Home › Forums › ⚖️ CRIME INVESTIGATION LIST ⚖️ › The true story behind the murder of Lt-Col Charl Kinnear. IPID and Cele classified the report to protect the police officers who are implicated in the murder and the wrong suspect was arrested,as usual,to cover their own crimes. The blood of Lt-Col Charl Kinnear is calling for justice and those who killed him will feel the wrath of his innocent soul. He will hunt them until they arrest themselves. There are no rest for the wicked-PATRICIA MASHALE
- This topic is empty.
Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
-
AuthorPosts
-
2023-04-20 at 22:39 #400929Nat QuinnKeymaster
ASSASSINATION OF POLICE OFFICER CHARL KINNEAR & SCAPEGOAT COVER-UP BY THE NPA ADV BILLY DOWNER, POLICE MINISTER BHEKI CELE & FORMER WESTERN CAPE DEPUTY PROVINCIAL COMMISSIONER;
“There are three sides to every story, your side, my side, and the truth” Rob Evans.
Remember the murder of police officer Charl Kinnear that sent shockwaves throughout the country, well a one Frederick Henriek Killian, I D. Number 5112165123082, residing at 34 Van Graan Road, Casseldale in Springs- Johannesburg since 1979 to date, penned a detailed handwritten & signed statement, that’s in my possession. Frederick is former Commander of the SAPS East Rand Riot Unit. In this statement, Frederick states that his wife was murdered on the 16 of April 2018, in Stillbay, Capetown. Frederick is also father to Zane Killian. Zane’s home is 30 Van Graan Road, one house away from Frederick’s. Zane is a former professional rugby player, who had to retire due to injury, then went into teaching, prior to becoming a private investigator- tracing instalment lapsed vehicles in the car dealership industry.
On 20 September, a late Sunday afternoon- police vehicles stopped outside the home of Frederick. There were approximately 15 heavily armed police officers. They produced two search warrants, one for Zane’s home and the other for Frederick’s. A warrant officer Oliver informed Frederick they had pinged Zane, and found he was in a suburb nearby but couldn’t track his exact location, so asked Frederick to call Zane. Whilst waiting for Zane, Frederick’s home was briefly searched and his safe checked, which Frederick states it became clear to him that the police were looking for specific equipment, but found none.
Frederick informed the police that he had both the remote for the gate of Zane’s home and keys to enter the house. Zane then arrived a short while later, and when they proceeded to Zane’s home- they found the gate had been broken open along with the back door, and police were already inside the house. Warrant Officer Oliver took charge of the situation, and Zane’s home was searched from top to bottom, and when the police couldn’t find anything incriminating, they asked Zane if he had any equipment, but all Zane had was a broken cellphone and another in use. The police officers were very disappointed, and took both Zane’s cellphones along with Frederick’s cellphone, with the promise it shall be returned the following day, of which never occurred.
Tuesday night at 22:00, Warrant Officer Oliver along with another policeman- arrested Zane for the murder of SAPS Mitchell’s Plane Anti-Gang Unit detective Charl Kinnear, and held Zane in police custody at the Midrand Police Station. The next day Zane was transferred to Cape Town, driven by police escourt, travelling during the night. Along the way, many stops were made, with the police often inquiring of Zane if he wanted to relieve himself in remote areas at the dead of night, and Zane would consitently respond that he did not need to.
As the son of a former policeman, Zane was aware of dirty tactics used by police to frame an individual in thier custody- that the individual was attempting to escape and therefore are granted by law to shoot the individual, and Zane was avoiding this scenario by not accepting the offers to releave himself. Zane was detained and held for 35 days at the Bellville Police Station, and was denied any form of contact with family or the outside world, and further denied any form of legal representation. Upon his detention, Die Son newspaper headlined a front page article with Zane’s picture stating “Here’s The Shooter & Monster”.
Frederick recalls that applying for bail was a nightmare. There was suddenly a “COVID-19” outbreak, starting with the judge, then the prosecutor, then the investigating officer, and on the Sunday prior to Zane finally being granted a bail hearing, a visibly sick inmate was made to share a cell with Zane. Tests were conducted and the hearing had to be postponed as the results were to be available on the Thursday that week. During this time, Zane was twice interrogated without legal representation, and when Zane refused to sign the statement that was prepared and presented to him, Zane was added to two other cases, namely the attempted murder of Cape Town based criminal defence lawyer William Booth and of crime underworld figure Andre Naude.
Jeremy Alan Vearey was in charge of the Mitchell’s Plane Anti-Gang Unit (AGU) since 2007. Kinnear was in charge of an AGU task team, & one the team’s assignments was “Enquiry 08/6/2007”- targeting narcotics dealer Fazel Dominic. This task team went to the shop owned by the mother of drug dealer Fazel Domingo. Fazel was outside the store with his sister Schemiema. The task team searched Fazel’s car and found no drugs, but rather R60 000 in cash. Kinnear seals the money and sends it to the Forensic Laboratory Chemistry Unit at Kuils River- Cape Town, for drug residue analysis.
