Tuesday, January 15, 2013

The plot thickens - Audi R8 crash docket 'gone'


The remains of an Audi R8 on Oxford Road, Rosebank, in which a motorist and a policeman died early yesterday. The driver had raced away while the policeman was in his car searching for drugs. Lieutenant-Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said two police officers had stopped the vehicle and found a small amount of dagga inside. The second policeman gave chase in a police van when the driver sped off. The Audi driver eventually lost control and hit a tree, a wall and a lamppost.

 He and the policeman were declared dead at the scene Picture: JAMES OATWAY GRAEME HOSKEN

 | 16 January, 2013 00:072 Comments The remains of an Audi R8 on Oxford Road, Rosebank, in which a motorist and a policeman died early yesterday. The driver had raced away while the policeman was in his car searching for drugs. Lieutenant-Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said two police officers had stopped the vehicle and found a small amount of dagga inside.
 The second policeman gave chase in a police van when the driver sped off. The Audi driver eventually lost control and hit a tree, a wall and a lamppost. He and the policeman were declared dead at the scene Picture: JAMES OATWAY The Independent Police Investigative Directorate says it has been unable to locate the police docket relating to the car crash that claimed the life of a policeman and a businessman during the early hours of Thursday on Oxford Road, Johannesburg
 The police insist that the docket is being handled by a specialised provincial police investigative unit and is under lock and key - but the directorate, the police watchdog, says it has been unable to locate it. The directorate investigates high-profile crimes committed by the police, such as corruption. Its spokesman, Moses Dlamini, said: "Up to today we have not been given the docket. We have made inquiries but have not received it.
 We don't know where it is, it is missing." The docket contains details of the mysterious car crash that killed Constable Goodman Lubisi and businessman Areff Haffejee. They were killed when Haffejee lost control of his Audi R8 supercar and crashed into a lamppost and a wall in Oxford Road. At the time, police claimed that Haffejee had tried to escape officers who had found dagga in his car when they stopped him at a roadblock in Sandton, northern Johannesburg.
 They allege that Haffejee, pursued by Lubisi's partner in a police van, crashed his car during a high-speed chase. But the police's version of events has been rubbished by witnesses, police officers close to the investigation and investigative directorate detectives. The police have failed to explain: Why Lubisi did not use his service pistol to force Haffejee to stop his car;
Why the policemen did not call for backup; Why Lubisi's colleagues at the crash scene waited nearly 10 minutes before calling for ambulances; Why the police van's vehicle monitoring device shows that the vehicle was not speeding, braking hard or rapidly cornering, as it would in a high-speed chase; What happened to the dagga said to have been found in Haffejee's car;
Why there was a delay in notifying the investigative directorate about the crash; and Why the statement of witness Selaelo Mannya, who was driving alongside the police van and the Audi, had not been taken. The police have yet to name a third policeman involved, who was travelling in the police van. An IPID investigator said there were "major" discrepancies between the police's version of events and what other evidence suggested.
 "There is no technical evidence to support the theory of a chase. If there was [a chase], why was the police van driving slowly - in some parts of the 'chase' no faster than 40km/h," the investigator said. "If Haffejee was not trying to get away, we need to know why the policeman was in his car. We need to know why it took so long for the police to contact the IPID." He said the investigation would look into the policemen's service records.
 "So far we have not been able to question the other policemen as they are on sick leave." Mannya said claims by the police that they were chasing Haffejee were rubbish. "When I stopped at a traffic light both the Audi and the police stopped next to me. Why would they do this if they were chasing?" Mannya said that though he had given the police all his contact details, he had not been asked to provide a statement. "What I saw happening was highly suspicious . those policemen were not chasing that car . they were not in a hurry to phone for help." Police spokesman Brigadier Neville Malila said the docket was not lost. "It is with the provincial investigative unit, which is tasked to investigate high-profile crimes," he said. "They are investigating this incident because one of our own died and because of the allegations." Times Live

 - - - COMMENTS BY SONNY IT IS ALSO ONLY AN ALLEGATION THAT "A SMALL AMOUNT OF DAGGA WAS FOUND IN HAFFEJEE'S CAR DURING THE ILLEGAL SEARCH!" Dead men don't tell lies...... This allegation is one 'suspect' policeman against two dead; one being a policeman found in a 'suspects' car under strange circumstance and one the owner/driver of the Audi R8. Tomorrow one of us are found under the same circumstances and we have to explain our innocence. We are sure the 'docket' is not gone, but, could be undergoing some 'plastic reconstructure surgery!' Is the SAPS also involved in organised crime like some politicians? We hope the truth comes out for both the deceased!


