Mdunge has been granted leave to appeal but, added Durban Regional Court magistrate Thandeka Fikeni, “There is absolutely nothing respectable about white collar criminals and crime. Society always looks to the police as people who are law abiding.”
The appeal, which would be heard in the Pietermaritzburg High Court, could take up to two years to conclude.
Fikeni also explained that the apparent leniency of the sentence came after a consideration that Mdunge was a first offender, had co-operated with the police, was married with five children and was now unemployed.
Mdunge was a colonel when he left the police force in 2013, soon after the allegations broke. When the provincial commissioner decided to institute disciplinary charges against him, he submitted his resignation, which was accepted. He was charged with forging his matric certificate and fraudulently accepting a salary to which he was not entitled.
People who hold prominent positions in the public sector and whose salaries are funded from taxpayers’ money, have been told through this example that they too are bound to abide by the law, and that there are consequences for failing to do so.