A R4.9 million grant scam just imploded in Johannesburg, dragging agency insiders into court and exposing how cash meant for the poorest got rerouted into shady hands.
Arrests shake SASSA in Johannesburg
Arrests shake SASSA in Johannesburg
- South African Social Security Agency backed the Soweto takedown.
- Four staffers were grabbed at a retail store during a cash withdrawal attempt.
- Whistleblower tips and payout red flags triggered the sting.
- Total suspects climbed to 11, spanning employees and outside helpers.
- Phumzile Dlamini stood among those hauled before the Lenasia Magistrates Court.
- Paul Bones and Phumelele Myeza were listed in the proceedings.
- Keamogetswe Ledwaba and Phiwe Mkhuzangwe also faced charges.
- An Ethiopian national was arrested, suggesting cross-border links.
- Insiders allegedly tweaked profiles to reroute grant deposits.
- Cloned cards and fake accounts fueled quick cash withdrawals.
- Stolen IDs were used to register bogus beneficiaries.
- Over 1,300 counts span cybercrime, fraud, and theft.
- Millions relying on child, pension, and disability grants felt the sting.
- Some beneficiaries discovered empty accounts when payments were due.
- Township families in Gauteng struggled with rent and school costs.
- Public trust took a knock as taxpayers absorbed losses.
- SASSA suspended implicated workers and vowed permanent dismissals.
- Biometric verification and real-time monitoring are being expanded.
- Ten accused secured bail between R10,000 and R30,000.
- Prosecutors cited bank records and digital trails as core evidence.