Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 580South Africa
S v Ndou and Others (SS36/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 580 (15 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Ndou and Others (SS36/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 580 (15 August 2022)
S v Ndou and Others (SS36/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 580 (15 August 2022)
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sino date 15 August 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NUMBER: SS36/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
15
August 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
ALBERT
AVHURENGWI SOLLY NDOU
First
Accused
MULALO
KENNETH MUNYAI
Second Accused
TSHILILO
FREEMAN CHAUKE
Third Accused
COLLEN
LESIBA
MULEYA
Fourth Accused
MASHUDU
STEVEN CHIRUNDU
Fifth Accused
SIMON
SAKALA
Sixth Accused
BRIAN
MULEYA
Seventh Accused
LUCKY
SHONGWE
Eighth Accused
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
Each of the accused persons was indicted before me on charges
relating to the theft of batteries from cellular telephone network
towers in the Gauteng, North West and Limpopo provinces. Each of the
accused persons was charged with offences committed during
the thefts
to which they were alleged to be linked.
2
In addition, each of the accused persons was charged with an
offence under the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
(“POCA”).
The substance of that charge is that the theft
of batteries from the various towers constituted a “pattern of
racketeering
activity” carried out as part of a “criminal
enterprise” within the meaning given to those terms in POCA.
3
Accused number 1, Mr. Ndou, was, in addition, charged with the
management of the enterprise the State alleges. The management of
such an enterprise – viz. conduct that goes beyond mere
association with an enterprise engaged in a pattern of racketeering
activity – constitutes a separate offence under POCA.
4
On the first day of trial, I separated the proceedings against
accused number 2, Mr. Munyai, and accused number 5, Mr. Chirundu,
from the proceedings against the remaining accused persons. The State
alleged that they had absconded, but it was nonetheless content
to
proceed without them.
5
On 27 June 2022, the third accused, Mr. Chauke, absented
himself from court without my permission, and did not appear again
for
the remainder of the trial. On the State’s application, I
provisionally cancelled Mr. Chauke’s bail, and issued a warrant
for his arrest. I then refused an application to postpone the trial
to allow the State to trace Mr. Chauke, because the State could
not
demonstrate that the prejudice to the remaining accused that would
likely be caused by the resulting delay was outweighed by
any
prejudice to the State that may be caused by proceeding with the
trial forthwith.
6
Any such prejudice was ameliorated by an order in terms of
section 159 (3) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the
CPA”), which I made immediately upon refusing the State’s
postponement application. The effect of that order is that
Mr.
Chauke’s trial is separated from those of the remaining accused
persons, but may continue before me once his attendance
has been
secured, from the stage it had reached when he absented itself.
7
The nett effect of all this is that I was required to return
verdicts only in respect of five of the accused persons: accused
number
1, Mr. Ndou; accused number 4, Mr. Collen Muleya; accused
number 6, Mr. Sakala; accused number 7, Mr. Brian Muleya; and accused
number 8, Mr. Shongwe.
The
principal issues to be decided
8
The indictment alleges 43 counts. It was conceded at the end
of the State’s case that no evidence had been led in respect of
counts 41 to 43. On the strength of that concession, I immediately
acquitted each of the accused on those counts.
9
I then acquitted Mr. Collen Muleya, Mr. Sakala and Mr. Shongwe
on the basis that the State had led no evidence on which a reasonable
court acting carefully could convict them in relation to any of the
other counts alleged against them on the indictment. My reasons
for
acquitting Mr. Muleya, Mr. Sakala and Mr. Shongwe were given orally
shortly after the State closed its case, but I shall record
and
supplement them in the course of this judgment. Only Mr. Ndou and Mr.
Brian Muleya were ultimately put on their defence.
10
The evidence led at trial coalesced around thefts of batteries
from eight towers, and the attempted theft of batteries from a ninth.
There was no dispute between the parties that the thefts and the
attempt took place. Nor was the manner in which the thefts and
the
attempt were carried out placed in any serious dispute. Unauthorised
persons gained access to each of the towers using keys
and
identification cards that they had acquired during their work as
contractors for the cell phone companies the towers serve.
Where they
had neither keys nor cards, the State’s case is that they lied
about being authorised contractors, and used angle
grinders and other
tools to force open the gates, containers and safes that secured the
batteries in each tower. The batteries
were loaded onto bakkies, and
taken away to be sold. In most cases, the batteries were recovered
before they could be taken away,
or before they could be sold.
11
All the accused persons admitted to being present near at
least some of the towers when the thefts took place, or in vehicles
carrying
stolen batteries when they were apprehended. Where they made
those admissions, they sought to advance innocent explanations for
their presence. Mr. Ndou denied having been anywhere near the scenes
of two of the thefts, and sought to advance alibi defences
in respect
of those incidents.
