused 2, who asked him why his room was called ‘umhlaba
wabaqiniso’ (land
of truths), he said that was not true but
rather the whole hotel building was called by that name. Put to him
that indeed the name
of his room fits the description of the events
of this matter, as the issue of enquiry was about the sim cards or
starter packs.
He alleged that he found the place called by that name
after he came from KZN where he was arrested. Asked if Mkhize is the
one
who caused him to be arrested there in KZN as well, he replied
negatively. Asked whether he had seen Mkhize’s presence in
this
matter, he said no. Put to him that the record will reflect that he
didn’t dispute that he once assaulted Z [....] 1
and Nhlanhla
during the testimony of Z [....]. Asked whether it was a co incidence
that Z [....] 1 and Nhlanhla are scared of him
and that it was
emphasized by w/o Netshidzati, the former I/O that people told her
that they are scared of him.
40.
Under cross examination by Adv. Xaba of the
State, asked whether besides his allegations that Z [....], B [....]
and Nhlanhla schemed
against him, was science the DNA results
colluded against him too? He replied by saying that Mkhize has
escalated he does not know
what magic is he using now. He said, he
does not use drugs and he is the member of the gangster group called
the 26 which only
operate in prison. Asked about beads on his arm, he
said he is not a traditional healer. He denied being a sangoma.
41.
S [....] 2 Z [....] 2
was
called by accused 2 as a witness. He testified that on a Saturday
morning in July 2019, he was woken by the noise at the passage
where
he was staying at Kings Hotel. He was occupying one of the rooms
there next to accused 1’s room. From the album Exhibit
D he
identified the door to accused1`s room. He placed the accused 1 in
the scene of the crime during the weekend of the 26
th
to 29
th
July 2019. He also knew Z [....] 1 whom he called Zolile. He also
knew accused 2, who he said he knew for some time as he lived
in a
block where Z [....] 2’s father also lived Kwa-Mbatha there in
Germiston. He had occasions where they would talk with
him.
42.
He was also the one responsible for the
arrest of Z [....] 1 and accused 2 on Monday the 29
th
July 2019. In the process of interrogating accused 2 when he found
him at the scrapyard, while denying knowledge of anything to
do with
killed people in Accused 1’s room, after examining the rolled
sleeve of his trouser that had blood on it, and which
blood on the
trouser was ultimately matched with one of the deceased’s
sample by W/O Makapan, he attempted to flee but the
witness grabbed
him. On the way to King’s Hotel he confessed to him that they
ended up killing the deceased, explaining to
him how they killed
them.
43.
When the police had arrived at King’s
Hotel busy with their investigations he also attempted to arrest
accused 1 without success,
whom he saw and chased at the back of the
building. Accused 1 fled into the dark and they had to stop chasing
him out of fear.
Even in subsequent days he would be seen at night at
Kings Hotel, and this caused the witness to leave Germiston and go
back home
in Nquthu for the fear of his life from accused 1, as there
was no electricity in the building. He was located in Nquthu for him
to testify in the matter. It is apparently due to his relocation to
Nquthu that the state could not find him as he was originally
a state
witness.
44.
On Saturday the 27
th
July 2019 he was woken up in the morning by noise of people on the
passage next to his room. When he went out he saw four unknown
males
with accused 1 who had come out of his room to address him, carrying
a walking stick. That walking stick, according to the
evidence of
accused 2, has a pipe inside in which the knife appearing in photo 27
and 28 fitted and would not be visible as accused
1 uses it as a
walking stick. He described the handle of this walking stick to
resemble the handle of a gun. Accused 1 asked these
people as to what
they want and why they are attacking them so early in the morning.
One of the four males responded by stating
that they were looking for
stolen cell phones by the person who stayed at accused 1`s room. This
evidence corroborates B [....]’s
evidence.
45.
Accused 1 denied there being a boy staying
there, but if they were talking about the one he knew, he was going
to look for him.
They promised to return in the afternoon. After
these people left the witness took the bucket of water to go wash his
vehicle,
since he had a trip to take. While busy washing the car,
accused 1 came in the company of two male persons whom he later saw
dead,
taking them to his room. Accused 1 informed him that these were
the boys that had caused the community members to come to his room,
and he was going to teach them a lesson because they brought
community members to his house. This evidence tallies with that of
Z
[....] 1 and accused 2 that when Z [....] 1 had gone to call accused
2 on accused 1’s instructions they found accused 1
with the two
deceased at a Pakistan`s shop.
46.
After accused 1 went pass he tried to warn
one of the deceased not to go to accused 1`s room but that boy did
not listen to him.
After they had walked passed him, Z [....] 1 and
accused 2 followed. He did speak with Z [....] 1 but accused 2 walked
passed him
without talking to him. In his conversation with Z [....]
1 he told him he had been sent by ‘Gabhadiya’, referring
to accused 1, to call accused 2.
47.
He confirmed knowing accused 1’s room
called ‘Umhlaba wamaqiniso’ (land of truths), where
people from outside
the Kings Hotel would come there to have their
issues resolved. Based on past experience of what happens in that
room is the reason
he was discouraging one of the deceased boys from
going there, as the bad things happen in that room, and he knew this
was not
going to end well. He had seen old people being assaulted in
that room. There was always noise in that room caused by people who
came to that room by way they knocked by stamping their feet on the
floor as there was no door so as to get attention. During the
night
time there was always a noise like someone was banging something with
a hammer from 8pm till 4am every day, and not one in
the building
could ask accused 1 because he was feared by everyone.
48.
He says within 5 minutes Z [....] 1 left
the room in possession of a bicycle, for which he borrowed a tyre
pump from him but he
denied having it though he did have, and advised
him to go to the garage. When he went upstairs to his room he saw the
younger
deceased boy standing outside at the door of accused 1. He
asked why he was not leaving and he said he was waiting for his
brother
as he is still inside and they are talking. Even when he went
to throw dirty water in the toilet which is passing accused 1’s
room he asked the boy again and even before he locked his room
leaving, and the boy kept giving the same answer.
49.
The following day while returning to
his room he found residents of Kings Hotel outside the building. And
they prevented him from
going to his room telling him accused 1
killed people and threw them in a hole in his flat. The police had
not yet arrived but
someone had called them. Realising their delay in
arriving, he drove with some of the community members in his car to
fetch the
police, who later followed them back to kings Hotel. He did
enter accused 1’s room in the presence of the police and saw
blood from the door. He also heard B [....] in the crowd as well
saying she saw the deceased tied and lying on the floor in accused
1’s room, but they were still alive when she last saw them.
50.
He was also aware that accused 2 was
assaulted by accused 1, ending up in hospital on one of the two
occasions. and at one time
he did ask accused 2 why he was in the
company of accused 1. He also stated that accused 1 was the leader of
young boys who were
in drugs. They would steal things and bring them
to his house. He confirmed that accused 1 was the most feared person
in that area
of Kings Hotel. He had seen him stabbing one person in
front of him who washed cars outside Kings Hotel, who used to bring
money
to him, the day he refused to give him money.
51.
Nhlanhla Kubheka
,
accused 2, was the last witness to testify. He confirmed that he knew
Z [....] 1 and the circumstances leading to their friendship,
he also
knew accused 1 through Thando, accused 1’s nephew who lived on
the ground floor at Kings Hotel, whilst accused 1
was on the 1
st
floor. This is contrary to accused 1’s evidence that this
Thando lived a kilometre away from Kings Hotel. He also knew B
[....]
though Thando as well and had been with her and accused 1 together.
He testified that he was fetched by Z [....] 1 on instructions
of
accused 1. He confirmed the evidence of both Z [....] 1 and S [....]
2 that they went to accused 1`s room together with the
two deceased
people on a Saturday.
52.
He stated that accused 1 gave them two
okapi knives that was himself and Z [....] 1 to stab the deceased. He
admitted that he did
stab one of these two people and Z [....] 1
stabbed the other one. This took place still during the day way
before the sunset.
As they did not stab the deceased to the
satisfaction of accused 1, he stopped them saying they did not know
what they were doing.
Meaning they were not doing it as he expected.
