Tensions flared at the Madlanga Commission on Wednesday when senior counsel Matthew Chaskalson dismissed Brown Mogotsi’s claims that KwaZulu-Natal police commissioner Lieutenant-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi was working as a CIA operative, calling the allegations “a professional lie” crafted to divert attention from far more serious issues under scrutiny.
Chaskalson, representing several implicated SAPS officials, challenged Mogotsi’s narrative as a deliberate attempt to cloud the commission’s focus on allegations that Mkhwanazi had uncovered criminal infiltration within police top structures. According to testimony already before the commission, Mkhwanazi had raised alarms about organised-crime networks penetrating key operational environments in KwaZulu-Natal, prompting discomfort among certain senior officers. Chaskalson argued that Mogotsi’s sensational claims formed part of an orchestrated effort to discredit the commissioner before those accusations gained further traction.
Mogotsi, who has portrayed himself as a whistleblower and intelligence insider, previously alleged that both Mkhwanazi and King Misuzulu Zulu were linked to the United States Central Intelligence Agency. Under cross-examination, however, he struggled to provide any evidence supporting the assertion. Chaskalson pointed out that such claims not only lacked factual foundation but also mirrored a pattern in which Mogotsi inserted intelligence agencies into disputes to obscure his own role and muddy the institutional narrative.
The exchange marked one of the most confrontational moments of the hearings, with Chaskalson insisting that Mogotsi’s conduct demonstrated a tendency to fabricate elaborate conspiracies whenever his credibility was questioned. He suggested that the witness had weaponised unfounded espionage allegations to shift public attention away from Mkhwanazi’s earlier warnings about corruption within SAPS leadership.
Observers noted that the commissioner has long been seen as a strong but polarising figure, particularly due to his resistance to political pressure and his outspoken stance on internal criminality. Chaskalson argued that undermining him through false intelligence claims risked weakening ongoing efforts to address high-level misconduct and sabotage within the police service.
Mogotsi maintained that his statements were based on information he believed to be credible, though he conceded he could not verify their origin. His inability to substantiate the claims is expected to have significant implications for his broader testimony.
As the commission proceeds, the confrontation has sharpened the spotlight on the reliability of Mogotsi’s evidence and the deep fractures within policing leadership. The inquiry continues to grapple with competing narratives, each carrying profound consequences for public trust in the country’s security apparatus.




