12
Accordingly – with the exception of the charges under
POCA, which raise problems of their own – what might at first
blush appear to be a factually complex case really boils down to two
issues: whether the accused persons were present when the thefts
were
carried out, and whether, if they were present, they participated in
the thefts, or in the other unlawful conduct alleged
to have been
committed in the course of them.
13
I now turn to address each of the incidents the State alleged.
The
Clubview Incident
14
Just after 7pm on 28 January 2017, Pieter van Eck, who
describes himself as a “Recovery Agent” at Capital Air
Reaction
Services, was called to an incident at a MTN cell phone mast
in Von Wielligh Avenue in Clubview, near Centurion. He was
accompanied
by his colleague, Jappie Venter. There, he found Mr.
Ndou, Mr. Shongwe and a third person, who is likely to have been Mr.
Chirundu.
One of the three men was standing at the gate. The other
two were inside the site removing batteries from it. Six batteries
had
been loaded on to a Mazda bakkie, which was parked on the street
outside the tower.
15
Mr. van Eck asked the men what they were doing. They (Mr. van
Eck could not say which of the accused spoke to him) explained that
they were contractors sent to the site to work on it.
16
The undisputed evidence of Mr. van Eck, and several other
State witnesses, was that there is a specific protocol for
controlling
access to MTN’s cell phone towers. Part of that
protocol is that each visit to a tower – for example for the
purposes
of maintaining or repairing the equipment in it – must
be authorised by a control centre. Once a visit is authorised, those
who will enter the site are issued with a reference number. The
reference number indicates that they are authorised to be present
at
a tower and to interfere with its installations for the period and
for the purposes to which the reference number corresponds.
17
None of the men at Clubview could provide a reference number.
The relevant control centre told Mr. van Eck that there was no such
reference number. It was not suggested in cross-examination of Mr.
van Eck that there was such a reference number.
18
Mr. van Eck and Mr. Venter detained all three men pending the
arrival of the police. While the police were on their way, the man
likely to have been Mr. Chirundu asked if he could go to his vehicle,
which was parked on the street outside the tower, to get
some tools.
He was allowed to do so, but instead of collecting tools from the
vehicle, he ran away.
19
Mr. Ndou and Mr. Shongwe were arrested on suspicion of theft
and taken to Wierderbrug Police Station.
20
Three years later, while the investigation of the Clubview
incident was apparently still continuing alongside the investigation
of other cases of theft and damage at cell phone towers, Mr. Shongwe
gave a statement to the police. That statement was handed in
as
Exhibit “R” before me. In it, Mr. Shongwe claimed that he
was nothing more than an innocent bystander. He had accompanied
Mr.
Ndou and Mr. Chirundu to the tower on 28 January 2017 but had no idea
of what was happening inside. He remained in the bakkie
while they
removed batteries from the tower. He later got out of the bakkie to
wait around on the street. He assumed that Mr. Ndou
and Mr. Chirundu
were carrying out some sort of work on the tower. He was not involved
in that work, and he never entered the tower.
21
When Mr. Mavata, who appeared for Mr. Shongwe before me, put
Mr. Shongwe’s version in cross-examining Mr. van Eck, he added
the detail that Mr. Shongwe had only joined Mr. Ndou and Mr. Chirundu
to have a drink with them later that evening. They had told
Mr.
Shongwe that they had to go to the tower to do some work before going
on for a drink.
22
Mr. van Eck was obviously unable to comment on this version.
Other than the statement Mr. Shongwe gave to the police, I received
no evidence from the State that would tend either to exclude or to
confirm Mr. Shongwe’s version.
23
Mr. Ndou’s version was not put to Mr. van Eck, or to any
of the State’s other witnesses. That version was that Mr. Brian
Muleya contracted him to go to the tower with Mr. Chirundu and Mr.
Shongwe, and to allow them to load some material on to the bakkie.
He
says that he was paid R350 to do so, that he did not ask what was
being loaded, and did not care. He said that he had no inkling
of any
intention to steal from the tower until Mr. van Eck and Mr. Visser
detained him.
The
Lochner Road Incident
24
At around 8am on 18 August 2017, two men entered the MTN cell
phone tower at Lochner Road, Mnandi, near Centurion. They were
observed
by Andries and Dennis Lategan, who operated a business next
to the tower. It is not possible to access the tower without crossing
the Lategans’ property, through a gate which they control. The
two men were given access to the Lategans’ property
and entered
the tower from there.
25
A short while later, Andries Lategan’s gardener alerted
him to the fact that the two men were removing batteries from the
tower. Andries, together with his son, Dennis, challenged the men to
produce evidence of their identity, presumably to establish
whether
they had a right to enter the tower. The men did not identify
themselves, but they continued to load batteries on to the
bakkie in
which they had arrived.
26
By this time, the Lategans had grown suspicious. Dennis
Lategan took pictures of both men, the vehicle, and the batteries
being
loaded onto the vehicle. The Lategans then returned to their
premises and contacted the security company responsible for the
tower.
The security company told Dennis Lategan not to allow the men
to leave, and that someone would be sent to investigate.
27
The Lategans did not return to the tower until representatives
of the security company arrived. By that time, however, the men had
left the tower. They had also abandoned the vehicle and the batteries
loaded on to it.
28
It turned out that the vehicle left at the site belonged to
Mr. Brian Muleya. On 25 May 2018, Mr. Muleya gave a statement to the
police that was entered as Exhibit “P” before me. In that
statement, Mr. Muleya states that he went to the tower with
Mr. Ndou,
because Mr. Ndou wanted to use his vehicle to “exchange”
the batteries in the tower for new ones. He denied
any knowledge of
an intent to steal the batteries that were there. He says he believed
Mr. Ndou to be authorised to remove the
batteries.
29
The photographs Dennis Lategan took were included in an
unsworn statement given by a Mr. Hendrik van Staden. That statement
was
entered as Exhibit “M” before me. Mr. van Staden did
not place his statement under oath before me. Mr. Lategan however
confirmed that he took two photographs of the men at the tower
included in the statement, and one of the photographs of the vehicle.
30
There is no dispute that Mr. Brian Muleya and his vehicle were
present at the tower on that day. Nor is there any dispute that Mr.
Muleya was loading batteries on to the vehicle with another man.
There is a dispute as to the identity of the other man. Neither
of
the Lategans were able to say who the other man was. They could not
identify him in court.
31
The photograph is fairly clear. It appears, on its face, to be
a photograph of Mr. Ndou. Mr. Ndou denies that it could have been
him. He says that at the time the photograph was taken he was in
Venda. But, probably because none of the witnesses identified
Mr.
Ndou as the person in the picture, that version was not put in
cross-examination.
The
Mutale Incident
32
It was common ground that, on 9 September 2017, Mr. Ndou was
arrested together with Mr. Chirundu near a Vodacom tower at Mutale in
Limpopo Province. There is no serious dispute that the gates to the
tower had been broken open and the batteries inside the tower
had
been removed. The State alleges that Mr. Ndou was caught in the act
of stealing batteries from the tower.
33
The State entered photographs of the motor vehicle found at
the tower, together with tools – including a bolt cutter, two
crowbars and five screwdrivers - that were found in the vehicle.
These photographs were marked as Exhibit “O”. Although
the photographs do not depict the batteries allegedly in the process
of being stolen, the security guard who first arrived at the
scene,
Mr. Mafumisa Tshitereke, said that he saw around 12 batteries in the
vehicle when he first arrived. This evidence was not
seriously
challenged in cross-examination, and I accept it.
34
Mr. Ndou’s version is that he was at the tower, and that
he was arrested. Mr. Ndou however insists that he had no knowledge
of
any theft from, or damage to, the tower. He says that Mr. Chirundu
picked him up from his home in Venda. The two men agreed
to go and
buy tickets for an upcoming music festival to be held in Thohoyandou.
Mr. Ndou says that he had drunk heavily the night
before and was
asleep in the car when he realised that it had stopped at a cell
phone tower. Mr. Chirundu told Mr. Ndou that he
wanted to dig up some
plants for use in producing a traditional remedy. Mr. Ndou fell
asleep again and was later woken up by the
police who arrested both
men.
The
Krugersdorp Incident
35
On 11 October 2017, Tsebe Ramahlare, an investigator for
Protea Coin Security, arrived at the NG Kerk MTN cell phone tower in
Krugersdorp.
He found that the entrance to the container housing the
installations at the tower had been broken open, and 16 batteries had
been
taken from the tower.
36
The security guard on duty, Mr. Abel Leshwe, informed Mr.
Ramahlare that the batteries must have been taken by three men who
turned
up in a bakkie claiming to be technicians who had arrived to
service the tower. Mr. Ramahlare took a picture of the register kept
by Mr. Leshwe. On that register, the registration number [....]
appears, among a number of other entries.
37
It is common ground that the registration number corresponds
with a white Isuzu bakkie that Mr. Ndou rented from the Rental Boss
car hire company on 6 October 2017. The car was rented out for 19
days and then returned. Mr. Ndou states, however, that the vehicle
was only rented by him on behalf of another person, referred to as
Mr. Mokoena, and that it was Mr. Mokoena who had custody of
the
vehicle throughout. He had nothing to do with the use of the vehicle.
38
The State said that it would call Mr. Leshwe to confirm that
the vehicle was used to steal the batteries, but Mr. Leshwe was not
ultimately called to give evidence before me.
