Dated: February 28 2013
By DAILY NEWS REPORTER
The State has conceded that school stationery fraud accused Jabulani Mabaso was entitled to a mark-up on the goods he supplied to the Department of Education and that he should be discharged on 12 of the counts he is facing.
Mabaso now faces a remaining 10 charges, which include fraud, forgery and uttering at his trial at the Pietermaritzburg High Court.
The charges against Mabaso relate to a tender awarded to his company, Indiza Infrastructure Solutions, by the KZN Department of Education for the supply of stationery to schools in 2005.
Indiza acted as the procurement agent on behalf of the department, procuring stationery from suppliers and then facilitating the supply and distribution of it to schools.
The department entered into a agreement with Indiza for a period of three months between June and September 2005 to continue the procurement and distribution of stationery to schools.
A second agreement was entered into in November 2005 for a period of two years.
Mabaso continued supplying stationery to the department and invoices were issued for this.
The State alleges that African Spirit Trading was a company created by Mabaso, which served as a supplier of stationery to Indiza at inflated prices, which in turn supplied the department.
During the period July 2005 to January 2007, Indiza invoiced the department an amount of R479 290 587. He is alleged to have defrauded the department of R197 466 837 by fabricating and inflating invoices.
In his plea, Mabaso said that his understanding of the agreement between him and the department was that Indiza was entitled to profit from the provision of stationery to schools.
Disclose
The department did not require Indiza to disclose the prices at which it purchased the stationery when it submitted its own invoices for payment. Mabaso said he bore no knowledge of incorrect invoices being submitted and that as far as he was concerned, all invoices were correct and calculated in accordance with his understanding of the service-evel agreement.
Following the closure of the State’s case, Mabaso’s legal team made an application for a discharge, claiming that the State had not disproved that he could profit from his agreement with the department.
The State conceded yesterday this was in fact the case, and that Mabaso was entitled to make a mark-up on goods, and so State advocate Wendy Greef conceded that Mabaso was hence entitled to a discharge on those counts.
However, in terms of the fraud charges against Mabaso, Greef said that these counts were widely framed and alleged prejudice or potential prejudice to the department and stationery suppliers Indiza used. These charges relate to an invoice that was allegedly “created” on the instructions of Mabaso and submitted to the department.
State witnesses and former Indiza employees Jillian Broughton and Paul de Villiers both fingered Mabaso as the “instigator” behind the fictitious invoice created in Palm Stationers’ name.
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The evidence in this matter has been clear that Mabaso was in charge of operations at Indiza and made all business decisions. Nothing left Indiza without his knowledge and signature, therefore he is too closely intertwined in the activities which gave rise to the charges. It is therefore submitted that discharging Mabaso… is not in the interests of justice,” Greef said.
Argument continues on Thursday.
Original article here