They gave him back the knives and accused 1 left the room. Accused 2
could not go
out since he did not know the whereabouts of accused 1.
He was afraid of him and before he could do anything against accused
1,
he had to think about his own safety first.
53.
Accused 2 was left in the house with Z
[....] 1 and the two deceased, accused 1 came back in the company of
K [....] 2 and Gift.
When K [....] 2 and Gift entered they started to
assault the deceased. Z [....] 1 did take a bicycle and went out.
When he returned
at 7-8pm accused 2 got an opportunity to go and
check on his Aunty/sister was not looking for him. He returned around
12 and 1am,
as he allegedly did not want accused 1 to think he ran
away, and also he was curious to know if the situation was still as
he left
it. Before he left accused 1 had already started stabbing the
deceased persons on their bodies. They were able to ward off the
blows and they were still breathing. He left out of shock. And being
scared. He returned, then B [....] came in and Z [....] 1 was
absent.
He was then sent by accused 1 to go look for Z [....] 1 to return
with the straight he had gone to buy. He found him at
JJ and gave him
the message, but he said he was not returning there, and advised
accused 2 also not to return there. He left him
there and went home
to sleep. He slept the whole Sunday and only woke up on Monday, the
day he was arrested. Z [....] 1 went out
to buy straight as he
reported, he was long gone and he was in the evening sent to call
him. He confirmed the conversation they
had with Z [....] 1 and the
advice that Z [....] 1 gave him. He also did not go back to the Kings
Hotel. When he left Kings Hotel
the two deceased were still alive,
there is no evidence to indicate that the fatal wounds were inflicted
in his presence nor in
B [....]`s presence. He was not also present
when their bodies were dumped to the ground floor. Accused 1 had on
two occasions
assaulted him, at first with a stone, and on another
occasion with a bottle. And had visible scars on his head. He could
not tell
his parents about what accused 1 had done to him but he did
tell his Aunt. He said he did not anticipate that the deceased would
end up being killed.
Totality of evidential
material
54.
Facts not in dispute are as follows:
a)
It is common cause that the deceased were
stabbed several times and died as a result, at Kings Hotel in
Germiston.
b)
It is not in dispute that accused number 2
was one of the people who were present at the crime scene during the
commission or partial
commission of the crimes in counts 2 & 4.
c)
Accused 2, Z [....], B [....] and Z [....]
2 know each other.
d)
Accused 1 and B [....] know each other.
55.
Facts in dispute are as follows:
a)
I respect of accused 1, whether he was at
Kings Hotel on the weekend of the commission of these 5 crimes and
was therefore involved
as alleged, or he was at Knights squatter
camp?
b)
In respect of accused 2, If accused 1 is
proved to have been the culprit, whether accused 2 acted in common
purpose with accused
1 on any or all of the five counts?
c)
Whether both accused were responsible for
the kidnapping of both the deceased.
d)
Whether both accused were together when the
deceased died.
e)
Whether the accused acted together in the
concealment of the dead bodies.
Onus:
56.
In
the SCA case of
State
v Combrink
[1]
by Shongwe AJ stated that “…it is trite law that the
state must prove its case beyond reasonable doubt and that no
onus
rests on the accused to prove his innocence. It is sufficient for
present purposes to state that it is well settled that the
evidence
must be looked at holistically”
57.
“
It
is part of dictum that there is no duty on the accused to prove his
innocence and that in case the version of the Defence is
reasonably
possibly true, he would be entitled to an acquittal. These are not
separate and independent tests. In order to convict,
the evidence [of
the State] must establish the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt, which will be so only if there is
at the same time no
reasonable possibility that an innocent explanation which has been
put forward might be true. The two are inseparable,
each being the
logical corollary of the other. In whichever form the test is
expressed, it must be satisfied upon consideration
of all
evidence”.
[2]
Evaluation of facts in
dispute:
58.
In
S
v Chabalala
[3]
Heher
AJA stated:
“
The
correct approach is to weigh up all the elements which points towards
the guilt of the accused against all those which are indicative
of
his innocence, taking proper account of inherent strengths and
weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities on both sides and,
having done so, to decide whether the balance weighs so heavily in
favour of the State as to exclude any reasonable doubt to the
accused’s guilt. The result may prove that one scrap of
evidence or one defect in the case for either party (such as the
failure to call a material witness concerning an identity parade) was
decisive but that can only be on an ex post facto determination
and a
trial court (and counsel) should avoid the temptation to latch on to
one (apparently) obvious aspect without assessing it
in the context
of the full picture in evidence.”
59.
As to whether accused 1, Jabulani
Michael Mbanjwa was at Kings Hotel or not on the weekend of the
commission of these 5 crimes and
still occupying the room which
according to him he used to occupy before 1 February 2019, the
following are important to determine.
Firstly, he is incriminated by
the person whom he says was his girlfriend, someone who is near and
dear to him. A person who admits
to the accused having been nothing
but good to her in many respects for the period she knew him, until
the date of the incident.
This is B [....], whom accused 1 alleges he
was last with her in 2018, and she says the opposite. She was with
him twice during
that weekend he being with the two deceased.
60.
Even though B [....] seemed to mix the
days, which she later admitted, and accused 2 in his evidence
confirmed she was there but
only confused the dates, her evidence is
corroborated by that of both Z [....] 1 and Accused 2. Even all their
police statements
place accused 1 in the scene. S [....] 2 Z [....]
2, who was the accused neighbour also placed him in the scene, as he
testified
that on two occasions on that Saturday the 27
th
July 2019 he conversed with accused 1. That was corroborated by Z
[....] 1 who asked for a bicycle pump from him after they went
pass
him while he washed his vehicle.
61.
Lastly he is implicated and placed on the
scene by DNA evidence from the ropes and steel wires used to tie one
of the deceased and
on the sharp object on photos 27 and 28 of
exhibit D, as testified by W/O Makapan from LCRC.
62.
I am therefore satisfied that the accused
was indeed still resident at King’s Hotel when these offences
took place, and he
in fact participated in the commission of the
kidnapping, tying of the deceased and their murder. It follows that
as the owner
of the room he knew the environment better that any
other person who might have acted in common purpose with him. It has
been alleged
that at times he would enter through the trap door and
sleep there. He knew the situation underneath the floor of his house.
It
follows therefore that he was best placed to know where to conceal
the two bodies, and he indeed did conceal them by pushing them
down
where they were found by SAPS. He could not have done this alone, but
must have been assisted in carrying those bodies and
concealing them
as such.
63.
As to whether both accused were responsible
for the kidnapping of the deceased, in respect of accused 1 is
conclusive he was the
main person behind their kidnapping. When he
returned to the building walking followed by the two deceased accused
1 informed Z
[....] 2 that those were the boys that brought members
of the community to his house. These are people who were making noise
that
woke Z [....] 2 up in the morning of that Saturday, looking for
stolen cell phones. Accused 1 even participated in their tying up
to
restrict their movement and ensuring they don’t run away.
64.
Since accused 1 is proved to have been the
perpetrator, the question is whether accused 2 acted in common
purpose with him on any
or all of the five counts?
65.
Accused 2 admitted to stabbing at least one
of the deceased twice with okapi knife from the deceased, in his
evidence. According
to his admission statement exhibit G he stabbed
both the deceased, which corroborates what B [....] stated that she
did not see
Z [....] 1 stab the deceased but accused 2 doing it
randomly on both the deceased. According to his admission statement,
exhibit
G, this happened after Kayle and Gift were present, yet
before Court he testifies that his participation in stabbing the
deceased
only happened during the day, before accused 1 left to fetch
Kayle and Gift. This is also before B [....] arrived, clearly B
[....]
was testifying about a different occasion of stabbing by
accused 2. Also this clashes with Z [....]’s and Z [....] 2’s
evidence, as according to them Z [....] 1 did not spend even 5
minutes after all 5 people went into the house. He left with the
bicycle going to pump and sell it, and not later after K [....] 2 and
Gift were present. It was never disputed by accused 2 when
they both
testified.
66.
Also another contradiction is that in terms
of his statement exhibit G he was left alone with the deceased told
not to speak a word
with them but only guard them, when Accused 1
returned with Kayle, Zolile and Gift. This then excludes Z [....] 1
from participating
in the stabbings during the day as alleged by
accused 2.
67.
He also stated that Z [....] 1 did take a
bicycle and went out after Gift and K [....] 2 arrived. When Z [....]
1 returned at between
7 and 8pm he, accused 2, got an opportunity to
go and check if his Aunty or sister was not looking for him. It has
been submitted
by his legal representative that he returned quickly
to avoid giving accused 1 an impression that he ran away, yet his own
evidence
says otherwise, because he returned between 12 and 1am,
which is 4 to 5 hours later.
68.
Under cross examination he admits that he
saw accused 1 stabbing the deceased, yet throughout he always
maintained that it was himself
and Z [....] 1 who stabbed the
deceased, and knives were taken by accused 1 who left and returned
with K [....] 2 and Gift. He
thereafter left when he was sent to call
Z [....] 1 with a straight and never returned but went home to sleep.
He contradicts himself
further by stating that at the time he was
sent to go and call Z [....], the deceased had been injured by
accused 1 and their clothing
was full of blood in his presence. This
confirms why the folded side of his trouser had a lot of blood.
69.
It becomes even more interesting when he
says this stabbing of the deceased by accused 1 with the spear or
sharp object in photos
27 and 28 was when K [....] 2 and Gift were no
longer present. The people present were B [....], himself, accused 1
and Z [....].
He concedes that at some stage K [....] 2 and Gift had
left when accused 1 only. This indeed corroborates B [....]’s
evidence
perfectly, except that Z [....] 1 was not there according to
B [....] and Z [....]’s evidence. This is proof that accused
2
did not go home to sleep as he testified in examination in chief,
after meeting Z [....] 1 who advised him not to return there.
He
returned and participated further and actively associating himself
with what accused 1 was doing. I therefore believe the things
B
[....] testified that they both even raped her, and accused 2 raped
her the second time in the absence of accused 1. That was
not the
behaviour of a person who was scared and affected by people who here
bleeding and stabbed in the room.
70.
I can safely conclude that after accused 1
handed B [....] to his neighbour it was only himself and accused 2 in
that room with
the deceased. Since his alibi has failed, accused 2 is
the only person who could have assisted accused 1 to conceal the
bodies
after the fatal wounds per Dr Kolodi were administered on both
deceased. Accused 2 had numerous opportunities to flee like Z [....]
1 did, but did not take that opportunity to disassociate himself from
accused 1’s activities on the day in question. Asked
under
cross examination why he did not flee after accused 1 left, he said
he does not know.
71.
It was argued for accused 2 that he did not
know what is happening as he had just been called by Z [....] 1 when
they met accused
1 and the two deceased at a shop belonging to the
Pakistanis, and following them into accused 1’s house. From the
evidence
above it is clear that even if he did not know at the
beginning, when he got to know he did not distance himself from
accused 1’s
actions.
72.
It follows also as to whether both accused
were together when the deceased died, that indeed they were as
concluded above. Also,
whether both the accused acted together in the
concealment of the dead bodies, they were the only two left in that
room after B
[....] was removed by accused 1. Whatever that happened
to the 2 deceased and their remains was done by the last two in that
room,
which is both accused 1 and 2.
LAW
COUNTS 1 AND 3:
KIDNAPPING
73.
‘
Kidnapping’
consists in unlawfully and
intentionally depriving a person of his or her freedom of movement
and/or, if such person is under the
age of 18 years, the custodians
of their control over the child. The elements of the crime are the
following: (
a
) the
deprivation
of (
b
) a person’s
freedom of movement
(or
the parental control
in the
case of a child) which takes place (
c
)
unlawfully
and
(
d
)
intentionally
.
COUNTS
2 AND 4: MURDER
74.
Murder is the unlawful and intentional causing of the death of
another human
being. The elements of the crime are the following: (
a
)
causing
the death
(
b
) of
another person
(
c
)
unlawfully
and (
d
)
intentionally.
COUNTS 5: OBSTRUCTING
THE COURSE OF JUSTICE
75.
The crime of defeating or obstructing the course of justice consists
in unlawfully
and intentionally engaging in conduct which defeats or
obstructs the course or administration of justice. The elements of
the crime
are the following: (
a
)
conduct
(
b
)
which amounts to
defeating or obstructing
(
c
) the
course or administration
of justice and which takes place (
d
)
unlawfully
and (
e
)
intentionally
.
Evaluation of
Admissions:
76.
Starting
with
Section 220
admissions and their exhibits,
S
v GROENEWALD
[4]
it
was stated that an admission is an acknowledgment of a fact. When
proved or made formally during judicial proceedings, it dispenses
with the need for proof in regard to that fact. Section 220 of the
Act, accordingly, makes it possible for a contested fact to
be put
beyond issue since, once made, the admission constitutes 'sufficient
proof' of it.
77.
In so far as accused 2 is concerned he did not dispute the contents
of his police
statement which was accepted as Exhibit G. In respect
of both accused chain evidence was not in dispute when one considers
the
admissions in terms of section 220 CPA, even though it would
appear as if counsel for accused 1 was challenging every witness by
the state. It is therefore important that I deal with formal evidence
of the state first before I deal with disputed factual issues.
78.
In addition to admissions I am satisfied with all formal evidence
presented
before this court by
Dr Molefe Isaac
Kolodi, W/O Oduetse Chriswell Makapan, Sgt Samuel Mashinini, Sgt
Hector Mavundza, Sgt Matsobane Maphakela and W/O
Merinah
Ntunguvhadzeni Netshidzati. They were all honest and reliable
witnesses whose evidence remained unshaken despite extensive
cross
examination from defence counsels.
Evaluation of Alibi
79.
In
R
v Hlongwane
[5]
“
The
legal position with regard to an alibi is that there is no onus on an
accused to establish it, and if it might reasonably be
true he must
be acquitted.
R
v Biya
,
1952 (4) SA 514
(AD). But is it important to point out that in
applying this test, the alibi does not have to be considered in
isolation. ...The
correct approach is to consider the alibi in the
light of the totality of the evidence in the case, and the Court’s
impressions
of the witnesses. In the
Biya’s
case
supra
,
Greenberg, J.A., said at p. 521 .... “... if on all the
evidence there is a reasonable possibility that this alibi evidence
is true it means that there is the same possibility that he has not
committed the crime”.
80.
The alibi defence of the accused 1 could
not be sustained in light of the strong evidence against him by 5
witnesses before court
and DNA results. Accused 2 contradicted his
own alibi in his own evidence as discussed earlier, proving that he
was not at his
home as he said but at accused 1’s house as
probabilities and circumstances dictate.
Premeditated
Murder
81.
On charges
of murder, culpable homicide or assault the evidence often reveals
that X’s aggressive conduct was immediately
preceded by
insulting or provocative behaviour on the part of Y, which angered X
and led to his aggressive conduct. Had the insulting
or provocative
conduct of Y or somebody else not taken place, X would not have
killed or assaulted Y. There is therefore a material
difference
between provoked homicide and non-provoked homicide, which is,
generally speaking, synonymous with premeditated murder.
The question
to be discussed here is whether or to what extent X may rely on the
provocation as a defence. This question arises
almost exclusively in
cases in which X is charged with murder. There is a
substantial
difference between premeditated murder
,
which is always committed with some evil motive, and the
intentional
but unpremeditated killing
of another person who has provoked X before X acted with aggression.
Any reasonable person feels almost instinctively that if X
had not
been provoked by Y, X would not have killed Y. It would, of course,
be wrong to allege that Y then only “got what
he deserved”,
because the law expects every person to exercise self-control.
Nevertheless, from a broad moral point of view,
every reasonable
person would be inclined to extend some recognition for human
weakness and therefore to treat X’s aggressive
act towards Y in
a way which differs from the way it would treat the premeditated
killing of Y.
[6]
82.
Firstly, from the beginning of the matter, when charges were put to
the accused
and as reflected in the indictment the murder charges
were read with section 51(1) and schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
. That suggests the imposition of life
sentence if the accused are convicted unless substantial and
compelling circumstances exist
that justify the imposition of a
lesser sentence. This is among others, where the murder is proven to
have been premeditated.
83.
The sale of
a stolen phone was the gist of the matter. The state has since
requested the court to consider the murder as premeditated
in respect
of accused 1, despite the
State
neither on the indictment nor when charges were put to both accused
did not mention “planned” or “premeditated
murder”.
Based on the case relied upon by the state,
Rasimate
Samuel Baloyi v The State
[7]
it
is my view that in this matter a case for premediation or planning
prior to the murders taking place is well established from
the facts
of the case.
Common Purpose
84.
A lot has
been submitted in relation to common purpose in this matter and an
argument presented by counsel for accused 2, quoting
among others
S
v Lungile and Another
[8]
to
argue that accused 2 disassociated himself from the actions of
accused 1. From the factual findings, it is clear that he never
disassociated himself and he did other wrongs voluntarily in the
absence of accused 1. He was a willing participant as a member
of
accused 1’
s 26
gang. He was loyal.
85.
Defence of Necessity and compulsion in respect of accused 2 does not
hold any
water based on the evidence before court. I don’t see
the need to even discuss this any further.
Application
of Facts to Law:
86.
I am satisfied with all the state’s
witnesses. They were clear and straight forward as stated above, in
respect of all the
five counts, and their evidence is accepted by the
Court as truthful and reliable.
87.
When it comes to the evidence of the state
there were so many
contradictions,
inconsistencies and improbabilities.
RULING:
88.
In respect of
Count
1 and 3, I am satisfied that from the time both the accused and Z
[....] 1 took the deceased to accused 1’s place, the
deceased
had lost their freedom of movement. It is clear from Z [....]’s
evidence that they realized the deceased G [....]
M [....] 2
wanted to run away and accused 1 signalled to him to guard him as
they walk there. In the room they did not have
any freedom. Accused 2
was left with them before they were tied, while accused 1 went to
fetch Gift and K [....] 2 , who when they
arrived according to his
evidence, they together with accused 1 further restricted their
freedom to move by tying them with ropes
and wire. Accused 2
participated in the whole process by guarding the two deceased not to
escape.
89.
In respect of Counts 2 and 4, I am
satisfied that accused 1 was leading in the killing of these people,
and accused 2 participated
too and willingly associated himself with
the resultant consequences. From Z [....] 2’s reliable evidence
when he apprehended
accused 2 while trying to escape, accused 2
confessed to him that they killed the deceased. This he knew that
they were dead already
by then. And such this murder was premeditated
based on all I have already stated above.
90.
In respect of count 5 of obstructing the
course of justice I am satisfied as discussed above as well that
indeed both accused 1
and 2 worked together in unlawfully and
intentionally hiding the bodies of the deceased in order to distort
the truth of what truly
happened in accused 1’s room and the
circumstances of the killing of the deceased.
ORDER:
a)
Accordingly, both accused 1 and 2 are
found guilty of counts 1,2,3,4 and 5 as charged.
L
M A Matjele
Acting
Judge of the High Court, Johannesburg
Appearances:
On
behalf of the Accused 1:
Adv. Seoka
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid Board
On
behalf of the Accused 2:
Adv. Mthembu
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid Board
On
behalf of the respondent:
Adv. Xaba
Instructed
by:
DPP
Date
of hearing:
8
th
July 2022
Date
of judgment:
11
th
July 2022
[1]
2012
(1) SACR 93 (SCA)
[2]
State
vs Meyden 1999(1) SACR 447 (W).
[3]
2003
(1) SACR 134
(SCA) @140a-b
[4]
2005
(2) SACR 597
(SCA) at para 33
[5]
1959
(3) SA 337 (A) 340H
[6]
CR
Snyman, Criminal Law, 6
th
Edition,
pg.
231
[7]
In
Rasimate
Samuel Baloyi v The State
(739/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 35
(01 April 2022)
[8]
1999(2)
SACR 597 (SCA).
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