
Cape Town police officer charged with kidnapping and murder
The kidnapping and murder case was postponed to 12 June for bail applications.
The state intends to oppose the bail application of a Cape Town Law Enforcement officer who has been charged with kidnapping and murder in connection with a case that has sent shockwaves through the local community.
The policeman, Thandile Khesa, 43, appeared in the Blue Downs Magistrate's Court on Tuesday as the fifth accused in what authorities describe as a heinous crime.
He was formally charged with kidnapping and murder.
His arrest followed an extensive multidisciplinary operation that has already netted four other suspects in the case.
'His case has been postponed until 12 June 2025, where he will be joining four other accused charged with kidnapping, extortion, murder and possession of stolen property,' NPA spokesperson for the Western Cape division Eric Ntabazilila said.
Multi-agency operation leads to kidnapping and murder arrests
Khesa's arrest on Monday morning was the result of what police describe as a comprehensive intelligence-led operation.
'The multi-disciplinary intelligence-led operation comprising the Hawks, Provincial Anti-Kidnapping Unit and Provincial Organised Crime resulted in the arrest of a 43-year-old suspect on 09 June 2025 on charges of Kidnapping, Extortion and Murder,' said Police spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Siyabulela Vukubi.
The law enforcement officer now joins four co-accused who were arrested earlier: Mogamat Samuels, Thokozani Kamnjunga, Existing Mudivari, and Yasseen Jele.
Following leads developed during their investigation, the multi-agency team tracked down the four initial suspects to addresses in Philippi and Kleinvlei on 17 May 2025.
The arrests of Samuels, 33, Kamnjunga, 36, Mudivari, 33, and Jele, 30, proved to be the breakthrough investigators needed.
The five accused represent a diverse group with varied backgrounds and nationalities.
According to police documents, Mudivari works as a panel beater and is from Zimbabwe, while Kanjunga is a Malawian spray painter.
Samuels is reportedly self-employed and hails from Mitchells Plain.
The four co-accused are also scheduled to appear in court on Thursday, 12 June, for their bail application, which the state intends to oppose as well.
Ntabazilila confirmed that the state would take a firm stance against all bail applications.
'These accused with apply for bail and the state will oppose the Schedule 6 bail application.
Ntabazilila said Khesa indicated that he intends to appoint a private lawyer,
'If the accused is ready for a bail application on Thursday, his bail application will also resume then. If he is not ready, a separate date will be arranged,' Ntabazilila added.
The officer remains in police custody.
ALSO READ: Defence happy after captain accused of raping trainee at Tshwane Police Academy is granted bail
Victim kidnapped and later murdered
The case centres around a kidnapping that occurred in Kraaifontein on 16 May 2025.
Police reported that the victim had arranged to meet someone in Bellville to view a vehicle he intended to purchase, but never returned home.
ALSO READ: KZN pensioner killed and daughter left with a slit throat in attack
'Instead, another friend of the victim received a call from the victim reporting that he had been kidnapped and was being assaulted,' Vukubi explained.
Vukubi stated that the kidnappers initially demanded a ransom of R100,000 for the victim's release, but later reduced their demand to R10,000.
The suspects provided banking details for the ransom payment, and according to the police, R5,000 was deposited into the specified account before the suspects continued to demand the remaining balance.
Discovery of the body
During questioning, one of the accused led authorities to a remote location between Monwabisi beach and Macassar.
There, in an open field on the dunes, investigators discovered a shallow grave where the victim had been killed and buried.
The investigation took a disturbing turn when it emerged that a City of Cape Town Law Enforcement vehicle had been used in the commission of the crime.
'Upon further probe, it transpired that the City of Cape Town Law Enforcement vehicle, which was driven by the suspect, was utilised in the commission of this heinous crime,' Vukubi stated.
ALSO READ: Suspect arrested in Likhona Fose murder
Hawks' commitment to justice
The arrest of a law enforcement officer in connection with such serious crimes has prompted strong statements from senior police officials about their commitment to justice, regardless of the perpetrator's position.
Provincial Head of the Hawks, Major General Makgato, emphasised that no one is above the law.
'We remain committed to root out any form of criminality even within the ranks of the Law Enforcement agencies, if they find themselves on the wrong side of the law,' Makgato declared.