The
Strubensvalley Incident
39
On 17 October 2017, Mr. Andre Herbst was called to an
MTN cell phone tower at the Town Square shopping centre in
Strubensvalley.
There he discovered that the container housing the
tower installations had been broken open, and 16 batteries had been
stolen.
40
The security guard on duty informed Mr. Herbst that the
batteries must have been taken by men driving an Isuzu bakkie with
registration
number
[....] – the vehicle
that Mr. Ndou accepts he signed for from Boss Rental around a week
before.
41
Again, however, the security guard capable
of confirming that this was the vehicle used to steal the batteries
was not called to
give evidence.
The Potchefstroom
Incidents
42
On 18 February 2018, 32 batteries were stolen from cell phone
towers at ML Fick School and Mooibank in Potchefstroom.
43
On the same day, Mr. Chauke was arrested in possession of 20
of those batteries. With him in the car was Mr Collen Muleya. Mr.
Chauke
apparently told the arresting officer that he had been asked
by a man called “Solly” to pick the batteries up from
Potchefstroom earlier that day.
44
Mr. Collen Muleya said that he was just a passenger in the
vehicle, and had no idea what was being carried. Mr. Chauke had
picked
him up from his home earlier and was driving him to buy
cigarettes. The arresting officer, Sgt Tshiovhe, was unable to
explain
in his evidence precisely why Mr. Collen Muleya was arrested,
or to give any evidence that might have excluded Mr. Collen Muleya’s
explanation for his presence in the vehicle. His evidence was, at its
highest, that Mr. Collen Muleya was arrested “for further
investigation”.
45
On the same day, Mr. Ndou was arrested in possession of the
remaining 12 batteries stolen from Potchefstroom. The unchallenged
evidence
of the arresting officer, Warrant Officer Masethla, was that
Mr. Ndou claimed that the batteries were his, and that he had them
because he was contracted to do something with them. He did not say
what he was to do, and by whom he had been contracted.
46
Mr. Ndou was arrested in the company of Mr. Chirundu, who
initially tried to run away from the police officers. The version Mr.
Ndou later gave in his evidence is that he had been driven in the
vehicle to Potchefstroom by Mr. Chirundu. Mr. Chirundu had requested
the use of the vehicle in return for a payment to Mr. Ndou. At
Potchefstroom, Mr. Chirundu had taken the vehicle and left Mr. Ndou
on his own for some time, before returning with the vehicle, which
was by this time fully loaded. Mr. Ndou says that he was not
interested in what had been loaded on to the vehicle, because he was
keen to get back home, having been left on his own in Potchefstroom
for so long.
The
Faerie Glen Incident
47
On 8 April 2018, Mr. Ndou was arrested at the Olympus Vodacom
Tower, Faerie Glen. Thomas Mabunda, a Bidvest Protea Coin security
officer, says that he saw Mr. Ndou trying to cut into a security cage
housing batteries at the tower. Mr. Mabundu says that Mr.
Ndou tried
to avoid being apprehended by promising to “pay” Mr.
Mabundu. Mr. Mabundu refused the apparent bribe, and
called his
colleague, Ben Chabalala, to assist him in arresting Mr. Ndou. Mr.
Ndou then scaled a wall around the installation and
attempted to
escape. He was apprehended shortly after by Mr. Chabalala and
security officers from an adjacent business, known as
“Blos
Café”.
48
Mr. Ndou accepts that he was present at the tower, but says
that he never entered it. He says that he was waiting for his
girlfriend
to finish a shift at a nearby café (this could have
been Blos Café. Mr. Ndou did not say). Mr. Ndou says that he
was arrested outside the tower while waiting in his motor vehicle. He
denies attempting to access the tower or steal anything from
it.
The
Midrand Incident
49
On 1 November 2017, Sergeant Given Musekwa arrested Mr. Chauke
in possession of ten batteries – which Sgt. Musekwa described
as “batteries of the tower” – which were loaded on
to the back of Mr. Chauke’s vehicle, a Nissan NP200
bakkie. Mr.
Sakala was a passenger in the vehicle and was also arrested.
50
In cross-examination, Mr. Dzimba, who appeared for Mr. Sakala,
put to Sgt. Musekwa that his client was not in possession of the
batteries and that Mr. Sakala was there to do no more than assist Mr.
Chauke in his work by translating from Chichewa into a language
Mr.
Chauke could understand. Precisely what the need for such services
was, and how they were rendered, was never explored.
51
Ultimately, however, Sgt. Musekwa was unable to gainsay Mr.
Sakala’s explanation for his presence. Nor was the State able
to lead any evidence that suggested that Mr. Sakala had participated
in anything unlawful.
52
The batteries in Mr. Chauke’s possession were later
booked into the evidence store at Midrand Police Station. Mark Brink,
a Network Specialist employed by Telkom, attended the police station
on 1 November 2017, and identified what he called “a
whole
stack” of batteries in the evidence store as having been stolen
from a Telkom installation. The State’s evidence
did not
explicitly confirm that these batteries were the batteries that had
been logged in by Sgt. Musekwa, but I am prepared to
accept that they
were, because nothing of consequence will ultimately turn on it.
53
I have now summarised the evidence relating to each of the
incidents to which the State attempted to link some or all of the
accused
persons. I have set out the material facts proved. I have
also dealt with the facts admitted by or on behalf of the accused
persons,
and exculpatory explanations advanced where these have been
offered.
54
I now turn to consider what the evidence establishes in
relation those of the accused persons whose culpability I am required
to
assess.
Collen
Muleya
55
It was accepted that the only evidence against Collen Muleya
was that he was apprehended when riding with Mr. Chauke in a vehicle
carrying stolen batteries. Mr. Ngodwana, who appeared for the State,
also accepted that the evidence sustained none of the counts
on the
indictment originally pressed against Mr. Collen Muleya.
56
In resisting Mr. Collen Muleya’s application for
discharge at the end of the State’s case, Mr. Ngodwana instead
argued
that the State’s evidence was capable of sustaining a
conviction on the charge of being in possession of stolen goods
knowing
them to be stolen. That is obviously a competent verdict on
the charge of theft of batteries from the ML Fick Primary School
tower
that was originally pressed.
57
The problem with this argument is that the State’s
evidence did not establish that Mr. Collen Muleya was ever in
possession
of the stolen batteries. Mr. Collen Muleya was a passenger
in the car driven by Mr. Chauke. It was accepted that the vehicle was
Mr. Chauke’s vehicle, not Mr. Muleya’s. Accordingly,
there was no direct evidence at all that Mr. Muleya was ever in
possession of the stolen batteries.
58
Moreover, the State led no evidence that could exclude the
version that Mr. Muleya put in cross-examination – viz. that he
was Mr. Chauke’s innocent passenger, and that the only reason
for his arrest was his presence in the vehicle. The arresting
officer
in fact corroborated that version by confirming that Mr. Muleya was
arrested “for further investigation”. That
investigation
appears to have advanced no further in the four years between Mr.
Muleya’s arrest and the trial before me.
59
Accordingly, the State led no evidence on which a reasonable
court acting carefully could have convicted Mr. Muleya.
60
For those reasons, I acquitted Mr. Muleya and discharged him
at the close of the State’s case.
Simon
Sakala
61
The State’s case against Mr. Sakala is no better. He,
too, faced no evidence on which a reasonable court could convict him
on any of the counts on the indictment. Mr. Ngodwana accepted this,
but pursued the same argument he had pursued in respect of
Mr. Collen
Muleya – that Mr. Sakala was in possession of stolen goods
knowing them to be stolen. That argument must suffer
the same fate as
it did in Mr. Muleya’s case. There was no evidence led to
suggest that the batteries were in Mr. Sakala’s
possession,
that he had any knowledge that they were stolen, or that his
explanation for being in the vehicle carrying the batteries
was
anything but true.
62
In addition, Mr. Dzimba put Mr. Sakala’s version even
though the arresting officer had not actually identified Mr. Sakala
as being present at the scene of his arrest. Mr. Sakala had nothing
to gain in admitting that he was arrested while accompanying
someone
in possession of stolen batteries. He could just as easily have
remained silent and applied for discharge on the basis
that none of
the State’s witnesses had identified him. He chose not to do
that. That choice strongly suggests that his explanation
–
involving as it did a potentially incriminating admission – was
truthful.
63
For those reasons, I acquitted Mr. Sakala and discharged him
at the close of the State’s case.
Lucky
Shongwe
64
The case against Mr. Shongwe was even thinner. He was present
at the Clubview incident, but the State led no evidence that
inculpated
him any further in that incident, or in any of the other
counts on the indictment. There was no evidence led to suggest that
he
had any role at all in stealing batteries from the Von Wielligh
Avenue tower, or from any other tower. The State was given a year’s
notice that such evidence would be required. Mr. Shongwe elected to
make an exculpatory statement to the police in January 2021.
The
State has had ample time since then to procure the evidence necessary
to exclude the explanation for Mr. Shongwe’s presence
at the
tower that his statement advanced. That evidence, if it exists, was
not produced before me.
65
For those reasons, I acquitted Mr. Shongwe and discharged him
at the close of the State’s case.
Brian
Muleya
66
The State conceded that the evidence against Mr. Brian Muleya
was almost exclusively limited to his participation in the removal
of
batteries from the Lochner Road tower.
