Former Kaizer Chiefs spin doctor Louis 'Sprinter' Tshakoane at Mamelodi Sundowns' Communications Manager, Alex 'Goldfinger' Shakoane's funeral Mamelodi International Assemblies Of God Church, before his arrest.
Image: Veli Nhlapo
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As one group of policemen pounced on former Kaizer Chiefs PRO Louis “Sprinter” Tshakoane shortly after he gave a funeral speech in Tshwane yesterday, back at his Kempton Park home, heavily armed officers were scaling the walls demanding to be let in to arrest his son.

Tshakoane was arrested in dramatic fashion at the funeral of Sundowns communications manager Alex “Goldfingers” Shakoane, four years after police first issued a warrant for his arrest for allegedly running a R100m ponzi scheme with his son Kgopotso, 34.

Louis Tshakoane Junior has been nabbed at his home.
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Neighbours who spoke to Sowetan said they were shocked to learn Tshakoane was a wanted man as he lived in his home, coming and going as he pleased. One neighbour said shortly before midday yesterday she saw police vehicles parking outside Tshakoane’s gate demanding to be let in while other officers others scaled the brick wall.

“I was very scared when I heard the noise outside and I didn’t know what was going on. There were about four police cars with lots of police with big guns, some were on top of the wall shouting ‘open the gate open the gate’. “I don’t know them [Tshakoanes] very well and I’ve been staying here for the past two years and always see a bulky gentleman taking out the rubbish bin,” said the neighbour.

“Are they rich because I always see them driving fancy cars? He didn’t act like someone who was in hiding because I’d see him driving out of his house to pick up his grandchildren from school. “They are friendly neighbours and I’ve known them for a very long time.”

Another neighbour said he saw Tshakoane on Monday but had not seen him for a while before that.

Mourners in Mamelodi assumed the police were there to protect the high-profile mourners who included mining magnate and CAF president Patrice Motsepe and Gauteng premier Panyaza Lesufi.

“It seems the police were waiting for him to finish his speech and pounce on him. But everything was just calm and not many noticed he was being arrested,” added a Sundowns supporter who asked not to be named.

Before his arrest, armed Hawks officers were seen milling around outside the church where the service was being held. Moments later, they were seen escorting Tshakoane out of the church with one officer holding a warrant of arrest. They led him to their vehicle.

The father and son pair is expected to appear in the Palm Ridge Specialised Commercial Crimes Court today on charges of fraud, theft, money laundering and contravention of the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act, said Gauteng police spokesperson Col Katlego Mogale.

Tshakoane, 74, has been on the run since 2019 when police issued a warrant for his arrest together with his wife, Komane, 60, who the state accused of swindling investors through the son’s unregistered scheme known as Undercover Millionaires. At some time, police claimed they could not find the trio even when they visited their Kempton Park home.

Kgopotso handed himself over in 2018 and was given R70,000 bail, but according to NPA spokesperson Phindi Mjonondwane, he abandoned his case. A warrant was issued for his arrest but he could not be traced despite posting pictures on his social media globetrotting the world and living a lavish lifestyle.

He [Kgopotso] was the first to be arrested before police showed up at the funeral yesterday to arrest his father, who was one of the speakers.

A company search by Sowetan yesterday showed that Tshakoane runs 14 companies which included Undercover Millionaires, which he co-owns with Kgopotso. The company was deregistered in 2019 for non-compliance with the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission.

Kedibone Somfula, a pensioner from Ormonde, Johannesburg invested R20,000 of her pension funds to the scheme in 2015 after she attended a presentation by Kgopotso in Sandton. Like other attendees, she was told that her investment will mature every three months and could almost double their returns in three months.

“He promised us heaven and earth. He told us that through cryptocurrency we could make millions and he even demonstrated how the money would accumulate interest. “All we had to do was deposit the money into their business bank account. There were many of us [investors] from different provinces. We were so excited.”

It was after trying to lay claim to her dividends that she found out that it was all lies. “He [Kgopotso] just kept telling us to be patient, but we knew something was wrong when people who had invested long before us were not getting their money.”

She wanted to use the money to start a small farm.

“Their arrests mean nothing to me. I am not going to get my money back.”

Paulina Sithole invested R20,000 from the inheritance left by her late policeman husband. She was told that it would be R50,000 in just three months.

“They took our hard-earned money for a lavish life while we still had children to care for,” said Sithole.

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