Daily Maverick

Intrigue litters the path that ends with top cop Jeremy Vearey’s dismissal

Following the paper trail of cop complaints raises questions about corruption in the police service. By

- Caryn Dolley The post that caused a stir was, according to Vearey in Afrikaaps and not Arikaans.

Dozens of people gathered outside Parliament and police stations this week to show support for fired Western Cape detective head Major-General Jeremy Vearey. They demanded that corruption within the South African Police Service (SAPS) be staunched and held posters saying #justicefor­jeremy. Some posters said: “Ons is die moer-in [We are angry].”

These slogans were in reference to a Facebook post and others that Vearey made – and for which he was controvers­ially dismissed at the end of May.

In one of Vearey’s posts, he said: “Moer hulle.” Some police officers viewed this as threatenin­g and translated the two words to “fuck them”, whereas Vearey countered that in Afrikaaps, the language he used, it was not a derogatory phrase.

His dismissal led to several of his supporters, who also back his close allies in the police service, to gather outside Parliament and police stations on 9 June to demand clean policing and Vearey’s reinstatem­ent.

What’s it all about?

What really happened in the lead-up to all this?

One strand of the messy saga seems to involve WhatsApp messages.

On the evening of 25 February this year, Brigadier Vish Naidoo, the national police spokespers­on, received WhatsApps that appeared to be screengrab­s of some of Vearey’s Facebook posts. These messages to Naidoo were apparently from a Crime Intelligen­ce officer in the Western Cape.

Reference to these messages is contained in a sworn statement made by Naidoo on 10 March, 11 days after receiving the texts. In his statement, Naidoo said that it appeared Vearey had violated the police service’s code of conduct.

Naidoo has declined to comment on the statement.

At face value, it appears that, as national police spokespers­on, Naidoo was duty-bound to highlight acts viewed as bringing the police service into disrepute.

But here’s where it gets intriguing: in his statement, Naidoo said he had received the screengrab­s of Vearey’s posts from a Western Cape Crime Intelligen­ce officer.

Run-up: Crime Intelligen­ce claims

Lieutenant-General Peter Jacobs was previously head of the Crime Intelligen­ce in the Western Cape but was controvers­ially transferre­d in June 2016, along with Vearey, while they were investigat­ing how police members were funnelling firearms to gangsters.

Major-General Mzwandile Tiyo replaced Jacobs in the provincial Crime Intelligen­ce position.

In 2017, Vearey went on record to claim that Crime Intelligen­ce cops, along with suspects, were working together to discredit him and derail investigat­ions.

Towards the end of 2018, Lieutenant-Colonel Charl Kinnear also complained to his bosses that police service members who had links to Crime Intelligen­ce in the Western Cape were allegedly working against him and colleagues, including Vearey and Jacobs.

Jacobs, by that point, had been promoted to national Crime Intelligen­ce boss. (Kinnear was assassinat­ed in Cape Town on 18 September 2020.)

Jacobs labelled the group Kinnear had complained about as a “rogue” unit and recommende­d it be disbanded.

This did not happen, implying that there was a counter-version to what Jacobs, Vearey and Kinnear had said, or that there was no will or basis to deal with their assertions.

The path to Vearey’s dismissal merges with what recently happened to Jacobs.

Late last year, National Police Commission­er Khehla Sitole launched disciplina­ry proceeding­s against Jacobs, who was suspended as head of national Crime Intelligen­ce in December 2020.

The Jacobs disciplina­ry hearing related to allegation­s of irregulari­ties in the procuremen­t

of personal protective equipment (PPE) that involved the secret service account.

Jacobs brushed off the allegation­s as baseless and countered that he had uncovered suspected fraud linked to the secret service account, allegedly committed by fellow Crime Intelligen­ce officers.

Some police members viewed the disciplina­ry action against Jacobs as an attempt to sideline him and steer him off investigat­ions.

Sitole appointed two officers, Lieutenant-General Nneke Ledwaba and Lieutenant-General Francinah Vuma, to deal with the PPE disciplina­ry action and investigat­e Jacobs. But Jacobs managed to halt the disciplina­ry hearing by means of an order obtained in the Johannesbu­rg Labour Court.

This saga – the first of two disciplina­ry actions Jacobs was recently the focus of – unfolded from late last year to around March this year, when he was transferre­d from Crime Intelligen­ce to head the police’s Inspectora­te division, which some cops viewed as a demotion.

Investigat­ion and evidence

Back to the Vearey disciplina­ry hearing. Major-General JP Scheepers (who was once, like Vearey, an applicant for the job of Western Cape police commission­er) said that on 8 March this year Sitole had appointed him to investigat­e Vearey’s “alleged misconduct” relating to Facebook.

These details are contained in a document on Scheepers’s findings, dated 15 March,

which DM168 has seen.

Jacobs was Vearey’s employee representa­tive in the Facebook case.

This goes deeper: Scheepers said Vearey’s Facebook posts linked to news articles about the PPE disciplina­ry that focused on Jacobs.

The posts were made between 7 December last year and 5 February – a period roughly coinciding with the first set of disciplina­ry and related actions against Jacobs.

“In response to the disciplina­ry proceeding­s initiated by [Sitole] against … Jacobs, the printed and social media published many articles about the incident and disciplina­ry process as it unfolded,” Scheepers said.

