Daily Dispatch

‘Smoking gun’ clues allowed in trial

Judge allows seized weapons in rhino poaching case

- ADRIENNE CARLISLE

Key evidence, which the state says directly links three alleged rhino poachers to at least 13 rhino poaching incidents in the province, was declared admissible in the Grahamstow­n High Court.

The admissibil­ity of the evidence seized in a police raid on a chalet in the Makana Holiday Resort in Makhanda (formerly Grahamstow­n) in June 2016 was contested by the three accused, Jabulani Ndlovu, 40, Forget Ndlovu, 37, and Sikhumbuzo Ndlovu, 38. The three men, who are not related, face 50 criminal charges related to poaching in the Eastern Cape over the past five years.

After a trial-within-a-trial and a lengthy postponeme­nt, judge Jeremy Pickering on Monday ruled that the evidence was admissible even though police had acted unlawfully in searching the chalet without a warrant.

The state alleges in its indictment that the three men were caught red-handed in the raid with a 10.27kg freshly harvested rhino horn valued R1m, a bloody saw, a .22 dart gun and tranquilli­ser darts, M99 tranquilli­ser, cellphones and SIM cards.

Pickering ruled that admitting the evidence would not affect their right to a fair trial, nor would it be detrimenta­l to the administra­tion of justice.

“It is real evidence, the existence of which would have been revealed independen­tly of the accuseds’ right to privacy had the police entered the chalet lawfully in terms of a search warrant.”

He said there had been public outrage at the ongoing slaughter of rhino. The exclusion of the evidence on what amounted to a technicali­ty would bring the administra­tion of justice into disrepute.

The evidence was seized just hours after a rhino bull named Campbell was hunted and his horn harvested on Bucklands Game Reserve outside Makhanda. The state says DNA evidence links both the horn and bloody saw back to Campbell.

The evidence seized also links the men to the 13 poaching incidents through a web of circumstan­tial evidence, says the state.

The courtroom was packed to capacity. Economic developmen­t, environmen­tal affairs and tourism MEC Oscar Mabuyane and dozens of antipoachi­ng activists, game rangers and top brass from the SA National Parks and Eastern Cape Parks and Tourism Agency welcomed the judgment.

Mabuyane led a march to the court on Monday morning to protest the prevalence of rhino poaching in the province.

The trial continues.

 ?? Pictures: ADRIENNE CARLISLE ?? FOR RHINOS: Oscar Mabuyane, below left, leads a 300-strong march on the Grahamstow­n high court where, below right, Jabulani Ndlovu, Forget Ndlovu and Sikhumbuzo Ndlovu face 50 charges in relation to 13 rhino poaching incidents.
Pictures: ADRIENNE CARLISLE FOR RHINOS: Oscar Mabuyane, below left, leads a 300-strong march on the Grahamstow­n high court where, below right, Jabulani Ndlovu, Forget Ndlovu and Sikhumbuzo Ndlovu face 50 charges in relation to 13 rhino poaching incidents.
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