Local newsNewsNews

Mbombela sting earns alleged ticket thief a red card

The sting operation was set up on Monday July 25 after it was found that the alleged stolen tickets were being advertised on a local Facebook group.

You can steal a man’s laptop, but do not mess with his rugby tickets.

When a local advocate had six of his coveted rugby tickets and his new laptop stolen, a sting operation to get them back was set into motion, when the alleged* thief was found to be selling them on the Facebook group, *NELSPRUITERS*.

Victor Kruger was over the moon on July 22 when he got six rugby tickets for him and his family for the Springboks vs All Blacks game at Mbombela Stadium this weekend, August 6.

ALSO READ: Man dies after head-on collision on R37

After acquiring the tickets, Kruger immediately snapped a pic and sent it to his family WhatsApp group, not knowing at the time that in a few hours, his tickets would be gone. However, the photo he took would also be the key to tracing the alleged ticket thief.

The post on Facebook that cracked the case open.

“I put the tickets in my laptop bag, then went to a local pub for a drink with a colleague at about 17:00. When I left at 20:00, I saw the window of my bakkie had been smashed and my laptop bag with the tickets and new laptop was gone.”

Kruger said he was devastated, and when he asked Computicket if anything could be done to get them back, Kruger was told the tickets could possibly be reprinted, but that getting into the game would be on a first come, first served basis.

ALSO READ: Rhino poaching numbers increase from 2021

A family friend of Kruger’s, Bianca Landsberg, whom one of the six tickets had been purchased for, said she was browsing Facebook on Monday July 25 when she came across a post on *NELSPRUITERS* on which a man was selling six R1 000 rugby tickets for R1 500 each.

Bianca Landsberg chatted to the man on WhatsApp to set up a meeting to get the alleged stolen tickets back.

After looking at the photos of the tickets Kruger had sent her and comparing them with the post, she realised they were in fact the same ones.

“I didn’t even tell Victor I had found them, I just sent the guy a message asking if they were still available. I didn’t want anyone else to buy stolen tickets,” said Landsberg.

The man was arrested as soon as he had handed the tickets over to Bianca Landsberg. > Photo: Phillip Vilikazi

After the alleged thief confirmed the tickets were still available, she called Kruger to let him know, who then called Albert Gryvenstein of Bossies Community Justice in the hopes of setting up a sting operation. Gryvenstein set up the operation, calling in Callen Herbst of AG Solutions to assist.

Herbst contacted Securicon Lowveld and another private security company owned by Phillip Vilikazi to act as backup.

ALSO READ: Woman arrested in connection with murder of KaBokweni cop

The plan was for Landsberg to meet with the alleged ticket thief at Absa Square later that afternoon, and when the man handed the tickets over to Landsberg, that would be when the security companies would move in to make the arrest.

The alleged ticket thief awaiting police arrest. > Photo: Callen Herbst

Kruger had in the meantime contacted the Nelspruit police, who said they liked the sting operation plan, and that as soon as the man had been caught, they had to call them to officially arrest him and take him into custody.

The man showed up and Landsberg met with him. She said she was nervous, but luckily everything went according to plan, and shortly after the man had handed over four of the six rugby tickets, AG Solutions moved in to arrest him.

When the alleged thief was searched, the remaining two tickets were found in his possession. The laptop has not yet been recovered.

The police were called and a case was opened.

“I am very impressed with everyone involved in the operation. I haven’t gotten my laptop back, but I am so glad we have the tickets. It is a once-in-a-lifetime experience that the Lowveld will never have again,” said Kruger.

Landsberg said she was ecstatic that they were able to get the tickets back, and that the man who had tried to sell them was brought to book.

ALSO READ: War on illegal connections in Thaba Chweu

It is believed there might have been a second man involved who may have given the tickets to the individual who was arrested on July 25, however, this cannot be confirmed and there is no trace of him.

*The identity of the man can now be revealed as he recently appeared in the Nelspruit Magistrate’s Court. Mpumalanga’s National Prosecuting Authority’s spokesperson, Monica Nyuswa, said Themba Bhululu Sishaba appeared in court on charges of possession of stolen property and was granted bail of R800. She said the matter has been postponed to August 26.

Do you have more information about the story?

Please send us an email to editorial@lowvelder.co.za.

For free breaking and community news, visit Lowvelder’s website: Lowvelder

For more news and interesting articles, like Lowvelder on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Instagram

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 Lowvelder in Google News and Top Stories.

Back to top button