NOW READ: KZN murder accused found dead in police van after court appearance

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Herald
2 hours ago
- The Herald
More than 900 'problem buildings' in Cape Town
There are 922 problem buildings listed in Cape Town with 322 of those under active investigation by the city's law enforcement problem building unit. 'Problem buildings are categorised into various groups based on their status within the investigation process. Of the 922 properties listed, 35% (322 properties) are active cases,' according to the city. Other categories included: new cases (11 properties), recommended closed (72 properties), and closed cases (517 properties). 'The city's problem building unit has made great progress by working closely with other city departments ... The first step in addressing a problem building is reporting it and so we appeal to the public to report any potential risks in their communities. We have often seen that opportunistic criminals would use a derelict building to hide or to use such a building as a base of operations,' said safety and security MMC JP Smith. What constitutes a problem building is outlined in the 2020 Problem Property By-law which is divided into two categories: • Problem buildings: properties with legal, safety, or health-related noncompliance. • Buildings with problems: Properties with aesthetic or minor maintenance issues, such as unpainted surfaces, broken windows or overgrown grass. The registered owners of problem buildings are formally notified and given an opportunity to comply with the bylaw. TimesLIVE


Daily Maverick
2 hours ago
- Daily Maverick
Justice delayed, justice derailed — acting judge's ‘litany of errors' in Nulane case dealt blow to accountability
An acting judge's misunderstanding of the law has, for two long years, delayed accountability for alleged State Capture. The high court judge's pronouncements unfairly embarrassed the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and demoralised courageous prosecutors fighting to restore faith in South Africa's justice system. Thankfully the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) has now set aside the Nulane judgment. Stingingly, the SCA found that 'the acquittal of the respondents was unfair to the prosecution and compromised the administration of justice'. Why is the Nulane case so important? In 2022, a mix of officials and businesspeople shuffled into a cold Bloemfontein dock, facing charges of orchestrating a R25-million fraud. With this, the NPA brought its first State Capture case to trial. Although R25-million was a pittance compared with what the Guptas would later purloin, Nulane was a dress rehearsal for the later schemes. The fraud itself appears glaringly obvious. In 2012, a Gupta-linked, foreign scrap metal company suddenly announced its intention to invest in an emerging farmers project in the Free State. Strangely, the foreign company insisted that a company it did not name must conduct a feasibility study first. Somehow, Nulane, owned by Iqbal Sharma, was appointed to that role. Evidence showed how Free State officials set about manipulating procurement processes to falsely and quickly appoint Nulane as a sole supplier. The feasibility study simply was outsourced to Deloitte for just R1.5-million. Nulane merely slapped its logo on the final report and sent invoices to the Department of Agriculture. The money went to Nulane and R19-million then ricocheted through various Gupta-controlled bank accounts before being siphoned off to Dubai. By the time the trial began, the Guptas had long fled South Africa. Smaller fish faced charges for PFMA breaches, fraud and money laundering. Despite evidence to the contrary, much of it common cause, the high court outright acquitted one of the accused and granted section 174 discharges to the rest. The high court declared that there was 'not an iota' of evidence to even answer. The acting judge excoriated both the prosecutors and police for presenting a 'lackadaisical' case. The documentary evidence amounted to 'zilch', the judge proclaimed. The investigation was a 'comedy of errors', a phrase the judge called 'the understatement of the millennia'. This insult warrants scrutiny. Did the acting judge mean that no investigations across thousands of years, from Meletus's inquiries into Socrates, were more incompetently conducted than Nulane? Or did she mean the singular noun millennium, thus restricting her comparison to all the other bad investigations since January 2000? Ironically, the high court's reasoning is now discredited on all these scores. The SCA judgment chronicles a litany of errors, misconceptions and misconstructions; some so basic as failing to apply the elements of fraud to the facts. As for the acting judge's finding that the documents proved 'zilch', the SCA found otherwise. The documents and money flows established a prima facie case of fraud and money laundering which the accused should have been called upon to answer. On 'zilch', the SCA remarked: 'The use of this colloquialism is unfortunate; it does not belong in a judgment.' Thank goodness the State appealed. The stakes were high not only because the acquittals were wrong but because the high court judgment undermined extradition efforts. The collapse of Nulane led to the Guptas walking free in Dubai. The judgment also destabilised case theories for prosecuting other State Capture crimes. The court's position on accomplice witnesses, best evidence, common purpose and section 174 discharges created ripple effects that reverberate today. It is heard tell that the high court's errors emboldened magistrates in Free State courts to discharge other financial crime suspects with alarming ease. When cases are lost, criticism of prosecutors is often merciless. Media outlets joined the chorus of social media condemnation. The otherwise astute investigative journalism platform amaBhungane released a video suggesting that Nulane prosecutors lacked sufficient skills for what should have been a slam-dunk case. Legal reporting guru Karyn Maughan proclaimed