CrimeEditor's choiceNews

Tzaneen: Traffic officials to serve jail time for corruption

Two Tzaneen Provincial traffic officials were convicted for corruption.

Stanley Kgapane Makhurupetje (43), and Motsatsi Portia Ramphelo (34), were convicted for corruption and sentenced by the Tzaneen Magistrate’s Court on Thursday 15 August.

“In December 2017, The Hawks’ Serious Corruption Investigation unit in collaboration with the Road Traffic Management Corporation (RTMC) conducted a sting operation in Tzaneen area that was aimed at addressing reports of corruption by traffic officers on the local roads,” Captain Matimba Maluleke said.

Read: 11 traffic officials arrested for corruption

Makhurpetje and Ramphelo together with other 11 traffic officers stationed at Tzaneen and Bolobedu respectively, were arrested for allegedly receiving bribes ranging from R150 to R 2 000 from motorists who reportedly contravened the Road Traffic Act.

Both accused were granted bail of R10 000 each during their trial.

According to Maluleke, Makhurupetje was sentenced to four years direct imprisonment with no option of a fine and suspended for 2 years.

Ramphelo was sentenced to two years direct imprisonment with no option of a fine.

The trial against the other accused is yet to be concluded.

“This should serve as a wakeup call to all law enforcers, that those who break the law will be dealt with without fear of favour”, Brigadier Thabo Ramela said.

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Letaba Herald in Google News and Top Stories.

Bertus de Bruyn

Bertus de Bruyn is based in Mbombela, Mpumalanga. De Bruyn has been employed by Caxton since 2009. After a short sabbatical of two years, De Bruyn is back at the place he called home, Caxton, at Lowveld Media. He is currently the digital content manager, but has 14 years of journalism skills, news editor, and acting editor duties behind his name.

Related Articles

Back to top button