×

We've got news for you.

Register on SowetanLIVE at no cost to receive newsletters, read exclusive articles & more.
Register now

Probe into Mandela cop an apartheid era conspiracy‚ court hears

The investigation into Major General Andre Lincoln was a conspiracy by apartheid era police to keep him out of the Western Cape‚ the Cape Town High Court heard on Monday.

Lincoln also said that winesses were “pressurised into giving false statements and forced to lie under oath” by police with “hidden agendas” and who knew how to “set you up“‚ as his cross exmamination continued.

In 1996 Lincoln was personally picked by former president Nelson Mandela to investigate organised crime headed by then Italian mafia boss Vito Palazzola.

Lincoln also uncovered a plot to kill the former head of state.

The top cop is now suing the former head of state security for R15 million for what he described as “malicious prosecution“. He told the court last week that senior police officials had gone to extreme lengths to blow his cover after telling Palazzolo that he was being investigated.

Lincoln faced criminal charges‚ most of which he was acquitted of before having 17 convictions set aside on appeal.

“I had nothing to hide‚ so if there were allegations by all means investigate me. [But] the investigating officer appointed to my case could not be trusted‚” he said.

Lincoln testified that he had told then deputy president Thabo Mbeki about pressure put on witnesses to testify against him‚ and that Mbeki’s response was for the case against him to “run its course“.

“I told him that witnesses were being made to lie under oath‚” he said.

He said “a senior policeman had told Palazzolo that I was not his friend and I was investigating him‚ which led him to change his statement against me“.

“That is where the malice comes in.”

Lincoln also said that affidavits used in his prosecution were “helped and coxed“‚ and that the decision to prosecute him did not come from the department of public prosecution‚ but that police investigators played a “serious role in the decision“.

In earlier testimony Lincoln said one of the officers‚ Leonard Knipe‚ told Mbeki that he would drop charges against Lincoln if he resigned from the SAPS.

 

 

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.