Results 1 to 3 of 3
  1. #1
    User
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Location
    Kensington, Jhb
    Posts
    4,151

    Default What is happening in the Western Cape?

    As per spew24

    Cape Town - The Western Cape head of crime intelligence, Major-General Mzwandile Tiyo, had no security clearance, no matric certificate, faced a pending driving under the influence probe, and was unfit to possess a firearm when his predecessor Major-General Peter Jacobs, was shifted to make way for him, the Labour Court in Cape Town heard on Thursday.''Jacobs alleges that without such security clearance, a member cannot access classified information and cannot perform provincial crime intelligence [duties], said Advocate Michael Donen SC for Jacobs.
    Police major-generals Jacobs and Jeremy Vearey are challenging their demotions in the Labour Court, alleging "irrational" decision at SAPS.
    Vearey was former deputy provincial commissioner for detective services; and Jacobs headed the Western Cape's Crime Intelligence unit.

    They were told they were being transferred on June 13, 2016, and have approached the Labour Court to have the decision reviewed, with the support of the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union.
    'Shoved'
    Vearey was shifted to a position he had previously filled - commander of the Cape Town cluster of police stations, while Jacobs was appointed Wynberg cluster commander.
    Both consider this a demotion that was not supported by any of the required legal procedures.
    Donen submitted that it looked as though they were ''shoved'' out of their posts.
    They were told that it was part of overall restructuring in the province to improve efforts to combat violent crime and gang activities.
    There are questions over how effective Tiyo could be without being allowed access to classified information.
    When the police were asked about this by the lawyers for the applicants, they were threatened over discussing security clearance issues in a public court, instead of clearing it up.
    Both sides had since agreed that Tiyo did not have security clearance when he was appointed.
    ''So you can't put someone in this post who has been refused some of those qualifications,'' Donen said.
    "However, Tiyo was also elevated from [the rank of] Brigadier to Major-General,'' he said.
    ''Everything is screaming at the national commissioner, make sure there are requirements and that they are met."
    Donen said that the national commissioner, Acting Commissioner Khomotso Phahlane, must record any deviations from the placement process in writing, but that was also not done.
    ''The fact that the incumbent of the post is moved out, to put in someone who is not qualified to have a access [to intelligence] is a matter of serious public concern,'' said Donen.
    And, on top of that, two months before the 13 June ''transfer'' of Jacobs and Vearey, Tiyo was asked by SAPS to report for duty at Western Cape Provincial Intelligence offices "with immediate effect".
    The driving under the influence matter, as well as the matric issue and gun possession fitness, was not elaborated on in court.
    It was also not mentioned whether or not Tiyo now had security clearance.
    The case will continue later on Thursday.
    HTML Code:
    http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/wcape-crime-intelligence-boss-had-no-security-clearance-court-hears-20170504

  2. #2
    User
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Age
    37
    Posts
    2,290

    Default Re: What is happening in the Western Cape?

    More state capture?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  3. #3
    User
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    River Club, Sandton
    Posts
    990

    Default Re: What is happening in the Western Cape?

    https://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/N...-spat-20180412

    Top Western Cape police officer Major General Jeremy Vearey has been appointed as the province's deputy commissioner of crime detection – a position he was previously suddenly transferred from in a move which led him to take legal action to have it reversed.
    This comes barely two weeks after it was announced that Lieutenant General Peter Jacobs, who was suddenly transferred from his role as provincial head of Crime Intelligence at the same time as Vearey's transfer in June 2016, has been appointed the head of the police's Crime Intelligence nationally.

    The tables have therefore turned completely for the duo who, less than a year ago, were still trying to be reinstated to the positions they held at that stage.
    In June 2016, Vearey, who at the time was deputy provincial commissioner for detective services, was suddenly shifted to a position he had previously filled - commander of the Cape Town cluster of police stations.


    Jacobs, who headed the province's Crime Intelligence unit, was appointed Wynberg cluster commander.
    Major General Patrick Mbotho replaced Vearey, while Major General Mzwandile Tiyo replaced Jacobs.
    After their transfers Vearey and Jacobs, supported by Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union (Popcru), took the matter to the Cape Town Labour Court where in August 2016 it was ruled that they should be reinstated in their previous positions.


    However, this did not happen immediately.
    Vearey and Jacobs had argued that they believed they were effectively demoted because of critical national investigations they were handling, including South Africa's biggest ever gun-smuggling investigation.
    The gun-smuggling investigation involved firearms and unfounded political perceptions about them.

    They had said that former MP Vytjie Mentor's statement about state capture, which she had wanted Vearey to take down, and the fact that they regularly reported to then national police commissioner Riah Phiyega about the firearms probe, resulted in them being sidelined and the effective crippling of investigations in which they played instrumental roles.
    Mbotho and Tiyo, the two officers who took over from them after their sudden transfers, were named recently in a bail application that centred around suspected underworld kingpin Nafiz Modack.
    Vearey, as head of the Cape Town cluster of police in December 2017, had been instrumental in Modack's arrest.
    Charl Kinnear, a police colonel who is investigating fights in Cape Town clubs, testified during Modack's bail application that there was a recording of Modack in a meeting with Vearey and Russell Christopher, a former State Security Agency official who trained with Vearey in the ANC's intelligence structures prior to 1994.
    The meeting happened on May 5, 2017.
    "Nafiz Modack states he was dealing with high-ranking police officials and, should there ever be a problem, Tiyo and Mbotho can sort it out," Kinnear had testified.
    He had been testifying about the "influence" Modack appeared to have.
    Kinnear had also testified that in another recording, Modack had alleged Vearey was working with the 27s gang.
    Modack and four co-accused were released on bail in this extortion and intimidation case which played out in the Cape Town Magistrate's Court following his arrest on December 15 until his release from custody on February 28.
    In January, it emerged that Mbotho was no longer to be provincial head of detectives in the Western Cape.
    At the time, Mbotho had said he was not aware that he may be transferred.

    Vearey and Jacobs, at the time of their June 2016 transfers, had been busy with investigating allegations regarding Project Impi and they argued that their effective demotions had nearly crippled the probe.
    Part of this investigation related to an ex-police colonel, Chris Prinsloo, now serving a jail sentence, who previously said he had sold at least 2 000 firearms to Rondebosch businessman Irshaad "Hunter" Laher, who allegedly paid him to steal guns meant for destruction.
    Laher and Vereeniging arms dealer Alan Raves are the accused in a case linked to the alleged selling of firearms, meant to have been destroyed by police, to gangsters in the Western Cape.
    Both Laher and Raves are yet to go on trial.
    Other aspects of Project Impi included looking into whether illicit firearms were being smuggled out of South Africa, if firearms were being stockpiled against the state by right-wing groups, and how cops were colluding with gangsters to smuggle guns to them.

    Labour Court papers in the Vearey and Jacobs matter showed that at least 1 066 murders, 1 403 attempted murders and 315 other crimes were committed with the use of guns stolen from police.
    Among those incidents were the shootings of 261 children. About 1 200 of these stolen guns are still apparently unaccounted for.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •