Ekurhuleni officials, businessman sentenced for tender fraud

The businessman failed to disclose that he was related to a municipal official though marriage.

Two former City of Ekurhuleni officials and a businessman were sentenced for tender-related fraud, corruption and money laundering amounting to over R 21.8m.

The Special Investigating Unit (SIU) spokesman Kaizer Kganyago says the Pretoria Commercial Crimes Court found Velero David and Nilesh Singh guilty of fraud and corruption charges. Andrew Mphushomadi was found guilty of money laundering for receiving benefits from unlawful activity.

Prison time and suspended fines

The court sentenced businessman David to 10 years for fraud amounting to R21,806 331 and 15 years for corruption of R12 678 602.

Former Ekurhuleni IT executive Singh was sentenced to 10 years for fraud amounting to R21 806 331 and 15 years for corruption of R12 678 602.

Mphushomadi, former IT senior manager at the city, was given a 10-year prison sentence, of which four were suspended, for money laundering. Mphushomadi received the proceeds of crime to the value of R3 365 574.

Two entities that were used in the commission of the crime, Meropa Sachabeng Technology CC, and Nanga Transport CC each received a fine of R600 000 wholly suspended for five years.

Meropa is represented by David while Nanga is represented by Princes Dlongolo, Mphushomadi’s wife.

Investigation reveals fraud, corruption and money laundering

“The SIU probe in Ekurhuleni revealed that Meropa was fraudulently awarded a tender for the supply and maintenance of computer components.

Meropa, together with bid adjudicators failed to disclose a conflict-of-interest contrary to Ekurhuleni’s bid policies, which provided a list of measurements to combat abuse like fraud, corruption and favouritism,” explains Kganyago.

David, sole director of Meropa, declared during the bidding process that he had no relationship with persons in the service of the state or who may be involved in the evaluation and adjudication of the bid.

Unbeknown to Ekurhuleni at the time, David was related through marriage to Singh, the executive director of the Information Technology Department and influential in awarding the tender.

Singh resigned and joined Meropa shortly after the bid was awarded.

Mphushomadi, a senior manager in the IT department at the time and a member of Nanga, was also involved in the allocation of the tender.

It emerged during the investigation that shortly after the tender was awarded, Nanga purchased Mercedes Benz trucks for close to R4m, paid for by Meropa from the money received from the city.

Assets forfeited to the state

In February, the commercial crimes court ordered that the assets seized by the Asset Forfeiture Unit in April 2012 be forfeited to the state.

The SIU welcomes the imprisonment of the accused in the commercial crimes court on May 18.

Kganyago says that the outcome of the Specialised Commercial Crime Court is a continuation of the implementation of the SIU to recover financial losses suffered by state institutions and to hold those responsible accountable for their actions through a justice process in accordance with the SIU Act 74 of 1996.

Fraud and corruption allegations may be reported via the following platforms:

siu@hotline.co.za.

Hotline: 0800 037 774.

Read original story on benonicitytimes.co.za

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 Network News in Google News and Top Stories.

Jana Boshoff

Jana works as a senior support specialist for Caxton digital. Before that she was a journalist at the Middelburg Observer 15 years where she won numerous awards including Sanlam's Up and Coming Journalist, Caxton Multimedia Journalist of the Year, and several investigative awards. She is passionate about people and the stories untold.
Back to top button