For three years the R60 000 is not returned, although Fazel had found out through his own sources that the lab tests found no residue. 31 May 2010, Vearey wrote a letter (pic) to the head of the lab, using official SAPS letterhead and his own e-mail address to send the letter- requesting the R60 000 be returned by the lab to Mitchell’s Plane , stating that the lawful owner of the money had been deceased, therefore the money shall be forfeited to the state.
Vearey specifically states in the letter that the money must be handed over to Sargent A.K. Lewis (Service number 0544408- 0) who would collect it. The Waarheid is in possession of the letter. No death certificate of Fazel is submitted to the lab, as standard procedure, & the most onerous aspect is the money could not be forfeited to the state because Fazel had next of kin. Now the big twist- 17 June 2010, Fazel is shot and killed- just seventeen days after the letter to the lab was emailed, and the SAPS Mitchell’s Plane register of the money goes missing.
2016, Fazel’s sister Schemiema comes across one of the police officers who was there on the night that Fazel’s car was searched, and the R60 000 confiscated by the team lead by Kinnear. Schemiema asks the officer- what happened to the R60 000 that was supposed to be returned to Fazel, of which the officer advises Schemiema to find out from Kinnear, what had happened to the money. Failing to get hold of Kinnear, Schemiema lays a charge of theft first at Mitchell’s Plane police station, however the case is opened and closed shortly after. Schemiema then lays a charge at Lentegeur Police Station (Case number 477/6/2016). The case is handled by Adv Billy Downer of the NPA. The case is investigated by SAPS at national level.
On the 4th of August 2020, Vearey makes a sworn and signed statement (pic) to SAPS National. Vearey was now promoted to Western Cape Deputy Provincial Commissioner (Service number 0527129-1). Vearey states that he was both aware and issued instructions for the operation that lead to the initial seizure of the R60 000 from Fazel, but it was in fact Kinnear who had approached Vearey on the 31st May 2007, for Vearey to sign the letter to lab authorising Sgt Lewis to collect the R60 000 in question, and that Kinnear had informed Vearey that Fazel was deceased. Therefore it was Kinnear and Lewis who were the prime suspect in the disappearance of the R60 000.
The statement by Vearey lands on the desk of an NPA official(preferred to remain anonymous) well acquainted with Kinnear, she then made copies and sent them to Kinnear. Upon knowledge of the statement by Vearey, a visibly furious Charl Kinnear directly contacted Deputy National Police Commissioner of Crime Detection- Lieutenant General Sindile Mfazi. No one knows what was said in the conversation, but it was clear that Kinnear wanted to blow the whistle. It must be mentioned Advocate Downer decided to not prosecute (“Nolle Prosequi”) on the case number 477/6/2016. According to Frederick Killian, Adv Downer has a history of Nolle Prosequi on any matter implicating Vearey. 18 September 2020 at 15:20, Kinner is murdered in front of his home at Bishop’s Lavey in Cape Town, after returning from a monthly standard SAPS meeting in Kayelitsha. When General Vearey arrives on the scene of Charl Kinnear’s murder, the Kinnear family chases Vearey away.
July 2021 General Mfazi travels to Cape Town for a brief stay, and shortly upon return to Johannesburg- 08 July 2021, Mfazi suddenly died from illness. The next day SAPS National Commissioner General Kehla Sithole released a statement that Mfazi had died from “COVID-19 complications, however Mfazi’s family disputed the statement by the SAPS. Mfazi’s corpse is exhumed as a result, and the autopsy reveals Mfazi actually died from casting resin poisoning.
The only two people who could expose Vearey have now both been eliminated. 13 July 2021, the NPA withdraws the attempted murder charge of William Booth, against Zane Killian. Nafiz Modack and Jacques Cronje had made guilty plea bargains and at a later stage, gang leader Moegamat Toufeeq Brown was also arrested for the same charge. It’s clear the NPA had wrongly charged Zane Kilian for attempted murder. Could the NPA have also wrongly charged Zane for the murder of Charl Kinnear?
The prosecution claims that Zane used “Location Based Services” technology, whereby a cellphone number can be used to track the location of the phone by sending a signal to the new number- the signal then beams off the nearest network tower back to the sender and providing the location of the targeted number. The prosecution claims that Zane Kilian first tracked Kinnear with a ping at 02:32 pm on the day of his murder, then made 38 more various pings, until Zane sent the last signal at 15:25 and then stopped using the technology, five minutes after Kinnear was murdered. Prosecution further states “the signals are believed to be from Zane”, but with no proof to this effect. A “grabber” is needed to ping but remember, the raid on both Zane and Frederick’s homes also found no equipment of the sort.
