Title: THE SPECIALISED COMMERCIAL CRIME UNIT
1THE SPECIALISED COMMERCIAL CRIME UNIT
- AN OVERVIEW
- MAY 2008
- ADV CHRIS JORDAAN, SC
2INDEX
- Background
- Who are we?
- Where do we fit into the structures?
- What cases do we do?
3INDEX (CONT)
- How do we do our work?
- Our achievements 2002/3 to date
- Recent achievements
- Trends/ challenges
- Annexures
- A- Monitoring tools
- B- Improvement Plans
4BACKGROUND
- Established on 1 August 1999 as a pilot project
to combat the deteriorating situation pertaining
to commercial crime. - Starting operations in Pretoria, it soon proved
to be so effective that it was decided to roll
the Unit out countrywide.
5BACKGROUND (CONT)
- Some of the objectives of the initiative were
- Specialisation
- Co-location of prosecutors and investigators
- Dedicated courts
- Substantially increase number of cases processed
- Reduce cycle times
6WHO ARE WE?
- Our mandate
- We are specialist prosecutors within the National
Prosecuting Authority - We are dedicated to the prosecution of complex
commercial crime cases
7WHO ARE WE? (CONT)
- Establishment 169 posts 7 contract posts
- Regional Offices at Pretoria, Johannesburg, Cape
Town, Port Elizabeth, Bloemfontein, Durban and
attached office of PE in East London - Pretoria also serves Polokwane and Mpumalanga
- Majority of prosecutors are Senior State
Advocates
8WHO ARE WE? (CONT)
- We also provide services to some regions, either
by a prosecutor on site or prosecutor going on
circuit - Our contract prosecutors deal with RAF matters
and counterfeit matters
9WHO ARE WE? (CONT)
- We mostly prosecute in the Regional Courts
- Prosecutions in the High Court and District Court
not excluded
10Where do we fit into the structures? NPA
Structure
11Where do we fit into the structures? Partners
NDPP
NSSD DEPUTY NDPP
Steering Committee
Regional Court President
Commercial Branch Provincial Head
SPECIAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTION
MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
SCCU
Prosecutors
Courts
Process Scheduling Management, Admin Finance
COMMERCIAL BRANCH
12Where do we fit into the structures? Partners
MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
PROSECUTION
INVESTIGATION
OPERATIONS
OPERATIONS
PROFESSIONAL
PROFESSIONAL
PERSONNEL
PERSONNEL
ADMINISTRATION
ADMINISTRATION
13WHAT CASES DO WE DO?(SAPS MANDATE)
- We prosecute complex commercial crime cases
investigated by the Commercial Branch of the
South African Police Services in dedicated
courts - We obtain our cases thus mostly through SAPS
Commercial Branchs mandate
14WHAT CASES DO WE DO?(SAPS MANDATE)
- However the SCCU will attend to any complex
commercial crime matter brought to its attention
in the area where it is operational - General rule only serious commercial crime
(Regional Court matters) - Directive of DPP as to forum of cases (DC or RC)
serves as a guideline
15The Mandate of SAPS Commercial Branch
- The mandate of SAPS Commercial Branch
- Statutory offences relating to legislation under
diverse areas, from Banking and Currency to
E-Crime - Common-law offences
- All common-law offences pertaining to the
statutes dealt with by the branch , including
fraud and theft -
16The Mandate of SAPS Commercial Branch
- Other fraud-related crimes
- counterfeit banknotes, and the counterfeiting of
legal tender - Theft
- Trust monies
17The Mandate of SAPS Commercial Branch
- Fraud
- Relating to company or close corporation, double
discounting of instalment sale agreements,
factoring, stock exchange, Computer related,
Internet related, stolen cards, State
Institutions, fiduciary capacity
18The Mandate of SAPS Commercial Branch
- White-plastic, clone cheques, counterfeiting and
uttering of credit, debit and petrol cards. - Kite-flying, which is the unlawful generating of
funds in bank accounts by means of depositing
stolen or worthless bills of exchange
19WHAT CASES DO WE DO?OTHER
- In discretion of Head of the Unit/delegates to
accept matters outside of SAPS Commercial Branch
mandate, e.g. upon request of another unit - NDPP exercises discretion and may allocate
certain matters, e.g. prosecution of NPA-members
in other units
20HOW DO WE DO OUR WORK?
- Joint planning problem solving
- Specified focus areas
- Location
- Team work
- Case planning
- Prosecutor guided investigation
- Monitoring evaluation
21HOW DO WE DO THIS?JOINT PLANNING PROBLEM
SOLVING
- We work jointly with the police and other
stakeholders, e. g. Banking Industry, Business
Against Crime, Road Accident Fund, etc - We have procedural guidelines, accepted by all
- We have scheduled strategic operational
meetings, attended by all
22HOW DO WE DO OUR WORK? OUR FOCUS AREAS
SPECIALISATION (Investigation Prosecution of
CC)
COMMITMENT (Dedicated Focus)
FOCUS AREAS
EXPERIENCED PEOPLE (Capacity Building)
EFFECTIVE PROCESSES (Optimal operational
efficiency effectiveness)
23HOW DO WE DO THIS?LOCATION
- We mostly share premises with the SAPS
Commercial Branch - We prosecute our cases in dedicated Regional
Courts, usually located at/near our premises
24HOW DO WE DO THIS?TEAM WORK
- A prosecutor and investigator are allocated right
at beginning of a case - They work together as a team throughout the case
- Co- location contributes to efficacy of
relationship
25HOW DO WE DO THIS?TEAM WORK
- The Prosecutor guides the investigation
- The Prosecutor and Investigator however operate
independently and are functionaries in their own
right - Involvement of prosecutors in the investigation
not allowed - The Prosecutor does not lead the investigation
26HOW DO WE DO OUR WORK?TEAMWORK
- Dr J A van S d Oliveira SC
- A prosecutor must be TASK TEAM ORIENTATED.
There must be a joint prosecutor police
collaboration from the outset. This is the
recipe for success.
27HOW DO WE DO OUR WORK?TEAM WORK
- Case plan
- The prosecutor and investigator jointly draft a
case plan, setting out what needs to be done, by
whom and when - They monitor progress by regular follow up
meetings - The guidelines aligns target dates to tasks
28CASE PLANNING
PLANNING MEETING Plan activity Agree resp.
target dates
TEAM FOCUS
29CASE PLANNINGSCOPE OF THE PROCESS
AFU FORMAL WORKING RELATION- SHIP
EXTERNAL SOURCES Eg. NDPP other Provinces,, etc.
PROSECUTOR
INVESTIGATOR
TEAM Investigates case and Prepares for Trial
THE TRIAL
The Post Trial REVIEW
Unit Commander allocates case to
Investigator INITIAL investigation to enable
Unit Cmdr to assess whether there is a case
SCCU Cases Investigator Prosecutor External
Spec Team Appt. PLAN Investigation Delegate
Tasks
Cases Reviewed by Unit Mgt.
