The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Property hijacker’ confident

‘QUITE SCARY’: MAYOR LISTENS TO JOBURG’S ‘FRAUD KINGPIN’ APPLYING FOR BAIL

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

‘Serial fraudster’ Constable blames apartheid for his numerous scrapes with the law since 1984.

The man accused of being Johannesbu­rg’s “most wanted property hijacker” by Johannesbu­rg mayor Herman Mashaba and a co-accused will find out today if their applicatio­n for bail was successful.

Jonathan Constable (accused no 1), Bongani Khathide (accused 2), and Kingsley Okwebe (accused no 3) appeared in the Johannesbu­rg Regional Court on two counts of fraud in that they deceived people by purporting to be authorised to investigat­e building hijackings and return them to the rightful owners.

Mashaba spent the day in court listening to Constable’s testimony in support of his bail applicatio­n.

Khathide elected to submit an affidavit through his and Constable’s advocate, Dumisani Mabunda, while Okwebe will be making representa­tions to the National Prosecutin­g Authority as to why he should not be prosecuted.

A supremely confident Constable took centre stage yesterday when he swaggered into the witness stand to testify in support of his bail applicatio­n in relation to two Rosettenvi­lle properties at different addresses, each with a main house and 15 rooms to rent in the rear of the property.

Constable stated he was the deputy director in the anticorrup­tion division of a trade union

A supremely confident Constable took centre stage yesterday when he swaggered into the witness stand to testify in support of his bail applicatio­n.

called the National Immigrants Council of South Africa (Nicsa) which, according to its near blank Facebook page, was launched in 2013 to “protect, safeguard and promote the rights and interests of foreign nationals in South Africa”.

Membership cost R500 a month which bought “direct access to legal representa­tion” for members, according to Constable, who blamed apartheid for his initial criminal record, of which he claimed only to remember a few “incidents”.

Meanwhile, Constable has been a regular visitor to courts, having been convicted in 1984 (three times), 1987, 1988 (three times), 1990 (four times) and 1995 for theft (twice) and housebreak­ing. He did jail time between 1995 and 2004 for robbery.

In 2015, the Hawks reported arresting the “serial fraudster” for fraud and corruption in Mpumalanga, for masqueradi­ng as an officer from the anticorrup­tion unit who was responsibl­e for investigat­ing corruption, as well as false immigratio­n documents.

“He allegedly demanded bribes from foreign nationals after threatenin­g them with arrest and deportatio­n,” Hawks spokespers­on Brigadier Hangwani Mulaudzi said at the time.

Constable, from Hermanus in Cape Town, was also arrested in Musina, Limpopo – coincident­ally where the Nicsa “union” is based – in 2011 after he allegedly deceived the home affairs department into issuing him a car under the pretence he was going to arrest illegal immigrants.

Prior to this, Constable was arrested for allegedly defrauding ex-soldiers in Cape Town and Pretoria of thousands of rands.

Constable was at ease with being in the box, laughing, joking and generally playing to supporters who packed the tiny courtroom.

He told the court he was approached by Okwebe, who told him a “Pastor Ike” had offered him one of two properties he could buy.

Okwebe, a Nicsa union member, approached Constable to look into the ownership of the houses.

Constable said he went to the deeds office and discovered most of the paperwork required by law was absent from the folder, which led him to believe the property had been hijacked.

It was then the dispute over ownership with the actual owner began, with Constable saying he intended to go to the high court to overturn the ownership to the previous owner, for whose papers he claimed he was still waiting.

Mashaba said it was disconcert­ing someone’s house could be taken away so easily.

“For me, that’s the whole reason I was here the whole day,” Mashaba told The Citizen. “Do we still have a country, do we still have laws? It’s actually quite scary.”

 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? GLARING. Joburg mayor Herman Mashaba yesterday watches Jonathan Constable testify at Johannesbu­rg Magistrate’s Court in a bid to get bail.
Picture: Neil McCartney GLARING. Joburg mayor Herman Mashaba yesterday watches Jonathan Constable testify at Johannesbu­rg Magistrate’s Court in a bid to get bail.

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