Daily Dispatch

NPA report flags ‘suspicious­ly withdrawn’ cases

- ASANDA NINI

A National Prosecutin­g Authority report has red-flagged court cases that have been “suspicious­ly withdrawn” in the Eastern Cape — including a hit-andrun accident involving a senior state prosecutor’s son.

Documents in the matter of the senior state advocate’s son, which are crucial to the outcome of the case, are also missing — but the investigat­ion, done by the NPA’s advocate Luvuyo Bono, cleared the young man’s mother and his employer of any wrongdoing.

The young man, who cannot be named because his mother could not be contacted on Tuesday, is accused of knocking down a pedestrian in King William’s Town before being arrested near Peddie in 2019.

His case was postponed for further investigat­ion but the docket never went back to court

— which Bono questions in his report.

Bono also investigat­ed allegation­s of racism, nepotism, favouritis­m and discrimina­tion in NPA offices in East London, Port Elizabeth and Komani. He found the allegation­s were unsubstant­iated. On Monday, Bono met with NPA top brass prosecutor­s at an East London hotel to present the findings.

Bono cleared the former senior state advocate after she had been accused of interferin­g in her son’s case.

“There was no statement of the complainan­t,” Bono’s report said.

“In the docket there was a lot missing.

“There was no sketch plan and there was no J88 [medical record] and the docket was not enrolled as per procedure and on this basis, she sent the docket back for investigat­ion, but the docket has never come back to court.

“I have not found anything wrong done by [the senior advocate] or any NPA official.

“What I am concerned about is the fact that this docket has not come back for trial.”

On withdrawn cases, Bono said “a number of cases were raised as having been suspicious­ly withdrawn”.

He said the investigat­ors had been advised that there was no defined process for cases that get withdrawn for further investigat­ion to come back to court.

“Much depends on the investigat­or when he has completed the investigat­ion to bring the docket back for [a] decision.

“This is a massive gap in the system because almost all dockets that have been identified as problemati­c, including [the senior advocate] son’s docket, the last that seems to have happened with them was when they were sent back for further investigat­ion, and they seem not to find their way back to court,” Bono said.

The probe also found relations between prosecutor­s and bosses at the NPA’s East London offices was “polarised and fragmented” to such an extent that “a relationsh­ip-building exercise” needed to take place before the end of December.

The prosecutin­g authority’s East London management, Bono said, also needed to undergo capacity building on management issues, including communicat­ion, personal leadership developmen­t and conflict management.

On the issue of racism, Bono said: “A lot of racist allegation­s were made regarding the actions by management.

“What appeared difficult was that most of the conduct complained of also benefited some black officials, and in that case, it would be difficult to classify such conduct as racist,” added Bono.

Bono’s investigat­ion also focused on cases relating to management’s alleged interferen­ce in prosecutor­s’ private cases, and the process of appointing aspirant prosecutor­s.

NPA spokespers­on Sipho Ngwema said the prosecutin­g authority had presented the report to prosecutor­s to discuss the issues Bono had raised.

Much depends on the investigat­or when he has completed the investigat­ion

Most of the conduct complained of also benefited some black officials

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