The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sleuth is on the warpath

Paul O’Sullivan ‘has enough’ to put some people in prison.

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

Long list has police generals, Zuma brothers and ex-chiefs of state-owned business.

Case dismissed ... removed from the court roll due to lack of evidence ... acquitted. These are a few of the reasons given in the nine cases the state had failed in trying to prosecute against forensic consultant Paul O’Sullivan.

And now, O’Sullivan is coming for the state – in particular the national director of public prosecutio­ns, advocate Shaun Abrahams, and the head of priority crimes litigation unit, Dr Torie Pretorius.

Speaking to The Citizen yesterday, he said: “I believe I have enough to put them in prison. And I’m not going to stop until I put them there.”

In a letter from DJ Eloff, lawyer for O’Sullivan, to his client’s other least favourite person JJ Mlotshwa, a prosecutor at the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA), Eloff noted there would shortly be “a substantia­l damages claim, which will include constituti­onal damages, as a result of the malicious campaign against him”.

Eloff lists, among others, generals Riah Phiyega, Khomotso Phahlane and Berning Ntlemeza; cousins Edward and Khulubuse Zuma; Dudu Myeni and Lucky Montana (both formerly with parastatal­s) as being suspects in cases of “widespread, institutio­nalised fraud, corruption and racketeeri­ng involving amounts in excess of R10 billion”.

“Not a single one of the many cases our client has opened, all of which contain prima facie evidence against the suspects, has led to the suspects being held accountabl­e, whilst our client has been repeatedly harassed and intimidate­d and been subjected to multiple unlawful searches, arrests, and violation of his constituti­onal rights, over the last three years and four months,” Eloff

said.

“Our client will apply for a certificat­e in terms of section 7(1) of the Criminal Procedures Act, to commence a private prosecutio­n against you, [investigat­ing officer Warrant Officer Kobus] Vlok and others that were involved in the gross abuse of his constituti­onal rights, whilst your unlawful campaign against our client has continued unabated.”

O’Sullivan plans to kick off his campaign with four dockets he opened in 2015, 2016, and 2017, in which there has been little to no movement and where Vlok and Mlotshwa are accused of multiple counts of unlawful arrest, unlawful detention, torture, extortion, corruption, contravent­ion and defeating the ends of justice, fraud and corruption.

Eloff warned Mlotshwa: “Should

you, or anyone else at the NPA, or DPCI [the Hawks], attempt to bring any more fake cases against our client, we will launch fresh urgent applicatio­ns to stop you in your tracks.”

The unlawful arrest case refers to O’Sullivan’s arrest in 2016, in front of his children, as the family were about to leave for London.

O’Sullivan made history by becoming the first person to be arrested for leaving SA as a naturalise­d citizen under a passport other than a South African one. –

I believe I have enough to put them in prison

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa