The Citizen (KZN)

Judge rejects centuries-old law to try Paul O’Sullivan

- Amanda Watson

A 123-year-old piece of legislatio­n was used yesterday to try and introduce a potentiall­y damaging piece of evidence against private investigat­or Paul O’Sullivan and his co-accused, Melissa Naidu, in their kidnapping and extortion trial.

Prosecutor Jabulani Mlotshwa wanted to use Makin vs Attorney General for New South Wales in Australia from 1894, which sets the basis for similar fact evidence to be brought against an accused.

Mlotshwa also wanted to introduce a 2013 civil judgement against O’Sullivan, obtained by former Ekurhuleni ANC councillor Neil Diamond, in which O’Sullivan was excoriated by Acting Judge CE Watt-Pringle.

Watt-Pringle indicted O’Sullivan from further threatenin­g, harassing, intimidati­ng or abusing Diamond.

O’Sullivan had tried to dispute the damning transcript of a recording by Diamond but that had been disallowed by Watt-Pringle, in broad terms, as too little, too late.

In a Supreme Court of Appeal judgment in Michael Nduna vs the State, the SCA found it was “settled law that while similar fact evidence is admissible to prove the identity of an accused person as the perpetrato­r of an offence, it cannot be used to prove the commission of the crime itself”.

Mlotshwa said the accused had pleaded not guilty to the charges brought against them by Cora van der Merwe.

“In their plea explanatio­n, they say if the honourable court deems their actions unlawful, then they did not have the knowledge of their actions,” said Mlotshwa.

He wanted to use the judgment to show that O’Sullivan and Naidu knew what they were doing was wrong when they allegedly kidnapped Van der Merwe.

Any prejudice they suffered would be a result of their own plea explanatio­n, Mlotshwa said.

But Magistrate Ndivhuwo Sethusha told Mlotshwa to find law which was more current and local and bring it to court today to support his applicatio­n. Sethusha also wanted to know what the impact of the constituti­on was.

The trial continues today.

 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? DOCKED. Paul O’Sullivan.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda DOCKED. Paul O’Sullivan.

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