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The Role of Specialist Units in the NPA

The Role of Specialist Units in the NPA. Willie Hofmeyr Deputy National Director of Public Prosecutions 28 March 2007. Specialised units - general. A number of specialised units were set up to develop a focussed approach to crime that is complex or where convictions are difficult

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The Role of Specialist Units in the NPA

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  1. The Role of Specialist Units in the NPA Willie Hofmeyr Deputy National Director of Public Prosecutions 28 March 2007

  2. Specialised units - general • A number of specialised units were set up to develop a focussed approach to crime that is complex or where convictions are difficult • Traditional investigations and prosecutions were delivering poor results • Learnt from international best practice, but also significant innovation in SA • Ensures that required skills are developed and retained

  3. Specialised units - general • Focus on integrating work of police and prosecutors • avoid failures in the “hand-over” • legal challenges to investigation procedures • Often involve co-location of police and prosecutors

  4. Origins of DSO (Scorpions) • Office for Serious Economic Offences (OSEO) • Separate agency to deal with serious economic crime - based on UK SFO • Police & prosecutors co-located and work together on cases - successful in dealing with sophisticated economic crime • Power to compel self-incriminating answers • NPA Act (1998) included OSEO in the NPA • As Investigating Directorate called IDSEO • Also extended the concept to organised crime

  5. Origins of DSO (Scorpions) • IDOCs set up to deal with terrorism in W Cape, political violence in KZN, hijackings in Gauteng • Close cooperation with police and intelligence proving increasingly vital • Model proved very successful in dealing with organised or complex crime • In KZN effective combination of investigation and prosecution was vital in reducing political violence and allowing space for political solutions • In W Cape the terror attacks by Pagad was dealt with in very short time

  6. Directorate of Special OperationsLeonard McCarthy • DSO was formed in late 1999 to incorporate IDSEO and IDOC and build on their successes • A major innovation was to create a single entity to house investigators, prosecutors and analysts • Enabled an integrated approach between the different components • And a more coherent national approach • Major focus areas: • Serious organised crime • Sophisticated economic crime and corruption

  7. Capacity • Capacity: • Built significant capacity – about 500 people • Attracting right skills is challenge • Deal with matters where extensive litigation is the norm • Budget • Much more required to deal effectively with mandate • Will increase significantly over next 3 years • Staff to grow to about 750

  8. Successes • Investigations finalised: 1 500 • Arrests to date: 1 600 • Cases finalised: 1 100 • Conviction rate has been 80% - 90% • Contraband seized: R5 bn • Used new offences effectively against organised crime • Money laundering • Racketeering

  9. Organised crime • Important benefit of the DSO has been ability to target threats pro-actively • Convictions syndicate leaders: Staggie Stansfield, Greens • Operation Yield platinum smugglers – R250m • 13 arrests • Operation Guanxi Chinese triads – abelone • Arrests: 335 • Convictions: 111 • Restraint order: R20m • Contraband seized: R3bn

  10. Sophisticated economic crime • Has significantly increased capacity of state to deal with massive commercial crime • Often marked by sophisticated frauds or serious corporate governance failures • Hyundia / Rautenbach – fugitive • Leisurenet: 2 directors convicted • Macmed – prosecution of 3 top managers • Saambou - prosecution of 3 top managers • Regal Bank – prosecution of CEO • Specialised Outsourcing - prosecution of King • JCI – Empire K

  11. Corruption • Major focus area of DSO – • mainly cases referred by government • Arms deal cases • Yengeni, Shaik, Zuma • Malatsi, Marais, Augusta • Mangaung mayor, speaker, COO • Para statals – significant no of cases • Work with SAPS in Eastern Cape on JACT • 100’s convicted

  12. Notable cases with AFU • Scale of cases reflected in joint cases with AFU • Nearly R1.5bn frozen in over 200 cases • Mohammed and Chohan – to prison • R10m returned to victims • Hout Bay Fishing – R30m forfeited • Golden Arrow Bus Service – R6m forfeited • R45.5m returned to Dept of Transport • GEMS – about R60m to be returned to union members who were defrauded by micro lender and union officials • SASOL – R15m, Gayadin R10m

  13. Asset Forfeiture UnitWillie Hofmeyr • Forfeiture was little used before 1998 because of complex civil litigation • AFU set up in May 1999 to ensure effective use of Prevention of Organised Crime Act • Main objectives: • To increase the volume of cases • To build capacity to do more cases and make a real impact in the fight against crime • Developing the law • To do test cases and create legal precedents that allow the effective use of the law

  14. Method of operation • AFU works closely with SAPS, DSO, SCCU and National Prosecutions Service • SAPS detectives work in task teams with AFU • Co-location in AFU office very effective • Ensure criminal investigation properly done • Develop expertise in asset tracing and financial profiling • Building capacity to do forfeiture: • 80 AFU staff and 40 SAPS • Additional funding to increase to 140 staff

  15. Increasing volume of cases • Results: • To date: 1 175 freezing orders, value R1.9bn • 06/07: 233 freezing orders, value R730m • To date: 890 cases completed, value R525m • 06/07: 235 cases completed, value R 96m • Overall success rate between 85% and 92% • R117m paid into special fund to fight crime • More than R250m paid to victims of crime

  16. Developing the law Total judgements obtained: • To date: 202 judgements, 67% favourable • In 06/07: 31 judgements, 81% favourable Supreme Court of Appeal, Constitutional Court • To date: 24 judgements, 67% favourable • Have won 11 of last 14 decisions (79%)

  17. Conviction based forfeiture • Very powerful tool to take profit out of crime • Conviction based forfeiture is similar to normal civil judgement • Money judgement for the amount of benefit • Can recover all gifts made in last 7 years • Assumption once convicted that all property owned is proceeds • In most cases can take all property as it cannot be explained

  18. Civil forfeiture • Forfeit property that is proceeds of crime or used to commit crime • independently of outcome of criminal trial • Have to prove case on balance of probability rather than beyond a reasonable doubt • Allow use of circumstantial evidence • Useful to deal with organised crime and corruption where it is often difficult to obtain convictions

  19. Notable cases • Ronny Johnny Smith – acquitted on drug dealing charges, R6m civil forfeiture agreed • Falk: German fraudster R70m frozen • Shaik finalised – will pay about R40m • David King – obtained freezing orders in Guernsey and UK • for as much as about R1 billion • Delport – customs fraud of R350m • largest ever number of assets seized in SA – about R80m

  20. National Special Services Division - Silas Ramaite • Other specialist units grouped in NSSD • Specialised Commercial Crime Unit • Sexual Offences and Community Affairs • Priority Crimes Litigation Unit • Witness Protection Unit

  21. Specialised Commercial Crime Unit – Chris Jordaan • Focus on prosecution of complex commercial crime cases from SAPS • Started June 1999 after study found only 15 commercial crime convictions in Jhb in 1997 • Now Pta & Jhb does more than 700 pa • Partnership with SAPS, DOJ&CD and business • Prosecutors in same building as investigators and they work case together from outset • Court in same building minimises delays • Business has contributed skills and resources

  22. Successes • Screen cases to ensure scarce resources used on cases with most merit • Conviction rate above 94% every year but 1 • Will obtain more than 1 400 convictions in 06/07 • More than 60% increase from 05/06 • More than 500 plea bargains • 134 cases of direct imprisonment • Sentences of more than 5 years are common and several over 15 years

  23. Building capacity • Offices: Pretoria, Johannesburg, Port Elizabeth, Durban, Cape Town and Bloemfontein • East London soon • Built partnerships: special projects to focus on • Road Accident Fund cases • Intellectual Property cases • Capacity: • 101 staff with another 59 posts to be filled • Finding correct skills is a challenge • Treasury has provided significant increase in budget over next 3 years

  24. Notable cases • Kalmeyer: international kidney trafficking, syndicate recruited “donors” from Brazil to supply kidneys to rich Israeli patients • Porrit: one of the most sophisticated investment scams yet. 3 160 charges from fraud and racketeering to statutory offences • Ghavalas: charges of pension fund fraud involving R400m

  25. Corruption cases • Has built capacity for state to deal effectively with corruption investigations and prosecutions: • Tshavunga: DDPP in NPA • Keet: ex magistrate • SAPS: Zondeki (Dir), Du Preez (Sen Supt) • Other senior officials

  26. Sexual Offences and Community Affairs- Thoko Majokweni • Set up in 1999 to ensure better focus on issues affecting women and children • Working towards a National Anti-Rape Strategy focussing on prevention, reaction & support • 365 day National Action Plan for no violence against women and children • Public education campaigns • Participate in implementation plan for the Victim’s Charter • Inputs to law reform • Part of human trafficking task team

  27. Domestic violence • Provide integrated domestic violence training • Developed of accredited standards • Developed minimum standards of service delivery and victim assistance and management • Training for traditional leaders • Skills program to develop registered facilitators and assessors on domestic violence for prosecutions

  28. Maintenance • Establish maintenance prosecution capacity • 10 senior and 70 junior maintenance prosecutors appointed • Another 68 sites identified • With DOJCD appointed 171 maintenance investigators • Developed maintenance manual and training • Project to ensure effective and efficient service delivery

  29. Child Justice • National interim protocol for dealing children awaiting trial • Case review teams to reduce the number of children awaiting trial • Audit of number of children diverted and awaiting trial in prison • Minimum standards for diversion programmes, standardisation and accreditation of current programmes • Provincial Child Justice Fora – monitor the management of young offenders

