Lodging a Complaint
IPID’s mandate The mandate of
the IPID is to conduct independent and impartial
investigations of specified criminality
committed by members of the South African Police
Service (SAPS) Municipal Police Services (MPS).
What the New legislation (IPID Act) entails?
This mandate has been expanded and focused by
the new Independent Police Investigative
Directorate (IPID) legislation which was signed
into law by President Zuma on 12 May 2011. IPID
Act is operational from 01 April 2012. This
means that the IPID will investigate only the
matters specified in the IPID Act.
TYPES OF MATTERS THAT MUST BE INVESTIGATED
-
any deaths in police
custody;
-
deaths as a result of
police actions;
-
any complaint relating
to the discharge of an official firearm
by any police officer;
-
rape by a police
officer, whether the police officer is
on or off duty;
-
rape of any person while
that person is in police custody;
-
any complaint of torture
or assault against a police officer in
the execution of his or her duties;
-
may investigate
corruption matters within the police
initiated by the Executive Director on
his or her own, or after the receipt of
a complaint from a member of the public,
or referred to the Directorate by the
Minister, an MEC or the Secretary of
Police, as the case may be; and
-
any other matter
referred to it as a result of a decision
by the Executive Director, or if so
requested by the Minister, an MEC or the
Secretary of Police as the case may be.
THE POLICE HAVE AN OBLIGATION
TO REPORT
The Station Commissioner, or any
member of the SAPS or MPS must:
-
immediately after becoming
aware, notify the Directorate of any matters
that must be investigated by the
Directorate; and
-
within 24 hours thereafter,
submit a written report to the Directorate
in the prescribed form and manner of any
such matter.
THE POLICE HAVE AN OBLIGATION
TO ACT OR RESPOND TO RECOMMENDATIONS
-
within 30 days of
receipt thereof, initiate disciplinary
proceedings in terms of the
recommendations made by the Directorate
and inform the Minister in writing, and
provide a copy thereof to the Executive
Director and the Secretary of Police;
-
quarterly submit a
written report to the Minister on the
progress regarding disciplinary matters
made in terms of paragraph (a) and
provide a copy thereof to the Executive
Director and the Secretary of Police;
and
-
immediately on
finalisation of any disciplinary matter
referred to it by the Directorate, to
inform the Minister in writing of the
outcome thereof and provide a copy
thereof to the Executive Director and
the Secretary of Police.
THE POLICE HAVE AN OBLIGATION
TO COOPERATE WITH THE IPID
-
the arrangement of an
identification parade within 48 hours of
the request made by the Directorate;
-
the availability of
members for the taking of an affidavit
or an affirmed declaration or to give
evidence or produce any document in that
member’s possession or under his or her
control which has a bearing on the
matter being investigated; and
-
any other information or
documentation required for investigation
purposes.
WHAT SORT OF MATTERS WILL THE
IPID NO LONGER DEAL WITH?
The IPID will no longer be
dealing with matters of non-compliance with
the DVA by SAPS members. Complaints of
non-compliance with this act will be handled
by the Secretariat of Police.
IPID will not investigate
service delivery complaints against SAPS or
MPS members in instances such as failure to
investigate, failure to assist, failure to
give feedback, rudeness and police
misconduct. These matters are now dealt with
by the police inspectorate in the offices of
SAPS Provincial Commissioners.
WHAT THE IPID CANNOT DEAL WITH
The IPID cannot deal with the
following:
-
Complaints of incidents
which occurred before the establishment of
the Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD)
in April 1997 and those which took place
more than a year before they were reported
to the IPID, unless there are exceptional
circumstances.
-
Complaints against
Correctional Services staff, court
officials, and members of the South African
National Defence Force.
-
Matters that have been dealt
with or are currently being dealt with by
the courts
-
Matters that are not
criminal in nature, e.g divorce, recovery of
money or unlawful arrest etc
WHO MAY LODGE A COMPLAINT?
-
Any person, either as a
victim, witness or representative.
-
Non-governmental and
community-based organizations.
HOW CAN I LODGE A COMPLAINT?
A complaint may be lodged in
person, by telephone, per letter or e-mail to
any IPID office. The complainant must fill in a
Complaint Reporting Form (Form 2), which can
be obtained from any IPID office. Download "Complaint Reporting Form (Form 2)"
here.
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