that the acting judge 'was absolutely justified in describing it as a comedy of errors'. Maughan said she would be 'absolutely amazed' if the State succeeded in its appeal application. It will be amazing to see an apology to the vilified prosecutors and SAPS investigator. The media's ridicule compounded what was an intensely demoralising experience for NPA advocates Witbooi and Serunye and SAPS investigator Lieutenant Colonel Mandla Mtolo. How they managed to persevere despite such unfair criticism is hard to imagine. Of course every prosecution can be improved. But it was the fact that the judge had 'closed her mind to the evidence adduced by the State' that really prevented the NPA from advancing the State's case, as the SCA noted. The NPA's resilience deserves praise. In this instance, the real issue lies not with prosecutors but with wiser case allocation. State Capture cases cannot be entrusted to judges susceptible to their own 'comedy of errors'. The NPA chief, advocate Shamila Batohi, has herself implored heads of court to appoint experienced judges to seminal matters. A similar hint rang out in Bloemfontein's quaintly dilapidated SCA courtroom B when State counsel, Nazeer Cassim SC, remarked that high-stakes cases should be assigned to judges capable of navigating complex legal terrain. It was acting SCA Justice Cagney Musi (also Free State Judge President) who assigned the Nulane case to the acting judge who so badly mishandled it. As Justice Musi pored over his division's work, he must have regretted his decision. Wayward acquittals are a danger. They imperil South Africa's fragile hope of salvaging itself from ruin. Without the credible prospect of prison, South Africa's kleptocracy will only expand until the justice system is nothing but a laughable, hollow threat. One can only but agree with the SCA's finding that the way the high court trial was conducted 'can be summed up in a single sentence: This was a failure of justice. Regrettably, this erodes public confidence in the criminal justice system.' This critique is not about singling out a judge any more than a judge singled out police and prosecutors. Rather, Nulane serves as a lesson in how mistaken opinions, judicial and public, can delay accountability and demoralise those tasked with wielding justice on society's behalf. Nulane also forces us to confront larger questions. 'How many other Nulane judgments are out there?' This is a troubling question. Much like the temperature this week, the standard of acting appointments has, by all accounts, been plummeting for some time. This phenomenon is so noticeable, it has crept into techniques of civil litigation. No matter how strong a party's case may be, many are induced to take a puny settlement rather than risk the potluck of the court roll. Yet this should not be so. High court trials carry huge social stakes. They're not a CCMA con-arb or housebreaking case. It's all very well to develop lawyers or magistrates by gifting them an acting stint. However, acting judges still need to be drawn from an intellectual and professional elite. A deep, nonracial strata of legal excellence exists in South Africa. Many inspired acting appointments are routinely made and these represent the breadth of legal talent in South Africa, so this is not a 'transformation' issue. The problem is the almost back-of-the-envelope selection of adjudicators we see sometimes. The 'proletarianisation' of the Bench is a threat to the state's legitimacy. The goals of inclusion and professional development must be tempered by a primary duty to select judges capable of deciding cases competently. This is the essence of the 'fair public hearing' promise the Constitution contains. It is especially hard for poor and already marginalised litigants to fix the damage made by learner-judges on appeal. As things stand though, NPA prosecutors have been vindicated by the SCA. Nulane also teaches judges and commentators alike to be less star-struck by defence counsel and their adamant speeches and charming tutelage. A careful examination of the record, not only snippets of the argument or judgment, will often reveal that less-flamboyant career prosecutors have indeed made out a case, at least to warrant the accused mounting a defence. Shakespeare's Hamlet lamented the law's delay and the insolence of office. Thankfully, the SCA has set matters right, for now. The NPA can do better but so can the judiciary. South Africa cannot afford further derailments in its pursuit of justice against the greedy stokers of our ruin. DM


Eyewitness News
2 hours ago
- Eyewitness News
Cape Town cop accused of kidnapping, murder to await bail application outcome
CAPE TOWN - A Cape Town law enforcement officer accused of kidnapping and murder will have to wait until next week to find out if he'll be released on bail or not. Thandile Khesa made a brief appearance at the Blue Downs Magistrates Court on Thursday, alongside four of his co-accused. The group is accused of kidnapping a man in Kraaifontein on 16 May 2025, when he responded to an online advert for a car on sale but ended up dead. The prosecution's case suggests that 43-year-old Khesa met with the deceased in Bellville, kidnapped him, and drove in a State-branded car to an open field near Khayelitsha. It's further alleged that Khesa, together with Mogamat Samuels, Thokozani Kamnjunga, Existing Mudivari and Yaseen Jele, then demanded a ransom of R100,000 from the victim's family for his release. When the family couldn't come up with the ransom money, the amount was reduced to R5,000, which was paid into a bank account provided by the accused. Detectives were able to trace Samuels, Kamnjunga, Mudivari, and Jele to addresses in Philippi and Kleinvlei a day after the alleged kidnapping took place. One of the accused led detectives to the crime scene between Monwabisi Beach and Macassar, where he pointed out a shallow grave where the victim was buried. The law enforcement officer's bail application has been postponed until next week on Tuesday, while his co-accused will apply for bail later on Thursday.