The Citizen (KZN)

Drugs prison term cut

-

The Constituti­onal Court yesterday ruled that minimum sentencing legislatio­n in cases involving drug manufactur­ing or drug dealing cannot apply where the state has not proved the market value of the drugs.

Convicted drug dealer and manufactur­er Michael Klaas brought an applicatio­n for leave to appeal against an order of the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA).

In 2013, the Alexandra Regional Court sentenced him to 15 years’ imprisonme­nt for dealing in drugs and five years for manufactur­ing drugs. He appealed his conviction and sentence, twice in the high court and once in the SCA. The applicatio­ns were dismissed, so Klaas turned to the ConCourt.

Klaas argued that his right to privacy had been infringed when police searched his house in 2009 without a search warrant and in his absence, and seized drugs, chemicals and equipment for manufactur­ing drugs.

In a statement, the ConCourt said the applicant had been rightly convicted but “did not have a fair trial at the sentencing stage”.

In terms of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, a first-time offender must be sentenced to a minimum of 15 years if the drugs are valued at over R50 000 and the accused was acting alone, or if the drugs are worth over R10 000 and the accused was part of a syndicate.

In the case of Klaas, 2 920 mandrax tablets had been seized, but the state had not proved the value of the drugs.

“For that reason the Constituti­onal Court held that there had been an irregulari­ty in sentencing and that it was entitled to reconsider the applicant’s sentence.”

Klaas’ sentence of 15 years for drug dealing was reduced to 12 years, to run concurrent­ly with his five-year term for drug manufactur­ing. – ANA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa