23 arrested for Cash-In-Transit robberies

The provinces that are most affected by the cash in transit heists are Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Eastern Cape, Limpopo, North West and the Free State, respectively.

The SAPS high-density multidisciplinary stabilisation team on Cash-In-Transit (CIT) heists has nabbed 23 suspects this past week, the police said on Monday.

According to a statement the team, which consists of members from crime intelligence, seasoned investigators from the Hawks and SAPS detectives, tactical teams such as the task force, tracing teams, the National Intervention Unit and the Tactical Response, has also managed to stabilise these robberies by with over 60% in the month of May.

The CIT robberies have been on the increase these past few months in the country with Gauteng alone reporting 96 cash-in-transit cases from January to May.

On Friday, the team, acting on intelligence, arrested two suspects, a 32-year-old man and his girlfriend, for the May Boksburg CIT robbery where two armoured vehicles were targeted.

The girlfriend, a Tshwane Metro Police Officer, is alleged to have been storing the weapons that were used during the attack of two CIT vehicles in Boksburg.

During the arrest, the team recovered one rifle, magazines and several rounds of ammunition, as well as a Toyota Quantum which is believed to have been a cash purchase.

Police said the suspect is linked to several CIT robberies in the country.

 

 

National Commissioner of Police General Khehla Sitole on Monday said although they are making inroads, there is still a long way to go.

However, he was confident that the stabilisation operations are turning the tide against this particular crime category.

“In order for the police to stamp the authority of the State, we need to continue arresting individuals that commit aggravated robberies, crimes like CIT heists and hijackings instil fear in the inhabitants of this country.

“We will, following these stabilisation operations, follow with a normalisation plan to ensure the people in South Africa are and feel safe,” said Sitole.

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