Accused lawyer Gary Trappler leaving the Cape Town Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday. Photo: Sandiso Phaliso
By Sandiso Phaliso
- A case of malicious damage to property against lawyer Gary Trappler was initially withdrawn in 2021 due to lack of evidence, but reinstated last year after CCTV footage of the incident was admitted to the court.
- The footage appears to show that no-one but Trappler was close enough to Thandi Mgwaba’s car to commit the deed.
- Mgwaba has accused him of slashing her tyres because she is black.
- Trappler has pleaded not guilty.
Cape Town lawyer Gary Trappler was at the scene of a tyre slashing incident in Green Point on the evening of 19 February 2020, according to a neighbourhood watch member’s testimony at the Cape Town Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday.
Trappler has pleaded not guilty to the charge of malicious damage to property for allegedly slashing the car tyres of his neighbour, Thandi Mgwaba. She has accused him in court of attacking her car because she is black.
The case against Trappler was initially withdrawn in 2021 due to lack of evidence but was reinstated after CCTV footage from another resident on the street was admitted before the court.
Former Green Point Neighbourhood Watch member Peter Flentov on Wednesday presented a 19-page PowerPoint presentation consisting of stills from video footage to Magistrate Venge Qula.
The video clips taken between 4:36pm and 9:23pm made it clear it was Trappler who slashed Mgwaba’s car tyres, said Flentov, as none of the other people who appeared in the footage were close to Mgwaba’s car.
He pointed out they were all either walking in the middle of the street or on the opposite pavement.
He said he had obtained the footage from a neighbourhood watch member who had got it from a police reservist. Flentov had posted the video on the neighbourhood watch’s social media pages with an explanation of what happened.
Flentov said that Trappler had subsequently filed a protection order against him, claiming harassment and intimidation on social networks. Flentov counter-filed for a protection order but both men have since withdrawn their respective applications.
“Mr Trappler had filed a protection order against me, accusing me of conspiring with the police and colluding with the EFF (Economic Freedom Fighters) and accused me of an attempted break-in at his residence,” Flentov told the court.
In November last year, Mgwaba told the court she had filed a criminal complaint at the police station the day after the incident, and had contacted people she knew in the EFF who joined her in confronting him. Confronted by Mgwaba and EFF members, Trappler had called the police, who, upon arriving at the scene, arrested Trappler. He was released on warning the same day.
Flentov said the video footage showed that Trappler approached Mgwaba’s car four times. “On two of the four occasions, he appears to put a note on the car. On the third occasion he goes to the back of the car. On the fourth occasion he bends down at the car, this is the time the tyres deflate,” he said.
Trappler’s lawyer, Anel du Toit, objected to Flentov’s testimony a number of times, claiming it was hearsay and was “inadmissible”.
Du Toit said Flentov’s presentation was a combination of black and white pictures that were blurred.
The case has been postponed until 10 May when the state will call its last witness before closing its case.
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