  30. Focus on sexual offences • Specific focus on improving quality of investigations and prosecutions • General regional courts: conviction rate is about 45% • Developed dedicated courts with additional prosecutor, special training and better care for victims: • Increased conviction rates to about 65% • Nearly 62full-time courts established • Magistrates with necessary training • Dealing with most of sexual offences now

  31. Thuthuzela Care Centres • 10 TCCs developed as best practice model • Focus on victim – provide one-stop service • Police bring victim to health site where all support services are available • District surgeon, social workers, NGOs, etc • Site coordinator, case manager, victim assistance officer, court preparation officer • Maximise effectiveness in prosecution • Prosecutors, police and district surgeons • Work together as a team from outset • TCC, Wynberg – conviction rate of 80% - 90%

  32. Witness Protection UnitDawood Adam • Effective protection of witnesses vital when dealing with serious organised crime • Do not hesitate to bribe, intimidate or kill • Often have to use witnesses from inside • In 2000 when NPA took over WPU, there were severe financial mismanagement, complaints by witnesses and the killing of a high-profile witness • Since then it has been turned around: • Today it enjoys the confidence of the public • It is highly regarded internationally and often held up as a best practice model

  33. New operating model • Developed specialised operating model • Ensure 24 hours a day 7 days a week operations • Remove witness from danger area within 1 hour • Increased focus on complete care for witness • Including better care after release • About to incorporate SAPS protectors in WPU • Witnesses on programme - 241 • Still challenge to build extra capacity • Related Persons - 270

  34. Successes over past 5 years • Since Dec 2000, not a single witness or relation has been harmed or killed • In only 1 case was a relation threatened • Outcomes from evidence in court: • Conviction rate: - 90% (in last yr) • Jail terms: - 12 350 years • Life sentences: - 781 • Voluntary Walk Offs - down from 40% to 3% • No. of Grievances - down from 90% to 1% • Length of stay: - down from 4 to 2 yrs

  35. Priority Crimes Litigation UnitAnton Ackerman • Manages and directs investigations and prosecutions relating to national and international security (working with SAPS and DSO): • Criminal prosecutions from the Rome Statute • Crimes against the State, including national and international terrorism • Contraventions of: • Non-Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction Act • National Conventional Arms Control Act • Nuclear Energy Act • Regulation of Foreign Military Assistance Act • Cases arising from the TRC

  36. TRC prosecutions • Prosecution Policy guidelines approved early 2006 • A multi-departmental task team was established to evaluate all cases emanating from the TRC process and make recommendations to the NDPP • 16 matters identified for investigation • S v Van Zyl & Another (Pebco 3) indicted in High Court pending review of Amnesty decision • About 150 cases disposed off before guidelines

  37. TRC Missing persons • TRC reports 477 missing person cases • Burial sites of 33 missing persons have been located and exhumed • Assisted by the Argentine Anthropology Forensic Team, the world leaders in this field • 21 bodies have been positively identified by means of forensic analysis • 14 of these have been handed over to the affected families • Assisted Namibia in the exhumation of mass graves

  38. Nuclear proliferation S v Asher Karni • In 2005, the Cape Town businessman, pleaded guilty in a US Federal Court to charges relating to exporting nuclear weapons technology to Pakistan • PCLU played a key role in securing evidence which led to his conviction S v Geiges & Wisser & Krisch Engineering • Largest case in the world of international nuclear proliferation relating to 2 directors of a SA company who supplied nuclear weapons technology to Libya’s clandestine nuclear weapons programme • This case is linked to the AQ Khan network

  39. Proliferation of chemical and biological warfare agents S v African Amines • First prosecution for contravening the Weapons of Mass Destruction Act • Company exported commercial chemicals which could have been converted into chemical warfare weapons to Iran and Australia

  40. Regulation of Foreign Military Assistance Act Attempted overthrow of Equatorial Guinea govt • Investigation resulted in the following convictions: • S v Mark Thatcher * S v Krause Steyl • S v Harry Carelse * S v Louwtjie Horn • S v Archer & 6 Others • acquitted on basis that they were unaware that conduct was unlawful Activities in the Ivory Coast S v Roget: Convicted a French citizen who recruited mercenaries in SA for the Ivory Coast govt S v Alberts: Convicted of serving as a helicopter pilot

  41. National Conventional Arms Control Act S v Nedlloyd: • In 2005 Nedlloyd shipping company pleaded guilty to transporting armaments to the Saudi Arabian Defence Force without the necessary conveyance permits • First prosecution under the Act S v Campbell: • An employee of a local arms manufacturer under false pretences caused components of missiles to be manufactured and exported to Pakistan. • The accused was convicted and fined R220 000.

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