67
Mr. Muleya admits participating in the removal of batteries
from the Lochner Road tower. However, he denies any knowledge that
what
he was doing amounted theft. He says that he was there to assist
Mr. Ndou by lending the use of his vehicle, and by driving that
vehicle. He also says that he believed that Mr. Ndou was a contractor
who was authorised to remove the batteries. This was the
gist of the
statement Mr. Muleya gave to the police on 25 May 2018.
68
Mr. Masuku applied for Mr. Muleya’s discharge at the
close of the State’s case. He advanced the contention that
there
was nothing in the State’s case to gainsay Mr. Muleya’s
version, which the State had known about for four years.
69
While this argument had its attractions, I refused the
application for discharge. It seemed to me that the fact that Mr.
Muleya
abandoned his vehicle at the Lochner Road tower was itself
incriminating, and that it sat uneasily with his version that he did
not know that either he or Mr. Ndou were doing anything wrong. On
that basis I was satisfied that there was evidence on which a
reasonable court acting carefully may have convicted Mr. Muleya.
70
Mr. Muleya elected not to lead any evidence in his own
defence. The question now is whether Mr. Muleya’s failure to
explain
why he abandoned his vehicle at the Lochner Road tower
renders his self-exculpatory statement not reasonably possibly true.
71
It seems to me that the mere fact that Mr. Muleya abandoned
his vehicle does not in itself demonstrate that he knew, at the time
that he removed the batteries from the tower, that he was stealing
them. The evidence is capable of sustaining the inference that
Mr.
Muleya only realised that he was involved in stealing the batteries
when Mr. Ndou told him to leave the tower, and, presumably,
to
abandon his vehicle. The fact that Mr. Muleya left his vehicle behind
demonstrates that he must have known that something was
wrong at the
point he abandoned it. But it does not in itself demonstrate that he
went to the tower and removed the batteries with
the intent to steal
them, or to assist Mr. Ndou to do so.
72
However, the statement of Constable Lebeko (handed in by
consent as Exhibit “S” before me) confirms that the tower
was
forcibly opened, that an alarm sensor had been disconnected and
that a battery void was broken. Mr. Muleya could not seriously have
thought that his presence at the tower was innocent in those
circumstances. In addition, Mr. Muleya’s vehicle had been used
in the Clubview incident, although he was apparently not present.
73
Mr. Muleya’s failure to explain these incriminating
facts justifies an inference against him. I do not think that his
statement
to the police can be accepted at face value. I reject it as
not reasonably possibly true. It cannot be accepted that he was
present
at the tower to do anything other than help Mr. Ndou steal
batteries from it.
Albert
Ndou
74
The evidence ranges wider against Mr. Ndou than it does
against any of the other accused persons. He was arrested at the
scene of
the Clubview Incident, the Mutale Incident and the Faerie
Glen Incident. He was caught in possession of batteries stolen from
either
the ML Fick or Mooibank towers, or both. His vehicle was
present at the ML Fick and Mooibank towers on the day that the
batteries
were stolen from them. A vehicle he rented is alleged to
have been used to steal batteries from the NG Kerk and Town Square
towers.
He was pictured taking batteries from the Lochner Road tower,
where Mr. Brian Muleya says Mr. Ndou had taken him, apparently to
“exchange” the batteries there.
75
Mr. Ndou was an unimpressive witness. He was belligerent and
argumentative in the witness box. The explanations he advanced for
being connected to no less than seven incidents of theft or attempted
theft of batteries from cell phone towers were inconsistent,
seldom
put to any of the State witnesses, and transparently untrue. Where
alibis were offered, they were improvised, lacking in
detail, and
uncorroborated. I reject Mr. Ndou’s evidence in its entirety.
It was wholly improbable.
76
I am satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that Mr. Ndou stole
batteries from the Clubview, Mutale, Lochner Road, ML Fick and
Mooibank
towers.
77
While it appears that he was not ultimately successful in
making off with the batteries in each of these towers, the offence of
theft was committed once the batteries were removed from their
cabinets. At that point, the batteries were appropriated with the
intent to permanently deprive their owners or lawful possessors of
them.
78
I am also satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that Mr. Ndou
attempted to steal batteries from the Faerie Glen tower, and was
caught
in the act by Mr. Mabunda. Although Mr. Mabunda was a single
witness to the attempt, his evidence was clear and satisfactory in
every material respect. It was also barely challenged. There was some
play made in argument about whether it was Mr. Chirundu or
Mr. Ndou
who was inside the tower attempting to break in, but I accept Mr.
Mabunda’s evidence that it was Mr. Ndou.
79
I am, however, not satisfied that the evidence makes out a
case that Mr. Ndou stole batteries from the Town Square or NG Kerk
towers.
