Diamond Fields Advertiser

‘Mining giant funded sting’

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document on a De Beers letterhead, where he registered as an informer, and said that De Beers had issued him with UIF and PAYE forms after his employment with them ended.

“These affidavits are misreprese­ntations and fraud. Everything in there is false and the documents in my possession reflect that,” Korff said

The affidavit also apparently indicates that Korff had signed a “confidenti­ality clause” with De Beers regarding any work done for and with AUM.

“This confidenti­ality agreement related to trade secrets, which I never shared. You can’t hide a crime under the protection of a confidenti­ality clause. De Beers funded crimes and was involved in unlawful activities,” he added.

When asked why he had decided to testify on behalf of the accused, Korff said that “the truth had to come out”.

“The accused are sitting here today as a result of the illegal actions by De Beers. It was wrong to entrap them illegally. Now they are sitting with the trouble, while De Beers smells like roses,” Korff said.

Korff also stated that he had to appoint a bodyguard, who was sitting in court, following numerous threats and being followed and watched.

He further testified that Volschenk offered De Witt 2 000 carats worth of (illegal) De Beers diamonds to be used as ‘bait” during undercover operations. However, he stated that the diamonds were never used, and that diamonds from the police diamond registry were used instead.

“These De Beers diamonds were not supposed to be in their possession but were also never handed over to police,” Korff said.

Korff then described the operations of Jephta, stating that while he undertook contractua­l obligation­s with, and was paid by De Beers, he did his operations through the SAPS.

“This could never be in the interests of justice,” Korff said.

Korff then alleged that Jephta had complained to him that he “was sick” of Potgieter taking half his incentive money when he got paid by De Beers after successful operations and that he (Jephta) had allegedly travelled to Taiwan to sell diamonds he had “taken” during Project Darling.

Korff added that technical surveillan­ce, in the form of video recordings taken by Jephta during operations with a concealed camera, was “a flop” as Jephta “could not follow instructio­ns on how to operate the equipment”.

Korff also stated that the entrapment process was not followed and that the section 252 authorisat­ion for entrapment was not obtained from both the SAPS and the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns.

After being asked why there was no mention of De Beers in the docket, Korff said that he made several statements against the accused with regard to the transactio­ns he was involved in. The defence made an applicatio­n to have the statement made available, which was done by the State, shortly before the case adjourned.

The State prosecutor, Johan Roothman, is expected to continue the cross-examinatio­n of Korff when the trial against the thirteen accused – Ashley Brooks, Patrick Mason, Manojkumar Detroya, Komilan Packirisam­y, Ahmed Khorani, Antonella Florio-Poone, McDonald Visser, Willem Weenink, Sarel van Graaf, Carl van Graaf, Kevin Urry, Trevor Pikwane and Frank Perridge – continues in the Northern Cape High Court today.

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 ??  ?? ACCUSED: The case against the thirteen accused continued in the Kimberley High Court yesterday.
ACCUSED: The case against the thirteen accused continued in the Kimberley High Court yesterday.

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