Judge Hillary Squires, who is presiding over the Schabir Shaik fraud and corruption trial, on Wednesday again lashed out at the media for inaccurate reporting regarding evidence which was led in the trial on Tuesday.
He was referring to a note the third state witness Susan Delique said she got from Thomson CSF boss Alain Thetard and then typed up and sent as an encrypted fax.
Delique is a former secretary of arms company Thomson CSF, now known as Thint, and is under cross examination for a second day at the Durban High Court.
On Tuesday, she said the note in question was given to her by Thetard for typing and was to be sent via encrypted fax to the company offices in France. The note contains details of plans to give R500 000 a year to Deputy President Jacob Zuma in return for protection from investigations and for support for future projects.
Thetard maintains he threw the note into a rubbish bin.
Squires said that some media representatives had not followed the exchange between counsel regarding the handwritten note and warned that it was not evidence of the truth unless the author was identified.
“Until then it is hearsay,” Squires said.
On Tuesday, Shaik’s counsel said they would contest the admissibility of the document at the end of the state’s case.
Thetard, now in France and refusing to testify in the trial, said in an affidavit earlier this year that the note was merely a rough draft of a document “in which I intended to record my thoughts on separate issues in a manner which was not only disjointed but also lacked circumspection”.
“It is for this reason that I did not fax this document or direct that it be faxed. I crumpled it and threw it into the waste paper basket from where it was possibly retrieved and provided to the state,” he said. – Sapa
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