Man arrested for perjury after opening false robbery case
An investigation revealed that this wasn't his first time.
Picture: iStock
A 28-year-old man has been arrested for perjury after opening a false case of robbery case at the Johannesburg Central Police Station.
According to Captain Xoli Mbele, the man was arrested on Tuesday after alleging that he had been robbed of his cellphone, a Huawei Blush Gold Nova 8 worth R11,000 on Monday, 28 February 2022.
“Detectives accompanied the complainant to show them where he was robbed. The complainant then changed the facts of his complaint and told the police he was robbed somewhere else. The detectives then took him to view CCTV footage and the complainant refused. He told the police he was robbed at a tavern in Maboneng Precinct,” said Mbele.
Further investigation revealed that the complainant opened a similar case of robbery in November last year and allegedly submitted an insurance claim.
The suspect was subsequently arrested for opening the false robbery case and is facing a charge of perjury.
Johannesburg Central Station Commander, Brigadier Perumal urged the community to refrain from opening false cases as such cases are viewed in a serious light and strongly condemned.
In another incident, a Cape Town-based export company and its director were found guilty of mis-declaring a consignment of scrap metal in order to avoid paying the recently introduced export duties on scrap metal.
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According to Sars, the company, Scrapmania, and its director, Joseph Daniel Hurling, pleaded guilty on a charge of making a false declaration to Customs and both were fined R500,000, with Hurling fined an additional R100,000 in the Durban Regional Court.
On 23 September 2021, Mirage Shipping processed an export declaration for ten containers of “polymers and ethylene” on behalf of Scrapmania.
“The shipment made its way from Cape Town to Durban Harbour, where it was detained for inspection on arrival, after it was flagged on the Customs system,” said Sars in a statement on Thursday.
On 12 October 2021, it was inspected and found to contain scrap metal, which requires an International Trade Administration Commission (ITAC) permit and is liable for export duties.
A criminal case was then registered with the SAPS for contravention of the Customs and Excise Act and the ITAC Act.
According to Sars, the scrap metal industry is a multi-billion rand industry and contributes an estimated R15 billion annually to South Africa’s gross domestic product.
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In 2017, a scrap metal company lost a case in the Constitutional Court to challenge the State’s scrap metal export provisions, known as the price preference system, as well as ITAC’s decision to refuse to issue export permits to the company, in accordance with the price preference system.
This followed almost four years of litigation over the lawfulness of the price preference system.
“SARS is committed to trade facilitation and growing our country’s economy. It will continue to make it easy and seamless for traders to comply with their legal obligation by providing them with clarity and certainty. Equally, SARS is building its capability to make it hard and costly for those of the traders who chose to be non-compliant. This is a warning that we will leave no stone unturned in ensuring that those who are involved in these types of behaviour that borders on criminality are dealt with harshly. Our fiscus is short changed by this intentional and criminal misdeclaration,” said SARS Commissioner Edward Kieswetter.
Compiled by Vhahangwele Nemakonde
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