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Makhele
Lehlohonolo Joseph SCOTT
July 12, 2012 / April 7, 2014
Media Statement from the Office of the National
Commissioner
South African Police Service
25 April 2014
PRETORIA - After months of investigations and
surveillance, a crack SAPS tracking team managed to arrest a
fugitive from justice from Lesotho who escaped from prison while
awaiting trial on two counts of murder.
During January 2012, a 13 year old youth
disappeared in the district of Berea in Lesotho. The villagers
found limbs, a torso and a head which were positively identified
as that of the missing lad. No arrests were made.
In July 2012 another person went missing from
the same village.
On 12 July 2012, police responded to a tip-off
and at the house discovered a Corsa bakkie in which two human
arms, a leg, penis and testicles were found. These belonged to the
second missing person, Kamohelo Mohata, 22 years of age.
The suspect, 27 year old Makhele Lehlohonolo
Joseph Scott, voluntarily pointed out a hacksaw and a box inside
the house, placed over a huge bloodstain on the floor, and
confessed to the murders. He also confessed to having cooked and
eaten some of the body parts. He further pointed out a shallow
grave where a torso and thigh were found. On 13 July 2012, Scott
took the police to a primary school where he pointed out a human
head, two feet, lungs, heart and intestines in one of the toilet
pits.
Scott was arrested and charged and the matter
was set before the High Court but he managed to escape from Maseru
Central Prison on 13 October 2012.
A warrant of arrest was issued and an
application was made to Interpol in Pretoria for assistance in the
suspect’s apprehension as there was a strong possibility that he
had fled to South Africa. The relevant documentation was forwarded
to the KwaZulu-Natal head of Detective Services who, on 16 July
2013, tasked the KZN SAPS Provincial Tracking Team to locate and
arrest the suspect.
After months of liaison between Lesotho and
South African Police, with the assistance of Interpol South Africa
and the use of various innovative techniques, the Tracking Team
arrested their man on 7 April 2014 at a church in Amaoti, Inanda,
KwaZulu-Natal. Scott was living on the church premises and playing
in the church band. He was very surprised when approached by SAPS
members and arrested.
Scott made a court appearance yesterday,
Thursday 24 April 2014 to make a bail application, which was
denied. The case was remanded to 15 May 2014.
The National Commissioner of the South African
Police Service, General Riah Phiyega, praised all SAPS members
involved in tracing and apprehending this suspected murderer and
apparently self-confessed cannibal. “The tenacity of the SAPS
Tracking Team in exploring all avenues in order to trace their
suspect is to be lauded. It is important for us to work closely
with our neighbours in order to ensure that justice is served and
that criminals are not given safe refuge in our country,” said
General Phiyega.
By Nokuthula Manyathi - CityPress.co.za
25 April 2014
A man accused of hacking and eating two people
in Lesotho has been captured by the South African Police Services
(SAPS) after 18 months of pursuit.
“After months
of liaison between Lesotho and South African police, with the
assistance of Interpol South Africa and the use of various
innovative techniques, the tracking team arrested their man on 7
April 2014 at a church in Amaoti, Inanda, KwaZulu-Natal,” the SAPS
said today.
Makhele Lehlohonolo Joseph Scott
(27) was arrested in July 2012 after police received a tip-off
connecting him to the disappearance a 13-year-old boy in Berea,
Lesotho.
The boy disappeared in January 2012 but
his limbs, torso and head were later found by villagers. When
police searched Scott’s home, they found a bakkie containing two
human arms, a leg, a penis and testicles.
Some
of these body parts were later identified as belonging to Kamohelo
Mohata (22), who had also disappeared.
Following
his arrest, Scott confessed to the murders – also adding that he
had cooked and eaten parts of his victims.
He
then took the police to a shallow grave where they found a torso
and a thigh. Later, Scott led police to a local primary school
where a human head, two feet, lungs, a heart and intestines were
found in one of the pit latrines.
Scott was
subsequently charged on two counts of murder. The matter was set
to appear in the high court but he escaped from Maseru Central
Prison in October 2012 before his court appearance.
“A warrant of arrest was issued and an application was made to
Interpol in Pretoria for assistance to apprehend the suspect as
there was a strong possibility that he had fled to South Africa,”
said the SAPS.
Thanks to collaborative work
between the KZN SAPS provincial tracking team and Interpol South
Africa, Scott was captured while singing and playing music in a
church band.
“He was very surprised when he was
approached by SAPS members and arrested,” said the police. Scott
had been living on the church premises.
“The
tenacity of the SAPS tracking team in exploring all avenues to
trace their suspect is to be lauded. It is important for us to
work closely with our neighbours to ensure that justice is served
and that criminals are not given safe refuge in our country,” said
National Police Commissioner Riah Phiyega.
Scott
is set to appear in court on May 15 and will remain in police
custody until his court date.