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Pinnacle exec's case postponed

Nicola Mawson
By Nicola Mawson, Contributor.
Johannesburg, 25 Apr 2014
Takalani Tshivhase's bribery case was postponed yesterday after he changed defence teams.
Takalani Tshivhase's bribery case was postponed yesterday after he changed defence teams.

Pinnacle executive Takalani Tshivhase, who was charged on 24 March with attempting to bribe a senior South African Police Service (SAPS) official, will appear in court for the start of his bribery trial on 2 June.

The matter was postponed yesterday so Tshivhase's recently-appointed new defence could peruse the docket, explains Hawks spokesman captain Paul Ramaloko. He notes the court indicated yesterday's postponement would be the final one.

Tshivhase allegedly attempted to bribe the police official with R5 million so the company could win a R182 million contract to supply about 3 000 handheld MaxID devices to the SAPS. He was arrested earlier in March.

He has since asked to take an immediate "leave of absence" until criminal proceedings have been wrapped up. Pinnacle says once the matter has been resolved, "Tshivhase's association with the company can be reviewed".

News of the charge, released in a short statement the following day, sent Pinnacle's shares into free fall, losing 25% on the day from its opening price of R20. On 26 March, its stock continued to slide, losing another 23.67%, to close at R11.45, dropping its market capitalisation to under R2 billion.

On 27 March, executives started buying up stock in the company. In several separate disclosures to the bourse - the last made on 3 April - directors and associated trusts snapped up more than R20 million-worth of stock.

Among the purchases was one for R13.2 million by CEO Arnold Fourie, through the Arnold Fourie Family Trust. However, these purchases failed to reassure the market, as the stock - after a brief recovery - started losing ground again from 2 April, when it closed at R15, and it last traded at R14.03.

The MaxID handheld hardware is used by the police for investigation purposes and to store information related to crimes, and is distributed locally by Pinnacle.

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