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Audi R8 crash docket 'gone'

GRAEME HOSKEN | 16 January, 2013 00:076
The remains of an Audi R8 on Oxford Road, Rosebank, in which a motorist and a policeman died early yesterday. The driver had raced away while the policeman was in his car searching for drugs. Lieutenant-Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said two police officers had stopped the vehicle and found a small amount of dagga inside. The second policeman gave chase in a police van when the driver sped off. The Audi driver eventually lost control and hit a tree, a wall and a lamppost. He and the policeman were declared dead at the scene Picture: JAMES OATWAY

The Independent Police Investigative Directorate says it has been unable to locate the police docket relating to the car crash that claimed the life of a policeman and a businessman during the early hours of Thursday on Oxford Road, Johannesburg .





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The police have failed to explain:
  • Why Lubisi did not use his service pistol to force Haffejee to stop his car;
  • Why the policemen did not call for backup;
  • Why Lubisi's colleagues at the crash scene waited nearly 10 minutes before calling for ambulances;
  • Why the police van's vehicle monitoring device shows that the vehicle was not speeding, braking hard or rapidly cornering, as it would in a high-speed chase;
  • What happened to the dagga said to have been found in Haffejee's car;
  • Why there was a delay in notifying the investigative directorate about the crash; and
  • Why the statement of witness Selaelo Mannya, who was driving alongside the police van and the Audi, had not been taken.
The police have yet to name a third policeman involved, who was travelling in the police van.
An IPID investigator said there were "major" discrepancies between the police's version of events and what other evidence suggested.
"There is no technical evidence to support the theory of a chase. If there was [a chase], why was the police van driving slowly - in some parts of the 'chase' no faster than 40km/h," the investigator said.
"If Haffejee was not trying to get away, we need to know why the policeman was in his car. We need to know why it took so long for the police to contact the IPID."
He said the investigation would look into the policemen's service records.
"So far we have not been able to question the other policemen as they are on sick leave."
Mannya said claims by the police that they were chasing Haffejee were rubbish.
"When I stopped at a traffic light both the Audi and the police stopped next to me. Why would they do this if they were chasing?"
Mannya said that though he had given the police all his contact details, he had not been asked to provide a statement.
"What I saw happening was highly suspicious . those policemen were not chasing that car . they were not in a hurry to phone for help."
Police spokesman Brigadier Neville Malila said the docket was not lost.
"It is with the provincial investigative unit, which is tasked to investigate high-profile crimes," he said.
"They are investigating this incident because one of our own died and because of the allegations.

Kind Regards
The eblockwatch team




1 comment:

  1. JOHANNESBURG - 17 JANUARY 2013 17:00 Two Sandton cops charged with corruption Alex Eliseev | one hour ago SANDTON - Gauteng police on Thursday confirmed that two Sandton officers were arrested for corruption after allegedly extorting money from a motorist. The officers appeared in the Randburg Magistrate's Court earlier in the day. They were released on R3,000 bail each. Last week, a constable from the same station died when an Audi R8 car crashed on Oxford Road in Rosebank. This after police pulled over the vehicle in Sandton. The cop had allegedly gotten inside the car while the driver sped away. The man then crashed into a tree in Rosebank. Police spokesperson Lungelo Dlamini said the two constables work in visible policing and pulled over a woman in Sandton last week Sunday. “They pulled over a motorist who was accused of having drugs. They took the driver’s licence and the motorist was later forced to withdraw R1,000 from an ATM.” The officers, Linda Mlambo and Mahlang Shaku, were charged with corruption and will return to court in February. Dlamini declined to comment on the similarities between this case and the one involving the Audi R8, saying there is no link between them. Police claimed officers had found dagga inside the supercar, but this has been met with scepticism. EYE WITNESS NEWS - - - COMMENTS BY SONNY - - Same police station, same circumstances...? So it is not as isolated as we are lead to believe.
    POSTED BY SONNY COX AT 7:14 AM NO COMMENTS: LINKS TO THIS POST

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