Hawks Detective Captain Edward du Plessis, filed an affidavit to the Blue Downs Regional Court detailing thirty-nine payments of a total of R1,237,500 from 28 August 2018 to 1 October 2020, made from the Empire Investment Cars FNB Gold Business Account number 62773345733, to four different accounts. Du Plessis states Nafiz Modak had access to the Gold Business Account, and the director of Empire Investment Cars was Yaseen Modack. Du Plessis further established these accounts belonged to Advocate Caitlin Bowen.
According to Du Plessis, Bowen provided a statement in which she confirms that these payments were made by Modack, allegedly for legal services rendered to him by Bowen. Hanware also made a statement, stating that R450 000 of these payments were for him, but both Hanware and Adv Bowen denied making any payments to General Vearey. Bowen is the life partner of Mohammed Hanware.
A transcript of a voice recording of a conversation between Mohammed Hanware and Nazif Modak (pic), prior to Kinnear’s death- shows that Mohammed notified Modak that he knew that both Modak and Kinnear were in Johannesburg, without Modak having informed Mohammed of thier whereabouts. Mohammed confirms he was told by Kinnear of Modak’s whereabouts. Modak refers to Mohammed as “my brother” and further states that Kinnear is friends with Mohammed. Hanware was friends with both Kinnear and Nazif Modak. The presiding judge in the murder charge against Zane however- dismissed the “Mohammed character” as “thumbsucked & laughable”, meaning he was fictional and nonexistent.
There’s a certain payment (pic) of R40 000 from the FNB Gold Business Account number 62773345733, made to FNB Current (bond/cheque) Account number 62749973290 belonging to General Vearey, the payment dated 30 May 2010- with the payment referenced “Vearey”. This payment was made just one day before Vearey had submitted the letter to the Forensic Laboratory Chemistry Unit on 31 May 2007.
In essence, an SAPS General Vearey recieved a R40 000 payment into his personal account, from an underworld figure Nazif Modak, who stands as a co-accussed for the murder of Charl Kinnear. This payment, including it’s timing shows both a long history between Modak and Vearey, and that Modak was aware of the R60 000 owned by Fazel Domingo, the payment being made a day before Vearey’s letter to the forensic lab, and sixteen days before Domingo was murdered.
The most important aspect of the state’s case against Zane, is that the state accuses Zane of not only tracking Kinnear, but also being the one who shot Kinnear dead. By pure coincidence, as Zane’s father Frederick Killian is routinely buying his grandson his medication at the local pharmacy, he runs into a friend of Zane (who chooses to be anonymous), & this friend asks Frederick; “What’s this nonsense that Zane is being accused of murdering Charl Kinnear, because I met Zane here in the pharmacy at the time of Kinnear’s murder”. Frederick- as a former policeman, immediately checks and finds the pharmacy has CCTV footage, then approaches the staff, to assist him in getting footage of Zane being at the pharmacy on the 18th of September 2020, at 15:50- of which the staff successfully found, and handed over to Frederick.
The CCTV footage (pic) validates that Zane Killian was in Springs, Gauteng- purchasing medication for his special needs son who suffers from Cerebral Palsy, 30 minutes after the time Charl Kinnear was murdered in Cape Town, therefore Zane could not have been at the scene of the crime and then made it back to Gauteng 30 minutes later. Zane’s son must take his treatment every morning and every night. This alibi was sought by his father Frederick Killian while Zane was in police custody, and Frederick handed the CCTV footage to the police. The state prosecutor Blaine Lazarus never took all this information into consideration and just dismissed it, also claiming Zane’s special needs son was “just naughty”.
The Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) conducted an investigation into the murder of Kinnear, however the Kinnear Report was classified by Bheki Cele. This begs the critical question as to what is the purposes of IPID being empowered by law to investigate criminality within SAPS, however the Minister of Police is also empowered to just rubber stamp classifying of IPID reports. This prerogative granted to the Police Ministry totally defeats the fundamental purpose of IPID.
Bheki Cele’s actions further clearly demonstrate complicity in the cover up of both the true events leading up to Kinnear’s murder, and that Vearey had the motive for murdering Charl Kinnear, and Vearey’s criminal associates carried out the assassination of Kinnear. 04 October 2022, IPID Executive Director Jennifer Ntlatseng briefed Members of Parliament Portfolio Committee on Police. Ntlatseng stated that the Kinnear Report was classified because it implicated senior police officials. MPs called for declassification of the report, but committee Chairperson Tina Joemat-Pettersson blocked the motion.
“There’s three sides to every story, your side, my side and the truth” Rob Evans. I have factually articulated the entire travesty & provided supporting proof, so it’s up to the reader to draw thier own conclusions as to which is the truth….
End
-
AuthorPosts
Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.