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Class action against SAPS for deaths, injuries due to corrupt, negligent firearms management

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Gun Free SA said it has given notice to Police Minister Bheki Cele of class action proceedings in which damages will be sought from the minister arising from deaths and injuries due to the actions of Christiaan Prinsloo and David Naidoo, who co-ordinated the sale of guns to gangs.

Christiaan Prinsloo, a former police officer, was sentenced to 18 years behind bars after being convicted of more than 20 charges, ranging from racketeering, corruption and money laundering relating to the smuggling and dealing of lethal weapons worth around R9 million with gangsters in the Cape Flats. File picture: Cindy Waxa

GUN FREE SA (GFSA) has instituted class action against the SAPS for deaths and injuries allegedly resulting from corrupt and negligent firearms management.

It said that the police were accountable for crimes committed by senior SAPS member Colonel Christiaan Prinsloo, who confessed to selling more than 2,000 guns in police stores to gang leaders on the Cape Flats. Prinsloo was assisted in his criminal enterprise by his colleague, Colonel David Charles Naidoo. As of 2016, the SAPS has records that “Prinsloo’s guns” have been used in at least 1,066 murders, with 187 children being killed by criminals using a “Prinsloo gun”.

GFSA said it has given notice to Police Minister Bheki Cele of class action proceedings in which damages will be sought from the minister arising from deaths and injuries due to the actions of Prinsloo and Naidoo, who co-ordinated the sale of guns to gangs.

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

Kirsten said the police have failed to ensure that SA has a strong and effective weapons and ammunition management system in place and this enabled someone like Prinsloo to steal guns in police stores and leak them into communities for years, undetected. Furthermore, the police had failed to adequately address systemic failures in the SAPS’s stockpile management system to prevent more legal guns from leaking into criminal hands, thereby contributing to the pool of weapons in the country.

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

GFSA said that when the police’s Operation Impi uncovered Prinsloo’s criminality in 2016, the SAPS’s Legal Division warned that unless the stolen firearms still in the hands of criminals were retrieved and systems put in place to prevent further corruption, the risk of litigation was “enormous”.

In September 2016, the SAPS recorded that at least a thousand “Prinsloo” guns remained in circulation and continued to maim and kill people across the country. It was at this same time that the SAPS disbanded Operation Impi and there is no publicly accessible information related to the SAPS’s progress (if any) in recovering the firearms and ammunition sold into criminal hands by Prinsloo.

“These guns continue to circulate in our communities,” said Cape Flats Safety Forum secretary Lynn Phillips, “and they pose the biggest threat to our right to life.”

She added: “This is why the police need to have dedicated teams that go after these guns, find them, and destroy them.”

GFSA said that as required by law, notices in terms of the Institution of Legal Proceedings Against Certain Organs of State Act, 2002 have been sent to the minister of police, national police commissioner and provincial police commissioners giving notice of the class action, specifically that an application for the certification of class action proceedings will be lodged with the Western Cape High Court in 60 days.

It said that litigants in the class action included 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 large firm of attorneys has taken the case pro bono, and secured prominent senior and junior legal counsel to represent the litigants in the Western Cape High Court.

GFSA added that any class action is a complex and lengthy process, and GFSA has committed to updating the media and stakeholders as soon as there are further developments.

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