14.1 C
Cape Town
Sunday, April 19, 2026

Court orders forfeiture of ransom money after two men charged with kidnapping Stellenbosch student

Published on

 

The Western Cape High Court has ordered the forfeiture of R89 000 in cash linked to a violent kidnapping and extortion case involving a Stellenbosch University student, in what prosecutors say is part of ongoing efforts to ensure crime does not pay.

 

The order was granted following an application by the Asset Forfeiture Unit (AFU) of the National Prosecuting Authority after the arrest of two Zimbabwean nationals, Truth Mambemba and Takudzwa Chauruka.

 

The pair face multiple charges, including kidnapping, robbery with aggravating circumstances, extortion, illegal possession of a firearm and contravening immigration laws.

 

Night out turns into a nightmare ordeal

 

According to court papers, the incident began late on the night of 2 October 2024 when a 20-year-old student went out with friends to a nightclub near Stellenbosch.

 

After the club closed in the early hours of the morning, she began walking back to her university residence. She later recalled finding herself inside a vehicle with two unknown men, one driving and another seated in the back.

 

The men allegedly drove her onto a highway, where she was threatened with a firearm and attacked. They then forced her to unlock her cellphone and record a video message to her parents claiming she had been kidnapped and urgently needed money.

 

When her parents did not immediately respond, the suspects allegedly phoned them directly using her phone and demanded payment. After rejecting an initial offer, the parents transferred R200 000 into their daughter’s bank account, which was subsequently withdrawn at various ATMs.

 

The suspects later ordered an e-hailing taxi for the student and gave her money for the fare.

 

Police track suspects

 

Later that morning, police received information about the kidnapping and began tracing cellphone activity and bank withdrawals. Investigators linked transactions to an ATM in Stanford and reviewed CCTV footage from a filling station in Kuils River, where a man was seen withdrawing cash from two ATMs using the victim’s card.

 

Police circulated the registration details of a German sedan captured on camera through a licence plate recognition system.

 

That afternoon, officers spotted the vehicle travelling along the N2 near Groot Brakrivier towards George and pulled it over. Inside, they found the two suspects, along with R89 000 in cash, the student’s cellphone and her bank card.

 

The men claimed the money came from an e-hailing taxi business, but police later established they were not registered operators.

 

Arrests and asset seizure

 

The suspects were arrested and remain in custody at Pollsmoor Prison after their bail application was denied in the Stellenbosch Magistrate’s Court. The criminal case is scheduled to return to court on 3 March 2026.

 

Prosecutors had already secured a preservation order for the seized cash in September 2025. On 12 February 2026, the High Court granted a final forfeiture order, allowing the state to confiscate the funds permanently.

 

Western Cape Director of Public Prosecutions Advocate Nicolette Bell welcomed the ruling, saying asset forfeiture is a key strategy used by the National Prosecuting Authority to strip criminals of the proceeds of crime and reinforce accountability beyond criminal prosecution.

Latest articles

WATCH: South Africa now makes critical molecule for lab-grown meat

 A South African biotechnology breakthrough could help make lab-grown meat more affordable and accessible. Lab-grown meat is considered the future of food because it offers...

Tributes pour in after sudden passing of Johnny Davids

  The Afrikaans lifestyle channel VIA (DStv channel 147) has paid tribute to television personality Johnny Davids, who passed away suddenly on Thursday morning at...

SASSA Moves to End ‘Unlawful’ Queue Selling Practice

 The South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) has intensified its warning against the illegal sale of queue positions at its offices, vowing a crackdown...
error: Content is protected !!