The Independent on Saturday

Weird ‘clue’ to bestiality video

PI, police investigat­e ‘repulsive’ act while NSPCA scores victory as guilty man gets eight years’ jail

- DUNCAN GUY duncan.guy@inl.co.za

SOMEWHERE out there, someone claiming to be a transgende­r person may have clues about a bestiality incident being investigat­ed by police and a private investigat­or.

The individual, who told PI Brad Nathanson he went by the name Violin as a male and Violet as a female, called him on Sunday and suggested they speak again on Tuesday.

“I have been calling every day, but I can’t get through. And the number is not ‘rica-ed’ (registered with the Regulation of Intercepti­on of Communicat­ions and Provision),” said Nathanson.

The Cinderella Animal Rescue organisati­on had given Nathanson the video of the incident and asked him to investigat­e it, he said.

Without posting the video on his Facebook page, he displayed a “discreet” picture of the alleged videograph­er.

Nathanson said Violin, or Violet, had wanted to assure him the picture was not of himself, or herself.

Unlike other alleged suspects and accomplice­s to crimes he investigat­es and which he posts about on Facebook, the caller did not ask Nathanson to take down the post, the private investigat­or said.

Nathanson said the video showed someone engaging sexually with a sedated cocker spaniel.

“It looked as if it was taking place in a garage or on an operating table,” he said, adding that he found it so repulsive that, in spite of all the mayhem he had seen in 41 years of investigat­ing criminals, he battled to watch it.

“Even when looking for clues,” he said. He did not post the video because it was so distressin­g.

He suspected that Violin, or Violet, could have been the videograph­er although, in his brief conversati­on, the caller denied being the person who filmed the incident.

Nathanson said he would welcome informatio­n from the public and can be contacted at 083 250 2007.

Late last month, Reaction Unit SA reported a social media post of a man boasting about having sex with his aunt’s dog.

He even posted advertisem­ents seeking female dogs, raising the ire of animal lovers who asked the Cinderella Animal Rescue organisati­on to open a case of bestiality. This was later changed to animal cruelty.

Police have said the case was under investigat­ion but had no updates yesterday. It is believed that the case has been transferre­d from Phoenix to Verulam.

Last month, in Gauteng, a man was sentenced to eight years after being found guilty of having sex with his neighbour’s pet dog. The 11-month animal, Moana, needed veterinary treatment.

The man was named as Mr M Mofokeng.

“The presiding officer for the case, the honourable Regional Court Magistrate E van Niekerk, stated in his judgment that a distinctio­n should not be made between the rape of an animal and that of a human,” said National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals executive director Marcelle Meredith after the case.

“The courts, therefore, have a duty to protect the rights of animal victims and impose appropriat­e sentences to avoid the community from taking matters into their own hands.”

The NSPCA noted that it was the highest direct imprisonme­nt sentencing ever imposed for animal cruelty in Africa, and would set a precedent.

“Moana has made a full physical recovery under the watchful eye of the NSPCA, and she has been sterilised, vaccinated, microchipp­ed, and dewormed,” Meredith added.

“Bestiality is a serious concern in our country. It is a shameful crime that is swept under carpets to protect perpetrato­rs – forgetting that bestiality usually progresses to the abuse of children and eventually other adult human beings.

“The NSPCA (which provided evidence and law enforcemen­t in the case) winning this case is of extreme significan­ce.

“We hope other bestiality cases being heard will follow suit because a precedent has been set, and that animal rapists have been thoroughly cautioned of the consequenc­es. People are encouraged to report bestiality. Together, with relentless pursuit, we can bring this evil to its knees,” said Meredith.

Durban and Coastal SPCA spokespers­on Tanya Fleischer urged the public to take any knowledge of bestiality seriously and report it to police or the SPCA.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa