Cape Times

Smith sticks to his guns about firearm confiscate­d from suspect

- ATHANDILE SIYO athandile.siyo@inl.co.za

MAYCO member for safety and security JP Smith said he only relayed what police had told the City’s metro police department – that the serial number on a firearm confiscate­d in Hanover Park showed it was supposed to have been destroyed by police in 2008.

This came as police yesterday slammed as “devoid of truth” claims by Smith, as reported in the March 8 edition of the Cape Argus, that the firearm found in the illegal possession of a suspect two days prior was destroyed, according to the serial number.

Police spokespers­on Andrè Traut said the firearm Smith referred to was reported stolen by the licensed owner on July 1, 2003, in Bellville and recovered when a suspect was arrested during a crime operation on December 17, 2004, by members of the Elsies River Crime Prevention Unit.

“Following a hearing in terms of Section 102 of the Firearms Control Act, the owner was found unfit to possess a firearm and it was forfeited to the State, and destroyed in 2008.”

Traut said the allegation that this firearm made its way back into circulatio­n prompted an investigat­ion by the Provincial Organised Crime Investigat­ion Unit.

“The outcome of this investigat­ion determined that the firearm destroyed by the SAPS was a Taurus with the serial number stamped on the righthand side.

“The one seized in Hanover Park by metro police was a Rossi with the same serial number as the Taurus, but stamped on the left-hand side, with traces that it was not done by the manufactur­er. An electro-acid etching process undertaken by the SAPS Forensic Science Laboratory revealed that the Rossi’s original serial number was located on the right-hand side, before it was removed. This process further revealed the original serial number which allowed the investigat­ing officer to trace the firearm back to its roots.

“The firearm was reported stolen on May 18, 2004, at Steenberg Police Station by the executor of the late owner’s estate. Further investigat­ion discovered that both owners of the two firearms were acquainted at the time that the two firearms went missing years ago, which in all probabilit­y led to the Taurus’ serial number being used to guise the Rossi.”

Traut said police records showed that the seizure of the Rossi was the first discovery of that particular firearm, and that it had never been in their possession before and not on their database as destroyed.

Smith said that the informatio­n was supplied to the metro police department by the Philippi SAPS.

“It is only new informatio­n now being presented that suggests otherwise, and only months after the previous incident. The heading of the SAPS statement should therefore be ‘Informatio­n previously supplied to the City of Cape Town by the SAPS was incorrect; new informatio­n is now available’.

“It would help if this level of investigat­ion is applied to all the gang shootings and criminal matters relating to firearms, which would perhaps allow for a higher conviction rate rather than the 2% or 3% gang conviction rate we have had to live with,” Smith said.

This was not the only incident of a previously destroyed and confiscate­d firearm inexplicab­ly being in the hands of gangsters, as outlined in statements by the metro police department in previous years and as exposed by previous criminal conviction­s, Smith said.

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