Blame game
CASH HEISTS: SECURITY FIRMS, POLICE INTELLIGENCE MUST CLEAN HOUSE
Parliament says security companies need to tackle cash-in-transit heists from within, but a crime expert says the police crime intelligent unit first needs to be purged of rogue elements.
Cops don’t need numbers to fight scourge, just careful planning – expert.
The blame game on cashin-transit (CIT) heists has hotted up, with an ANC MP saying security companies need to get their own house in order and a crime expert saying the crimes will not go down until the police crime intelligent unit is purged of rogue elements.
ANC MP in the police portfolio committee Leonard Ramatlakane expressed his disappointment that security companies failed to acknowledge their own role in heists where internal risk and weaknesses were overlooked.
“I understand there is complete compliance … and I listened for an acknowledgement about a serious internal problem. None of that was mentioned as part of the problem. If you are in this kind of business, the risk starts with you.”
Ramatlakane said companies had to identify and deal with information leaks coming from within their work force, suggesting that heists did not happen at random, but were carefully planned using intelligence from within the business.
Business Against Crime echoed this, saying the spike in heists was as a result of “vulnerabilities in security companies, such as the vetting of employees.”
But crime expert Gareth Newham said the quality of policing has been deteriorating over time, “because of all the political interference and multiple ministers over a short space of time, and a number of appointments of incompetent people in key positions.
“That is why we saw cash-in transit heists go up to almost 400 in 2013-2014. The real question that should be asked is what is being done to fix crime intelligence.”
The portfolio committee yesterday held a public hearing on the recent spike in cash heists. The South African Police Service (Saps) and Police Minister Bheki Cele presented its five-point plan to tackle the escalating crime. Also giving presentations were representatives of the cash transporting industry and unions.
But Newham said plans announced by Saps yesterday related to random searches and visible policing were proven in the ’50s to be insufficient in policing organised crime.
Identifying the patterns involved in the cash-in transit network was also a key factor in policing the trend.
Newham said that according to various studies on cash-in-transit heists in South Africa where convicted offenders were interviewed, the common threat was that these were highly skilled career criminals, who had been involved in various kinds of crimes before ascending to the elite criminal networks involved in cash-intransit heists.
“The only real way to bring these crimes down is to identify the individual networks involved and to ensure those individuals are arrested and put in jail.
“If you increase security on the vehicles, they will just go for ATMs or jewellery that’s being transported – or start going after the trucks.
“These criminals don’t just do one kind of crime,” Newham said.
Referencing a 2011 policing strategy by Gauteng police tackling aggravated robberies, Newham argued that tackling CITs required detailed planning, rather than the deployment of thousands of police officers.
Last week, Gauteng community safety MEC Sizakele NkosiMalobane announced 7 000 police officers would be deployed to deal with cash heists.
Newham pointed out that between 2009 and 2011, the Saps’ Gauteng aggravated robbery strategy reduced home invasions by 20%, business robberies by 19% and hijackings by 32% using a force of only about 400 police officers.
But this all had to start with cleaning out crime intelligence, said Newham.
“We have a number of these crime intelligence officers who have been involved in organised
The quality of policing has been deteriorating over time because of all the political interference and multiple ministers over a short space of time, and a number of appointments of incompetent people in key positions. Gareth Newham Crime expert
crime, such as Captain ‘KGB’ Tshabalala who has been linked to at least 8 heists.
“[Former crime intelligence boss] Richard Mdluli allegedly made about 250 dodgy and irregular appointments in his time, many of whom were his friends and family,” Newham said.
“Until criminal elements within crime intelligence are investigated, suspended and prosecuted, the efforts of this unit would always be undermined by corruption.”