New evidence suggests that kwaito artist Mandoza was not the
driver of a Mini Cooper that crashed into a palm tree in
Weltevreden Park, north-west Johannesburg, at the weekend, metro
police said on Monday.
"Apparently, when the first tow truck driver arrived on the
scene, they found Mandoza injured and bleeding in the back seat of
the car... so there's a possibility he was never alone in that
car," said Johannesburg metro police spokesperson Inspector Edna
Mamonyane.
"At the back of the car there were two sharp wires that were
sticking out and he had a long cut on his forehead, (suggesting)
that (Mandoza) could have been cut by the wires.
"There was not even one drop of blood in the front of the car...
definitely, there were other occupants in the car," said Mamonyane.
The cut to the forehead could not have been caused by the
steering wheel and the windscreen did not break during the
accident, she added.
Mamonyane said the metro police officer on the scene phoned the
owner of the car, who has not been identified, and told him to
visit the crash scene.
"He [the owner] never showed any shock at the accident. He was
requested to come to the scene. My officer says he had to
repeatedly call and ask where he was. Forty-five minutes later he
had to call him again and ask, 'where are you?'...
"When he [the owner] got to the scene he was reeking of alcohol,
he stank like the brewery tank," said Mamonyane.
While the metro officer waited on the accident scene for the
owner to arrive, Mandoza was taken to hospital in an ambulance.
Mamonyane said once her officer had cleared the crash scene he
went to Helen Joseph hospital to interview Mandoza, whose real name
is Mduduzi Tshabalala.
'Not even the smallest fume of alcohol'
The officer reported that Mandoza did not smell of alcohol but
that he was very confused and did not know where he was.
"My officer went to the doctor... he [Mandoza] had not even the
smallest fume of alcohol...."
If the entertainer was intoxicated, it was not on alcohol.
No tests were ordered to check if drugs or alcohol were in
Mandoza's system.
Mamonyane said by the time her officer arrived at the hospital,
it was too late to do the tests.
He was late because he was waiting for the owner of the Mini to
arrive at the crash scene and give permission to have the car towed
away.
Mamonyane said she was unaware of reports that plastic bags with
white powder were found in the car.
Several newspapers reported on Monday that Mandoza had taken his
friend's car without his permission after he had a fight with his
wife.
Mamonyane said the owner of the car declined to take the metro
officer to the security complex from where the car had been taken.
The metro officer wanted to corroborate his story that Mandoza
had been seen by complex security guards driving the car.
The officer on the scene also urged the owner to lay a charge
with the police that his friend had taken his car without his
consent, but no case had been opened by Monday morning, said
Mamonyane.
"There are still a lot of missing pieces in this puzzle," she
said.
Mamonyane said the police were investigating the possibility
that Mandoza had been sleeping on the back seat while someone else
drove the car the Mini.
A case of reckless and negligent driving has been opened.
Mandoza was found of guilty of culpable homicide after a crash
in March 2008 on the N1 North highway in which two people were
killed. He pleaded guilty in December 2008 and was given a
suspended sentence of three years and nine months.