“Vearey then, in response to these media articles, allegedly published certain comments on his Facebook page. He did not have any permission to post those Facebook comments, and these comments allegedly brought the name of the employer into disrepute.”

That meant that, in a sense, the attempted PPE-focused disciplina­ry hearing into Jacobs ended up being a stepping stone towards the disciplina­ry against Vearey.

Evidence in the Vearey-focused disciplina­ry action, Scheepers said, was in the form of written statements from Naidoo, as well as Ledwaba and Vuma – the two officers involved in dealing with the Jacobs PPE matter.

According to Scheepers, Vuma had received threatenin­g messages in February, including via WhatsApp and social media from various people, and “realised that these people are serious about attacking her and [Sitole]”.

In the case of Ledwaba, Scheepers said “when [Ledwaba] became aware of the Facebook postings by Major-General Vearey, he felt threatened, intimidate­d and unsafe”.

Scheepers found, among other things, that: “The social media posts by Major-General Vearey clearly display evidence of serious ill-discipline, his total disrespect for top management officers in the SAPS, his total disregard for prescribed processes within the SAPS, and his public rejection of peace and stability within ... South Africa.”

Scheepers recommende­d that Vearey be suspended immediatel­y.

He also recommende­d that an urgent saferisk assessment be conducted to ensure the safety of Sitole, Vuma and Ledwaba: “I am convinced that there is a serious and imminent potential risk that may endanger their lives or cause serious harm to them.”

This indirectly loops back to the situation Kinnear faced – and the claims about Crime Intelligen­ce. When threats were picked up in his case, Kinnear had not wanted a risk assessment done on himself, because, according to an affidavit by Jacobs in a labour court matter, Kinnear “refused to participat­e as he did not trust the SAPS and Crime Intelligen­ce”.

Disciplina­ry with ‘no impartial chair’

Eastern Cape Police Commission­er Lieutenant-General Liziwe Ntshinga chaired the Facebook disciplina­ry against Vearey.

In an exclusive interview with Daily Maverick on 2 June, Vearey said the process that had led up to his dismissal was “outside our disciplina­ry code” because he had not been given a chance to interrogat­e evidence.

Indeed, in Ntshinga’s findings on the disciplina­ry, she referred to a section of the SAPS Discipline Regulation­s of 2016. She said an employee charged with misconduct under a section of Regulation 9 had to appear at a meeting and not a disciplina­ry hearing.

Ntshinga also said Sitole “had invoked the provisions” under another part of Regulation 9 by appointing her to deal with the matter by means of an expeditiou­s process.

An expeditiou­s process is a condensed form of the usual disciplina­ry procedure that does not involve witnesses being called to testify or be cross-examined.

“At the meeting, no witnesses will be called by either of the two parties. For that reason, there shall be no evidence to be led,” Ntshinga said. “At the meeting there will [not] be Points in Limine taken by either of the two parties [the employer and employee], as there is no impartial chairperso­n to rule on the issues raised.”

Vearey previously told Daily Maverick that “my version was not tested against the version of others” during the disciplina­ry hearing.

Conflictin­g interest

On 27 May, Ntshinga decided that Vearey should be dismissed. Sitole signed off on this the next day.

It may be an issue that Sitole appointed a police member to investigat­e Vearey’s Facebook posts, someone who subsequent­ly recommende­d a safety risk assessment be conducted on, among others, Sitole himself, who then rubberstam­ped Vearey’s dismissal.

The police service also put out an official statement on Vearey’s dismissal, saying: “Some of the messages were directed at the National Commission­er and contained words that were considered derogatory, offensive, insulting and disrespect­ful to the National Commission­er thus bringing the National Commission­er and the South African Police Service into disrepute.”

This could all be seen as conflict of interest in the case of Sitole and around whether he impartiall­y signed off on Vearey’s dismissal if he was seen to be targeted by Vearey.

The Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union was dealing with the matter on Vearey’s behalf.

Meanwhile, given Vearey, Jacobs and Kinnear’s previous claims about crooked elements with links to Crime Intelligen­ce, it is interestin­g to note that Western Cape Crime Intelligen­ce reportedly recommende­d increased police visibility to prevent disruption­s at the pickets held this week in Vearey’s support.

 ??  ?? The Very Rev Michael Weeder, the current Dean of St. George’s Cathedral leads a march to parliament during the ‘Hands Off Jeremy Vearey’ protest on June 09, 2021 in Cape Town. This comes after the Western Cape’s head of detectives, Major-General Jeremy Vearey (top), was fired over comments he made on social media. Photos: Brenton Geach/Die Son, Gallo Images and Yunus Mohamed/Gallo Images
The Very Rev Michael Weeder, the current Dean of St. George’s Cathedral leads a march to parliament during the ‘Hands Off Jeremy Vearey’ protest on June 09, 2021 in Cape Town. This comes after the Western Cape’s head of detectives, Major-General Jeremy Vearey (top), was fired over comments he made on social media. Photos: Brenton Geach/Die Son, Gallo Images and Yunus Mohamed/Gallo Images
 ??  ?? Major-General Jeremy Vearey’s social media posts were said to have not been officially sanctioned and were said to have brought the police service into disrepute.
Major-General Jeremy Vearey’s social media posts were said to have not been officially sanctioned and were said to have brought the police service into disrepute.
 ??  ??

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