- Tribunal condemns dishonest conduct by debarred financial service providers,
- Forgery, fraud and misuse of client funds led to R470m in pensioner losses,
- Reconsideration appeals dismissed as delaying tactics, penalties remain in force
Those entrusted with other people’s money carry an unshakeable responsibility to act with honesty, care, and integrity. When that trust is broken, the consequences are severe.
This was the firm message from the Financial Services Tribunal, as it summarily dismissed three reconsideration applications brought by individuals who oversaw the disappearance of R470 million in retirement investments.
The applicants, Jeremia Jesaja Steyn Jansen van Rensburg, Stephanus Cornelius Jansen van Rensburg and Frederik Young du Preez, were previously debarred by the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) for 20 to 30 years and fined a combined R68 million.
They had hoped to overturn those sanctions, claiming that their misconduct was negligent, not criminal, and that they could restore lost funds through a last-minute financial deal. The Tribunal, however, found their conduct to be fraudulent, reckless, and fundamentally dishonest, dismissing their appeals as frivolous and vexatious.
Dishonest conduct disguised as error
Far from being a simple regulatory misstep, the case revealed a pattern of deliberate misrepresentation. Investors, primarily pensioners, had been promised that their funds would be securely placed in low-risk unit trusts. Instead, the funds were illegally diverted to high-risk ventures through unlicensed entities, in direct violation of mandates.
To conceal these actions, the applicants forged investment reports, misled clients and regulators, and later tried to shift blame onto the FSCA and the High Court for liquidating the firms involved.
“The applicants are dishonest and lack integrity,” the Tribunal concluded. “They fabricated statements to hide unauthorised actions, used trust money to create secret profits, and acted in breach of duties owed to clients.”
The Tribunal rejected arguments that their intention was never criminal, stating that their conduct amounted to theft and fraud in ordinary criminal law.
Attempts to delay justice
The reconsideration applications were filed on the last possible day, and instead of being properly substantiated, the applicants submitted a document titled “Common Grounds,” which was authored by a self-declared paralegal, not qualified to appear before the Tribunal. This document included vague admissions of wrongdoing paired with a request for leniency based on a proposed R470 million loan offer which the Tribunal described as “vacuous” and clearly aimed at delaying judgment.
When pressed, the applicants failed to provide promised documentation, instead seeking further postponements, joining new parties, and blaming external forces for the financial collapse.
“Further documents cannot salvage this sinking ship,” the Tribunal held, stating the delay tactics undermined the seriousness of the regulatory breaches.
A sector built on trust
The decision is not just a legal conclusion; it is a warning to every financial professional in South Africa. Forging documents, hiding losses, and misleading clients is not a mistake to be overlooked; it is a breach of the very foundation of financial services.
The Tribunal was clear that debarment is not a punishment, but a necessary protection for the public to prevent unfit individuals from returning to positions of trust. “The public deserves protection against financial providers who are not fit and proper,” the panel wrote.
Public warning: Trust broken, trust lost
This case is a harsh reminder that those entrusted with managing other people’s money must act with integrity at all times. Misusing that power, whether through fraud, concealment, or forgery has life-altering consequences. Financial professionals must place clients’ interests above their own and adhere strictly to mandates and laws. Anything less is not just unethical; it is illegal.
Conviction.co.za
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