SAPS faces class action lawsuit after ‘Prinsloo guns’ kill 187 kids, over 1 000 people

Christiaan Prinsloo leaves the Bellville Magistrate’s Court after his appearance. File picture: Leon Lestrade/African News Agency

Christiaan Prinsloo leaves the Bellville Magistrate’s Court after his appearance. File picture: Leon Lestrade/African News Agency

Published Mar 7, 2023

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Cape Town - Gun Free SA (GFSA) is headed to the Western Cape High Court with a class action case against the police minister seeking damages arising from deaths and injuries due to corrupt, negligent firearms management.

GFSA claims in its suit that the police are accountable for crimes committed by former police colonel Christiaan Prinsloo, who confessed to selling more than 2 000 guns in police stores to gang leaders on the Cape Flats.

Prinsloo, who was involved in the illegal gun trade, was sentenced to 18 years’ imprisonment for a string of charges, including corruption, racketeering and theft after entering into a plea agreement with the State at the Bellville Magistrate’s Court in 2016.

The former Gauteng policeman was arrested in 2015 as part of a lengthy investigation into gangsters and the illegal gun trade in the Western Cape.

During the case it emerged that Prinsloo was assisted in his criminal enterprise by his colleague Colonel David Charles Naidoo.

GFSA said that since 2016, police records show that “Prinsloo’s guns” have been used in, at least, 1 066 murders and that 187 children were killed by criminals using a “Prinsloo gun”.

Minister of Police General Bheki Cele. File picture: Phando Jikelo African News Agency (ANA)

Calls and text messages failed to elicit a response from Police Minister Bheki Cele’s spokesperson. However, in February, while delivering the crime statistics from October to December 2022, Cele said there was evidence that guns were stolen from the police and households.

GFSA’s director Adèle Kirsten said: “As the virus of gun violence spreads, it’s time to hold the police accountable for their negligence.”

Litigants in the class action include the parents and guardians of children who were injured, dependants of victims killed, and those who survived a shooting with a Prinsloo gun.

Several families have already given witness statements and work continues to identify further claimants. A firm of attorneys has taken the case pro-bono, and secured senior and junior legal counsel to represent the litigants in the Western Cape High Court.

Kirsten said the police had failed to ensure South Africa had a strong and effective weapons and ammunition management system in place and this had enabled Prinsloo to steal guns in police stores and leak them into communities for years, undetected.

“Furthermore, the police have failed to adequately address systemic failures in SAPS’ stockpile management system to prevent more legal guns leaking into criminal hands, thereby contributing to the pool of weapons in the country.”

Kirsten said that with guns ever more available, gun violence had increased and guns are now the leading cause of murder in South Africa, with 34 people shot and killed every day between October and December 2022.

This morning (Tuesday) the legislature’s standing committee on community safety will be briefed by the police on their response to the 2021/22 policing needs and priorities report.

During a briefing to the legislature on the report in February, Police Oversight and Community Safety MEC Reagen Allen urged the police to continue to focus on firearm recoveries and confiscations through stop and search and intelligence-led operations.

Community Safety and Police Oversight MEC Reagen Allen. File Picture: Armand Hough/African News Agency (ANA)

MEC Allen said: “Firearm stockpiles must be closely managed. SAPS must report on all firearms and ammunition lost or stolen from exhibits, stores or from members of SAPS.”

He said it was necessary for confiscated firearms to be destroyed on a more regular basis and that there needed to be further regulation of the sale of ammunition to prevent “large amounts being bought and sold or lent on to criminally-minded people.”

Last August members of the standing committee were left frustrated after being told the information they sought from provincial police top brass on the destruction of illegal firearms was classified and not to be revealed in an open session.

The committee members had invited Western Cape police management to brief them on the slow progress in identifying a site in the province where the guns could be destroyed instead of having to transport them to Pretoria every so often.

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