Sowetan

‘It was a criminal enterprise’

- By Warren Thompson

The explosive findings of a damning report into the failure of VBS Mutual Bank reveals how its architects and accomplice­s stole a bank.

The report‚ by investigat­ors appointed by the Reserve Bank to establish what transpired in relation to the failure of VBS‚ also found that criminal charges must be brought against those responsibl­e.

Following a severe liquidity crisis in March 2018‚ which led to the Reserve Bank placing VBS under curatorshi­p‚ Kuben Naidoo‚ deputy governor of the Reserve Bank and CEO of the Prudential Authority‚ appointed a team of forensic investigat­ors led by Werksmans Attorneys and advocate Terry Motau to establish what exactly had precipitat­ed the failure.

The investigat­ion enormously benefited from the gathering and securing of evidence by forensic and cyberforen­sic investigat­ors assisting Werskmans‚ which allowed “a regime which properly secured the chain of evidence‚ of enormous numbers of documents”.

This was in part made possible through search-andseizure operations permitted and executed under the recently adopted Financial Sector Regulation Act.

Over a period of about three weeks in April and May 2018‚ investigat­ors conducted search-and-seizure operations at VBS offices in Makhado‚ Sandton and Thohoyando­u‚ as well as the offices of VBS shareholde­r Vele Investment­s.

The findings‚ published in a 148-page report entitled “VBS Mutual Bank – The Great Bank Heist”‚ was released yesterday morning and makes a number of explosive findings‚ including:

The perpetrato­rs of the heist ● made away with almost R2bn. “It emerges from the forensic accountant­s report that an amount of R1.894m was gratuitous­ly received from VBS by some 53 persons of interest‚ both natural and juristic‚ over the period March 1 2015 to June 17 2018‚” wrote the investigat­ors;

The large bulk of the funds

● stolen was for the benefit of individual­s and entities related to VBS executives‚ including its largest purported shareholde­r‚ Vele Investment­s‚ which benefited to the tune of R936m;

Tshifhiwa Matodzi‚ the chair ● of VBS Mutual Bank and Vele Investment­s‚ personally benefited to the tune of R325m. Matodzi‚ who weeks ago had his estate provisiona­lly sequestrat­ed following an applicatio­n brought by VBS curator Anoosh Rooplal‚ is identified as the kingpin of the heist;

A number of other previous

VBS executives including Robert Madzonga (R30.3m)‚ Phophi Mukhodobwa­ne (R30.5m) and CEO Andile Ramavhunga (R28.9m) benefited from the looting. The bank’s previous CFO‚ Philip Truter‚ who was responsibl­e for enabling the manipulati­on of the banking system‚ also benefited‚ but nowhere near his peers;

According to the report‚

● Mukhodobwa­ne and Truter have confessed to their complicity in the crime. Ramavhunga, Madzonga and Matodzi have denied any wrongdoing; and KPMG partner Sipho Malaba

● – who was the engagement partner for VBS and the person who ultimately signed off the false 2017 year-end audit that was subsequent­ly withdrawn by the bank’s curator – benefited to the tune of R34m.

Motau concludes: “The investigat­ion has revealed a wide range of criminalit­y in the conduct of the affairs of VBS. That is also in regard to Vele. Indeed‚ it emerges very clearly that VBS and Vele have been operated as a single criminal enterprise‚ with Matodzi firmly at the helm.”

On that basis‚ Motau recommends that the Prudential Authority takes “immediate steps” to pursue criminal charges.

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