Although it was suggested that the vehicle Mr. Ndou rented
was present at those towers at around the time the batteries were
stolen,
the State did not call the security guards on duty at the
time the batteries were stolen to confirm that the vehicle rented by
Mr. Ndou was in fact the vehicle that made off with the batteries.
Nor did the State apply to have Mr. Ramahlare’s or Mr.
Herbst’s
hearsay evidence to this effect admitted. In the absence of such an
application, I am bound to exclude that evidence.
Without it, or the
direct evidence of the security guards on duty, there is insufficient
evidence to conclude that the vehicle
rented by Mr. Ndou was involved
in the thefts from those towers.
80
Direct evidence was led that the Mooibank tower, the ML Fick
tower, the Lochner Road tower and the Mutale tower were broken into.
The evidence of breaking and entering at the Lochner Road tower came
in the form of a sworn statement from Constable Dede Leboko,
handed
in by consent as Exhibit “S”. The evidence was also that
Mr. Ndou was in the process of cutting off the lock
to one of the
installations at the Farie Glen tower when he was apprehended.
81
The circumstances of the case strongly suggests that keys used
to access some of the towers had themselves been stolen. But no
direct
evidence was led of these thefts, and there is insufficient
evidence on which to convict Mr. Ndou of any of them.
82
It was further alleged that Mr. Ndou attempted to bribe Mr.
Mabunda during the Faerie Glen incident. It is true that Mr. Mabunda
alleged that Mr. Ndou offered to pay him if he did not apprehend Mr.
Ndou at the tower. I accept Mr. Mabunda’s evidence in
this
respect. I am accordingly bound to accept that the charge of
attempted bribery made out on count 37 of the indictment has
been
proved.
83
Finally, the indictment alleges that, in breaking in to the
towers, and removing the batteries, Mr. Ndou damaged or destroyed
essential
infrastructure, contrary to section 3 of the Criminal
Matters Amendment Act 18 of 2015. I am satisfied that the towers
constitute
“essential infrastructure” as defined in
section 1 of that Act, in that they are “installation[s],
structure[s],
facility[ies] or system[s]” involved in the
provision of basic telecommunications services to the general public,
and that
tampering with them may result in interference with those
services. In this case, the evidence was that removing batteries from
the towers means that they cannot function in the event of a power
outage. Depending on the type of tower, the removal of batteries
may
limit or eliminate many of the services the towers provide even if
the power supply to the tower remains uninterrupted.
The
POCA charges
84
Mr. Ndou’s activities, as I have outlined them, are
alleged to constitute a “pattern of racketeering activity”.
This is defined in POCA as “the planned, ongoing, continuous or
repeated participation or involvement in” at least
two offences
mentioned in Schedule 1 of POCA, which must be committed after 1999
and within ten years of each other.
85
Clearly, the conduct proved in respect of Mr. Ndou constitutes
such a pattern. I have found that Mr. Ndou has committed multiple
acts of theft and breaking and entering. They were committed over a
compressed period, between January 2017 and February 2018.
86
Section 2 (1) (e) of POCA makes it an offence to participate
in a “pattern of racketeering activity” while “managing
or employed by or associated with any enterprise”. Section 2
(1) (f) makes it an offence to manage any enterprise with the
actual
or constructive knowledge that another in that enterprise is engaged
in a pattern of racketeering activity. It is alleged
that Mr. Ndou
associated with and managed an enterprise the sole purpose of which
was to identify cell phone towers, and steal
batteries from them.
87
In the summary of substantial facts annexed to the indictment,
the enterprise was said to involve at least all 8 of the accused,
who
worked in concert to steal batteries from the various towers. Had
that been proved, I would have had no hesitation in convicting
Mr.
Ndou on either or both of the POCA offences alleged.
88
The problem, though, is that insufficient evidence has been
led of the nature of the enterprise in which Mr. Ndou is alleged to
have participated. An “enterprise” in terms of POCA can,
of course, constitute a single person, but the State does not
allege
that the “enterprise” in this case was Mr. Ndou acting
alone. The State alleges that Mr. Ndou acted as part
as a syndicate
the purpose of which was to break into and steal batteries from cell
phone towers. The activities of that syndicate
as an enterprise have
not been proven as distinct from a series of offences in which Mr.
Ndou was definitely involved.
89
I am not prepared to convict Mr. Ndou of the racketeering
offences pressed against him in circumstances where the evidence
leaves
obscure the nature of the enterprise said to constitute the
“racket”. Proof of an “enterprise” as
distinct
from a person who commits repeated offences is an essential
element of the offences defined in sections 2 (1) (e) and (f) of
POCA.
The State has not proved this element.
90
It follows that Mr. Ndou must be acquitted on the racketeering
offences alleged on the indictment. For the same reasons, Mr. Muleya
cannot be convicted on the POCA charge either.
