The Citizen (Gauteng)

Ex-Scorpions staffer can’t plead to bank robbery bid as he faces terrorism rap

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The state was unable to accept the guilty plea of the man accused of attempting to rob a bank at the Menlyn Maine shopping centre in Pretoria on Tuesday because he faces a terrorism charge.

Ekhardt Albertus Mostert, also known as Mossie Mostert, made his first appearance in the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court yesterday.

Mostert, 50, told the court he would be representi­ng himself and that he wanted to plead guilty to the charges.

But prosecutor Kagisho Rancho told the court a guilty plea could not be entered because the accused faces a terrorism charge, which means the deputy public prosecutor would have to issue a certificat­e first.

Rancho added that they also had to consider whether the plea should be dealt with in the regional or high court.

The matter was postponed so that the state can obtain Mostert’s criminal profile.

According to the charge sheet, Mostert faces charges of attempted robbery with aggravatin­g circumstan­ces, terrorism and contraveni­ng the Protection of Constituti­onal Democracy against Terrorism and Related Activities Act.

Mostert, who is a former investigat­or of the now-defunct Scorpions, was arrested at the Menlyn Maine shopping centre after he allegedly tried to rob an Absa bank.

According to the police, he was believed to have entered Absa bank at 11.15am and walked straight to a bank teller, handing over a note.

He had disguised himself by wearing a wig and entered the bank with a device in his possession, which he later claimed was a bomb.

Police spokespers­on Captain Colette Weilbach said the note stated that he had a bomb and that he wanted an undisclose­d amount of money.

The bank teller then pressed the silent alarm.

“Security immediatel­y reacted and evacuated the whole shopping centre. The police responded and arrested the man inside the bank. A firearm was confiscate­d,” Weilbach said.

The police’s bomb squad and K9 units were called to the scene to inspect the device.

Sniffer dogs initially reacted positively to the device, but the

He disguised himself by wearing a wig and entered the bank with a device which he later claimed was a bomb.

bomb disposal unit found that it was not a bomb, but that the man had sprinkled gunpowder on the device to make it appear authentic.

The charge sheet alleges that the device was a plastic box which had a flickering light.

Two sources, who are former colleagues of Mostert, said he had allegedly been suffering financiall­y.

Since leaving the Directorat­e of Special Operations (Scorpions) and the police, Mostert has worked as a private investigat­or at a company called Mostert Security Solutions.

The matter was postponed to September 26. – News24 Wire

Captain Colette Weilbach Police spokespers­on

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