Sowetan

PPEpreneur made to rue showing off

Flashy wheels seized, accounts frozen

- By Nomahlubi Sonjica – TimesLIVE

The Pretoria high court has made final a provisiona­l order the SA Revenue Service (Sars) obtained against Gauteng businessma­n Hamilton Ndlovu to freeze his bank accounts and seize some of his luxury cars.

Ndlovu leapt into the public domain last May after posting video footage online boasting about buying a fleet of luxury vehicles worth about R11m. The fleet included three Porsche vehicles‚ a Jeep and a Lamborghin­i Urus SUV.

Sars took a keen interest in Ndlovu’s financial affairs afterwards.

“He thrust himself out of obscurity by doing two things. First‚ in May 2020 he bought five luxury vehicles at about the same time some of the other respondent­s received payments for lucrative contracts with the National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS). Then he bragged about this feat on social media‚” Gauteng acting deputy judge president Roland Sutherland said when handing down the order.

Subsequent to Ndlovu making his flashy lifestyle public‚ Sars obtained a provisiona­l preservati­on order against him and five associated companies.

He is the sole director of two of the companies cited as respondent­s in the matter and is allegedly linked to the others by “collaborat­ion”.

The provisiona­l preservati­on order resulted in the seizure of several assets‚ including cars‚ and the freezing of bank accounts.

Sars then approached the high court to confirm the provisiona­l order‚ a move opposed by Ndlovu.

The Hawks‚ according to court papers‚ are investigat­ing whether personal protective equipment (PPE) contracts obtained by companies linked to Ndlovu were legally granted.

During its investigat­ion into Ndlovu’s financial affairs‚ Sars discovered there were flows of money to and from one or more companies.

Sars also discovered the tax and VAT affairs of some of the companies were not in order.

“Not only were returns outstandin­g‚ some for several years‚ but the income streams‚ especially payments from the NHLS to several respondent­s‚ could not be matched with the VAT‚ that would‚ by inference‚ be due and payable‚” the court held.

Sars concluded Ndlovu allegedly used entities linked to him as alter egos “to spread potential liabilitie­s and evade the scale of liability from progressiv­e tax sales”.

“The diversion of huge sums of money among businesses supports the inference of all of them being mere alter egos of one person and implies strongly that shady dealings are likely‚” the court found.

Companies linked to Ndlovu‚ according to the court‚ failed to explain a rational business model to justify cash flows. The court contended the opinion of Sars that a preservati­on order was reasonable.

“The provisiona­l order of September 10 2020 is confirmed and made final‚” it ruled.

 ?? /SCREENSHOT ?? Gauteng businessma­n Hamilton Ndlovu flaunted his new cars on the internet.
/SCREENSHOT Gauteng businessma­n Hamilton Ndlovu flaunted his new cars on the internet.

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