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SA court rejects plea deal for alleged crime boss linked to Eswatini ID

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Alleged underworld kingpin Vusimuzi ‘Cat’ Matlala at the Pretoria Specialised Commercial Crimes Court on 1 July 2026.( Picture: Dimakatso Leshoro/EWN)
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MBABANE – Alleged crime kingpin Vusimuzi ‘Cat’ Matlala, who reportedly holds an Eswatini national identity document, faces a longer prison term after a South African court rejected his plea deal.

A Pretoria magistrate on Wednesday rejected an agreement that would have seen Matlala serve an effective eight-year prison sentence, saying the punishment was too lenient for the offences committed.

According to South African news platform Independent Online (IOL), Magistrate Ignatius du Preez told the Pretoria Specialised Commercial Crimes Court that an effective 12-year sentence would better reflect the seriousness of Matlala’s crimes.

The magistrate then adjourned proceedings for 30 minutes to allow the prosecution and defence to consider whether to accept the proposed sentence or abandon the plea agreement. However, after further discussions, the matter was postponed to July 13.

IOL reported that Matlala stood alone in the dock as the magistrate criticised the proposed sentence and condemned the impact of corruption on South African society.

“Corruption has robbed South Africans of economic growth, jobs, functioning public services and public trust. It has contributed directly to failing infrastructure, collapsing institutions and widespread poverty. These offences were committed out of greed and for no other reason,” Du Preez said, according to IOL.

Matlala pleaded guilty last week under an agreement that would have seen him testify against senior police officers in exchange for a reduced sentence. However, the magistrate rejected the argument that his cooperation demonstrated genuine remorse.

According to IOL, Du Preez ruled that Matlala’s willingness to assist investigators amounted to little more than an attempt to secure a lighter sentence.

The magistrate said Matlala only offered to cooperate after his arrest and once he realised investigators had built a strong case against him.

“The duty to investigate and prosecute those who corrupt the institution of state rests upon the SA Police Service and the National Prosecuting Authority, and not upon the accused,” Du Preez said, as quoted by IOL.

He further ruled that Matlala’s evidence against senior officials could not justify a sentence that failed to reflect his own criminal conduct.

Du Preez also questioned whether plea and sentence agreements were achieving justice in high-profile corruption cases, saying public confidence in the process could be undermined.

The magistrate found that Matlala had masterminded the fraudulent scheme, describing him as its principal instigator.

Under the sentence proposed by the court, Matlala would receive 15 years’ imprisonment for fraud, with seven years suspended, while corruption and money-laundering sentences would run partly concurrently, resulting in an effective 12-year prison term. He would also remain unfit to possess a firearm.

Du Preez stressed that the sentence had not yet been imposed and that both the State and the accused remained free to accept or reject the revised agreement. Should either party refuse, Matlala would be entitled to withdraw his guilty plea.

The proceedings began dramatically after Matlala dismissed his lawyer, Advocate Hlawu Maluleke. Advocate Anneline van den Heever subsequently took over his defence and was granted time to consult with her client.

According to IOL, Matlala pleaded guilty last week to seven counts of fraud, corruption and money laundering linked to a South African Police Service health services tender awarded to his company, Medicare24 Tshwane District.

He admitted paying more than R300 000 in bribes to Brigadier Rachel Matjeng, a police forensic services official who allegedly referred SAPS members to his company for medical screening.

The tender, initially advertised at about R360 million, was ultimately awarded for approximately R228 million before being cancelled in May 2025 after an internal audit uncovered irregularities. By then, the company had reportedly received about R50 million.

Matlala is one of 17 accused in the case. His co-accused include senior police officers, Medicare24 managing director James Murray and suspended National Police Commissioner General Fannie Masemola, whose case has been postponed to August 28.

IOL further reported that Matlala, a security company owner from Mamelodi, has become a central figure in allegations of organised criminal infiltration of the South African Police Service and is currently being held in the high-security C-Max section of Kgosi Mampuru II Correctional Centre. He also faces

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