Suspended sergeant Nkosi's bail ruling due Wednesday after heated arguments

In the latest update on suspended police sergeant Fannie Nkosi's case, the Pretoria North Magistrate’s Court will deliver its bail ruling on Wednesday, following his third appearance. Nkosi, facing charges of theft, defeating the ends of justice, and unlawful possession of ammunition and explosives, had his home raided earlier this month, leading to his arrest. This follows previous court postponements in the ongoing investigation.

The bail application of suspended Sergeant Fannie Nkosi, from Gauteng’s Organised Crime Unit, marks the third court appearance in his case, stemming from a police raid on his Pretoria North home earlier this month. The raid, part of the broader Sergeant Fannie Nkosi investigation (previously covered in articles on the initial search and first court hearing), uncovered dockets, explosives, and ammunition.

Nkosi's lawyer, Advocate Sizo Dlali, argued there is no evidence the dockets were stolen, claiming they were centralised under a directive from National Police Commissioner Fannie Masemola for cases including cash-in-transit heists. "How do you now come to the conclusion that those dockets were stolen but at the same time you’re saying that Mr Nkosi was directed to the police station and demanded those dockets to be given to him," Dlali told the court. He emphasised the charges relate to possession, not drug trafficking tied to the Madlanga Commission.

The state, led by Advocate Tholoana Sekhonyana, opposes bail, arguing Nkosi was protecting serious criminals with overwhelming evidence against him. "The offences the applicant is facing cannot be said to be trivial. They are so grievous... the applicant may skip bail and evade trial," the prosecutor stated.

Nkosi had indicated he could afford R10,000 bail. The ruling is set for Wednesday at Pretoria North Magistrate’s Court. For prior coverage, see the Sergeant Fannie Nkosi investigation series.

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Suspended Sgt. Fannie Nkosi in Pretoria court facing charges; evidence includes firearms, cash, and robbery dockets from home raid.
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Suspended sergeant Fannie Nkosi faces charges after home raid

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Suspended Sergeant Fannie Nkosi of Gauteng’s Organised Crime Unit appeared in Pretoria North Magistrates’ Court on 7 April 2026, facing charges including possession of unlicensed ammunition and defeating the ends of justice. Police raided his home last week, finding firearms, cash and six undetected case dockets related to cash-in-transit robberies. His bail application was postponed to 13 April 2026.

Police have added fresh charges against Sergeant Fannie Nkosi for defeating and obstructing the course of justice. He appeared before the Thohoyandou Magistrates’ Court on Friday amid ongoing scrutiny over his links to a Tshwane security contract held by his brother.

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Police have conducted a search and seizure operation at the Pretoria North home of Sergeant Fannie Nkosi, an organised crime officer who recently testified before the Madlanga Commission. Security strategist Andy Mashaila described the J51 operation as signalling an escalating investigation. Authorities confirmed the raid but provided no further details.

Colonel Silas Thoka told the Pretoria High Court he had no knowledge of any official complaint about a cellphone allegedly found with accused Bongani Ntanzi. Thoka, who commands Villieria Police Station, was giving evidence in the trial of Ntanzi and four others charged with the 2014 murder of former Bafana Bafana captain Senzo Meyiwa.

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National Coloured Congress leader and MP Fadiel Adams was granted bail of R10,000 with strict conditions by the Pinetown Magistrate’s Court on 15 May 2026. Magistrate Wendalyn Robinson ruled after considering arguments from both sides in the fraud and justice obstruction case linked to the 2017 murder of Sindiso Magaqa. Adams had been arrested on 5 May at the Parliamentary Village.

Captain Laurence Makgotloe appeared in the Pretoria Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday facing expanded charges including a second count of accessory after the fact to murder linked to a 2018 incident.

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The fraud case against South African Football Association president Danny Jordaan and co-accused Gronie Hluyo has been postponed to 25 May after they sought another Section 342A application on trial delays. Co-accused Trevor Neethling and Russell Paul will decide later whether to join. The case remains in pre-trial at Palm Ridge Magistrate’s Court.

 

 

 

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