Unreasonable
delay
91
It is finally necessary to say something about the delays that
have featured in this prosecution. The offences on the indictment
were committed between four and five years ago. The matter was listed
for trial before me on 17 January 2022, but had been postponed
on
numerous occasions before that. The State was not in any event ready
to proceed until shortly before 15 March 2022, and I am
convinced
that the commencement of the trial would have been further delayed
had I not taken steps to case manage the matter during
the first term
of this year.
92
Counsel for most of the parties then became unavailable at the
end of the first term, and the matter had to be postponed to the
part-heard roll on 27 June 2022. It took some effort to arrange a
four-week period, commencing on that date, and concluding on 29
July
2022, with a break during the week of 11 July, during which the trial
could be completed.
93
However, on 27 June 2022, and despite having had the better
part of 3 months to make arrangements to do so, the State failed to
secure the attendance of Mr. Brian Muleya for the continuation of the
trial. Mr. Muleya was detained at St. Albans Prison in Port
Elizabeth
pending trial on other charges he faces in the Eastern Cape. It took
an additional week to have Mr. Muleya conveyed to
Johannesburg from
Port Elizabeth, meaning that the trial could not proceed until 5 July
2022.
94
It is not necessary for me to go in to any detail about the
reasons for the delay. Suffice it to say that the delay was entirely
foreseeable, avoidable and wholly unreasonable.
95
However, the attitude taken by the State – that the
responsibility for the delay lay with the Police and the Department
for
Correctional Services, and so could not be attributed to the
State as a party before me – does require comment.
96
When the National Prosecuting Authority indicts an accused
person, it does so on behalf of the State as a whole. Where the
accused
person is in the custody of the Police or the Department of
Correctional Services, it is the State as a whole that is responsible
for ensuring that they are timeously produced before a court, and
that the trial proceeds as speedily as possible. While it may
be
necessary to distinguish between different departments of State in
order to identify the causes of a particular delay in the
trial
process, the responsibility for the delay lies with the State as a
whole. Counsel for the State may not – and ought
not to be
encouraged to – fold their arms and blame the Police, the
Department of Correctional Services or any other functionary
or
entity for a delayed prosecution. For obvious reasons, any procedural
consequences arising from the delay will be visited on
the State as
whole, whether or not counsel or the National Prosecuting Authority
is directly responsible for them.
97
In this case, it was argued that the State should not be
mulcted in costs for the week-long delay caused by Mr. Muleya’s
absence,
because the National Prosecuting Authority was not directly
responsible for his failure to appear before me.
98
I reject that argument, but I am nonetheless disinclined to
order the State to pay the wasted costs of the week of 27 June 2022.
This is because three out of the four counsel who appeared for the
defence were funded by the State itself through Legal Aid SA,
and
counsel for the privately-funded accused person did not press for a
costs order on his client’s behalf. It has not been
demonstrated that any actual prejudice would be cured by a costs
order in these circumstances. It was also argued that I am not,
in
any event, empowered to make a costs order in criminal proceedings. I
have some doubts about that proposition. But, in the circumstances,
they need not be explored.
Verdict
99
For all these reasons –
99.1 I
formally record that -
99.1.1 accused no.
4, COLLEN LESIBA MULEYA was found
NOT GUILTY
and discharged
under
section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
on 8 July
2022; and that
99.1.2 accused no.
6, SIMON SAKALA and accused no. 8, LUCKY SHONGWE were found
NOT
GUILTY
and discharged under
section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
on 18 July 2022.
99.2 I find
accused no. 7, BRIAN MULEYA,
GUILTY
of counts 10, 11 and 13 on
the indictment.
99.3 In
respect of all of the other counts on the indictment alleged against
him, I find accused no. 7, BRIAN MULEYA,
NOT GUILTY
.
99.4 I find
accused no. 1, ALBERT AVHURENGWI SOLLY NDOU,
GUILTY
of counts
3, 4, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 18, 26, 27, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 37 and 38
on the indictment.
99.5 In
respect of all of the other counts on the indictment alleged against
him, I find accused no. 1, ALBERT AVHURENGWI
SOLLY NDOU,
NOT
GUILTY
.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
15, 16, 17, 18, 23 and 24 March 2022; 27, 29 and
30 June 2020; 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 18, 21, 22, 26 and 29
July 2022.
DECIDED
ON:
15 August 2022
For
the State:
L Ngodwana
Instructed by
National
Prosecuting Authority
For
the First Accused:
Mr. Simane
Instructed by Legal Aid
SA
For
the Third and Seventh
Mr. Masuku
Accused:
Instructed by Legal Aid SA
For
the Fourth and Eighth
A Mavata
Accused:
Instructed by Legal Aid SA
For the Sixth
Accused:
QM Dzimba
Name
of instructing attorney not supplied
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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