- Two of the three police officers accused of killing
Nathaniel Julies were “thirsty for blood”, the Protea Magistrate’s
Court has heard. - Prosecutor Mzwandile Mrwabe said Sergeant Simon
Scorpion Ndyalvane and Constable Caylene Whiteboy went on a “wild, wild
west” shooting spree. - Mrwabe said the pair first opened fire on a crowd
of people who were drinking liquor before using a shotgun to shoot Julies.
Two of the three police officers accused of killing
Nathaniel Julies were “thirsty for blood” when the teenager was shot
dead, the Protea Magistrate’s Court heard during their bail application this
week.
Prosecutor Mzwandile Mrwabe said Sergeant Simon
Scorpion Ndyalvane, 46, and Constable Caylene Whiteboy, 23, went on a
“wild, wild west” shooting spree when Julies was killed.
Mrwabe said Ndyalvane booked out a shotgun from the
Eldorado Park police station without ammunition.
The two officers and three others headed to Freedom
Park near Eldorado Park and found a crowd of people drinking alcohol, Mrwabe
added.
Mrwabe said:
They first opened fire at people who were drinking alcohol in Freedom Park. They then drove away because they had not quenched their thirst for blood. They then shot at this boy. Are these not wild, wild west tendencies? Yes, they are.
Mrwabe added that Julies, who had Down Syndrome,
was outside his home, next to a truck, on 26 August, when a police van driven
by Ndyalvane arrived.
“When seeing a police van approaching him, he
(Julies) greeted the police. Ndyalvane then insulted Julies and chased him
away. The boy left and returned. Ndyalvane then instructed Whiteboy to shoot at
the boy. Their actions showed hunger for blood,” said Mrwabe.
‘They will tamper with our case’
The court heard that Ndyalvane failed to disclose
to his seniors that the shotgun he had booked out was used to kill a person.
Mrwabe pleaded with the court to deny bail to
Ndyalvane, Whiteboy and their co-accused, Detective Sergeant Foster
Netshiongolo, 37.
Mrwabe said:
There is no closure for the community in Eldorado Park because the matter has not gone to trial. Witnesses are known to them. For now, Netshiongolo might know one or two witnesses. If Netshiongolo, who was at the scene, saw witnesses, he might have shared their identities with his co-accused. Inside their police van there were three other officers who might have made statements to the police.
Outside the court, Julies’ mother Bridget Harris
said she was confident that the wheels of justice were grinding in the right
direction.
“I am more confident than before because
justice is now taking its course. I have the feeling that the case is going
somewhere, and I say we are in [a more] proper situation [than] we were in
before,” said Harris.
Regional National Prosecuting Authority (NPA)
spokesperson Phindi Mjonondwane said they were opposing bail because some of
the witnesses work with the accused.
“There is [a] likelihood that they will tamper
with our case. Their release will undermine public peace. There is a public
outcry about their release on bail. The mother has given supportive documents
to the State, opposing their release,” said Mjonondwane.
Judgment in the bail application has been reserved
until Monday.
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