NEWS - NAMIBIA
| 2013-08-08
Criminal record returns to haunt robber
Werner Menges
Matheus Frans Tjappa
CONVICTED armed robber Matheus Tjappa has been clashing with the law for the past 38 years, it was revealed in the High Court in Windhoek yesterday.
Tjappa (54) has a record of previous criminal convictions stretching back all the way to July 1975, Judge Nate Ndauendapo was informed with Tjappa’s return to court following the delivery of the verdict in his latest trial last week. Tjappa is due to be sentenced on Friday next week on the most recent charges on which he has been convicted.
The criminal justice system has been misunderstanding him since the time of his first conviction, Tjappa indicated to the judge when he informed him that he had been wrongly convicted time and again in the past in cases in which he was actually not guilty.
Tjappa’s latest conviction is his tenth.
Judge Ndauendapo found him guilty on a charge of robbery with aggravating circumstances, three counts of attempted murder, and charges of negligent discharge or handling of a firearm and possession of a firearm and ammunition without a license on Tuesday last week.
All of those charges emanated from an armed robbery in which a gang of men stole about N$42 600 from a branch of the supermarket group Woermann Brock in Windhoek’s Khomasdal area on the evening of 11 October 2008.
One of the members of the gang that carried out the robbery was left behind when his accomplices fled from the scene in a car. The remaining member of the gang tried to flee from the scene on foot and fired several shots at police officers who pursued him until he was wounded in the foot and cornered in a pipe in a riverbed nearby.
The person pulled from the pipe was Tjappa. A stolen revolver was also found in the pipe, while money was found on Tjappa’s person – some of it had been stuffed into his underpants – and two bags with more money were found close to the spot where he was caught, the judge heard during Tjappa’s trial.
The police’s record of Tjappa’s previous convictions indicates that he was found guilty of a crime for the first time in Windhoek in July 1975, when he was convicted of theft.
More convictions followed in 1980, when Tjappa was found guilty of theft, housebreaking and possession of housebreaking implements. He clocked up more convictions on charges of housebreaking with intent to steal and theft during the 1980s, when he was repeatedly sentenced to terms of imprisonment ranging from four months to three years.
Tjappa graduated to an even more serious level of criminality in August 1992, when he was found guilty in the High Court on three counts of robbery with aggravating circumstances, and sentenced to an effective 49 years’ imprisonment. That sentence was later cut to 20 years when he succeeded with an appeal to the Supreme Court.
In that case, Tjappa and two co-accused were convicted in connection with a spate of armed robberies, which had been committed at farms in the Omaruru, Otjiwarongo and Okahandja districts from December 1990 to March 1991.
Tjappa told Judge Ndauendapo yesterday that he served the 20-year prison term until he was released in November 2007.
Less than a year later he was arrested in connection with the Woermann Brock robbery.
“This is a man who spent a good part of his life behind bars,” Judge Ndauendapo commented while Tjappa’s defence lawyer, Mbushandje Ntinda, addressed him on the sentence to be imposed on Tjappa.
“I’m not sure he can be rehabilitated. Because that is one of the objectives of punishment,” the judge said. “If one looks at his track record, is he not a candidate who must actually be put away for the rest of his life?”
Ntinda conceded that it was inevitable that Tjappa should be sentenced to a term of imprisonment. He, however, asked the court to also show some mercy to his client.
State advocate Palmer Kumalo, arguing that Tjappa has shown that he was determined not to be stopped from committing crimes, asked the judge to sentence him to “a very lengthy” jail term.
Comments
this gentlemen has no respect for human life at all, he should feel the full weight of the law this time, because its clear he does not want to learn - kojaa
Justice is not about how old you are, Not about the defendant, Not about mercy, Not about second chance, But about taking responsibility of your own actions, & giving justice to the victims and their families. He is a sociopath and jail is where he belong. If you are sympathetic with him, what about his victims? Or are you telling me you feel sorry for both side? Learn more about law before you write your next comment. - mili
pls leasese him and gv him lst wornng his too old i hope he wont think roobary anymore - bonie
It was fortunate to a law enforcement officers to succesful apprehand this ruthless hard-core criminal unscathed. he is a threat to the officials whose trying to curb high rate of crimes in our country, as well as to the public at large.
this man was given all good 20years to change his bad behaviours when he was sent to prison but he just showed that he ll never appreciate a chance given to him to be return in the society again.
Therefore, it will be the right legal decision for judge Ndauedapo to put him to rest in prison for the last days of his life before we loose innocent lives at this criminal hands, he already prove of what he is capable of when stopped by firing at police officers during the robbery.
Judge Ndauedapo, take a good example and examprally lesson from the Outjo incident of a criminal being granted bail for killing a young boy, just to go finish off the mother again when he was allowed to return into society. - Nick
It was fortunate to a law enforcement officers to succesful apprehand this ruthless hard-core criminal unscathed. he is a threat to the officials whose trying to curb high rate of crimes in our country, as well as to the public at large.
this man was given all good 20years to change his bad behaviours when he was sent to prison but he just showed that he ll never appreciate a chance given to him to be return in the society again.
Therefore, it will be the right legal decision for judge Ndauedapo to put him to rest in prison for the last days of his life before we loose innocent lives at this criminal hands, he already prove of what he is capable of when stopped by firing at police officers during the robbery.
Judge Ndauedapo, take a good example and examprally lesson from the Outjo incident of a criminal being granted bail for killing a young boy, just to go finish off the mother again when he was allowed to return into society. - Nick
please can we give him another chance because he did not took any thing every thing he was tried to steal was recoverd, so know he must just released and get last warning , any thing happen ,he mus get life.and we cant trust crimes he did before we get indepedent,it might happen due to apartheid ,reason. Cape Town. - joel
Is this Tjappa a holy vow in the Namibian legal system? For too long he has been a media subject which must go where it belongs. Tired of legal games. Common sense has come to its conclusions here. - Longeni
I think Tjappa cannot fit to be free, so he deserve a life sentence. He is too old to do some of those things. - Hosian Hitanwa
This is a classical case that put to test the purpose of jails. Are they really for rehabilitation or merely a means of keeping habitual criminals from unleashing their crimes on the rest of the law abiding citizenry? - JRK