NEW CASES
CASES CLOSED
NON-SCCU CASES
CASES NOLLE PROSECUI
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
30HOW DO WE DO OUR WORK?MONITOR EVALUATE
- The process is monitored by supervisors on an
electronic case register - Regular operational and strategic meetings with
all stakeholders are held
31OUR ACHIEVEMENTS 2002/3 TO 2006/7
- Number of courts increased by 241.7
- Number of convictions increased by 435.3
- Conviction rate averaging 95
32OUR ACHIEVEMENTS 2002/3 TO 2006/7
- Cases enrolled for trial increased by 251.9
- Cases finalised increased by 158, 2
33OUR ACHIEVEMENTS 2002/3 TO 2006/7
- Major cases resulting in convictions and long
prison sentences - E.g. In 2006/7 direct imprisonment in 134 cases
- Good court hours in 2006/7 averaging 4h34
- Model environment for development of similar
prosecutor guided initiatives
34RECENT ACHIEVEMENTS
- The SCCU devised compliance monitoring tools for
13 selected policies and monitored compliance
over a year to obtain baselines - The SCCU selected 7 priority governance areas,
implemented improvement plans and increased the
combined governance index score by 28,75
35RECENT ACHIEVEMENTS
- The SCCU actively managed risk by allocating a
risk manager and implementing risk mitigation
plans - The SCCU concentrated on properly managing the
relationships with stakeholders, employees, other
units - A stakeholder survey was held
- An employee satisfaction survey was held
36RECENT ACHIEVEMENTS
- Baselines were obtained and plans to increase
satisfaction levels drafted - The SCCU made a concerted effort to engage with
the community all offices had several projects - Joint targets were set with the AFU and exceeded
372007/2008 PTA JHB PE DBN BLOEM CAPE T APR 08 06/07 05/06 04/05
COURT HOURS 0404 0417 0442 0440 0352 0354 0414 0434 4.94 4.69
ENROLLED 303 444 256 452 136 260 1851 1184 1431 935
OUTSTANDING 235 312 129 323 107 109 1215 1163 1056 843
CONVICTIONS 329 198 188 310 88 119 1232 1515 857 653
SENTENCES 319 210 174 305 84 119 1211 1485 916 635
ACQUITTALS 18 24 10 2 4 19 77 53 47 36
CONVICTION RATE 94.81 89.19 94.95 99.36 95.65 86.23 94.12 96.62 94.63 94.78
WITHDRAWALS 226 205 15 138 8 63 655 343 268 213
gt 6MONTHS 55 40 65 61 51 52 53.95 55.80 NA NA
105 A 29 31 4 14 8 67 153 537 171 90
CASE LOAD PP 49 61 45.1 80 43 92 74.02 73.22 59.5 63.41
Turnaround court (days) 263 454.31 285 206 222 129 238.39 233.83 302.08 NA
Turnaround all (days) 349 433.73 287 265 233 80 274.62 253.31 244.72 177
Cases received 588 987 480 805 293 1206 4359 3423 2823.00 3077
Cases finalised 747 768 355 631 158 372 3031 3574 2271.00 1772
Nolle prosequi 184 329 156 186 62 171 1088 1693 1035.00
In Custody gt6M 28 12 6 3 5 7 61 92
In Custody gt2Y 4 12 1 0 0 0 17 10
PP for inv 32 19 10 47 5 1 114 0
38TRENDS
- Decrease in Court hours
- Permanent Magistrates not given by DoJ as
promised - Rotating of magistrates, which influences
continuity of cases and requires fragmentation of
staff in different courts - -The type of cases enrolled are more complex
- -A tendency for less pleas and more trials have
developed.
39TRENDS
- Consistently high conviction rate
- High withdrawal rate
- This can be attributed to a clean out session
relating to the RAF project held during the year - Reasons for withdrawals are supplied on an
ongoing basis and monitored
40TRENDS
Decrease in Section 105A pleas - Accused are electing to take their chances in court
Steady increase in Case loads of prosecutors - Continually monitored and addressed
Steady Turnaround times of matters on the role
Turnaround times of all cases (on role and not on role) are slightly higher than before, but not a matter of concern
Increase in number of cases received - Roll out of the Bloemfontein and Cape Town offices - Stakeholder programs which have created trust in the abilities of the Unit
Less cases were finalised in total. There were many vacancies in this period.
Less cases were finalised by way of nolle prosequi, and more enrolled
41CHALLENGES
- To increase access to our services
- To create a pool of prosecutors who are
specialists in the prosecution of commercial
crime - To investigate how we can deliver a service from
district court level up
42THE SPECIALISED COMMERCIAL CRIME UNIT
43ANNEXURE AMONITORING TOOLS
- Asset Management
- Conditions of Service
- Employee Wellness
- Performance Management
- Petty Cash
- Prevention and Combatting of Corrupt Activities
- Sexual Harassment
- Smoking
- Supply Chain Management
- Telephone and Cellular
- Termination of Service
- Theft and Losses
- Vehicle Management
44ANNEXURE BIMPROVEMENT PLANS
- Priority Governance Areas
- Risk Management
- Performance Management
- Stakeholder Management
- Policy Management
- Financial Management
- Strategic Management
- Information Management