Former Eskom executive Matshela Koko. (Esa Alexander/Gallo Images)
Acting magistrate Stanley Jacobs, who presided over and ultimately kicked out the Investigating Directorate's (ID) multimillion-rand corruption case against former Eskom executive Matshela Koko and others, allegedly failed to disclose his own business dealings with the power utility.
A News24 investigation can reveal that Jacobs is a director and shareholder of a company named BEP African Consulting; a company first registered in 2000. He resigned as a director in 2001 and was reappointed in 2008 and, according to company records, has remained a director to date.
According to internal Eskom accounting records News24 first obtained as part of The Eskom Files investigation, BEP was paid R14.3 million between December 2011 and July 2016 – a time that Koko and another of his co-accused, Frans Sithole, held senior positions at the power utility.
South Africans need to be in the know if we want to create a prosperous future. News24 has kept the country informed for 25 years, and we're about to enter a new chapter of fearless journalism. Join our free subscription trial to unlock this story and a world of news aimed to inform, empower, and inspire.
Next on News24
Copping heat: 'Shoplifted' air fryer at heart of Crime Intelligence whistleblower's apparent stitch-up
13 Mar