Constable told Commissioner that he took bribes to pay utilty and cable tv bills

PC699 Kenneth Sevasta has pleaded 'not guilty' to bribery charges in Court, but had admitted to Commissioner John Rizzo that he accepted money and gifts from hunters because he couldnt pay his utilty and Melita Cable TV bills. He was released on bail.

Sevasta, who was arrested and indefinitely suspended from the police force, was not charged under arrest, and was therefore released on bail.

He was accused of having accepted bribes from hunters while he was stationed at the Administrative Law Enforcement Unit, a crime he was duty bound not to allow to ever happen.

Police Superintendent Mario Spiteri, head of the Police Internal Investigations Unit was giving evidence about police statements made by PC Kenneth Sevasta, 39 of Marsascala,

Superintendent Spiteri said that PC Sevasta exercised his right not to answer any questions.

Later, however, Police Commissioner John Rizzo spoke to the constable who admitted everything and said he had accepted money in exchange for information because he had serious financial problems and could not pay his electricity and Melita bills.

He had admitted before the Commissioner to having on different occasions, accepted €150 and €50 in cash, as well as €200 in Chain Supermarket vouchers and a new mobile phone.

Three hunters have already faced charges on conspiracy to corrupt PC Sevasta. The scandal revealed by MaltaToday and uncovered a racket within the Administrative Law Enforcement Unit (ALE).

Hunters Eric Scicluna 38 from Mtarfa, Glenn Neil Scicluna, 33 from Marsascala and Roderick Stabile, 27 from Zejtun were charged last week for conspiracy to corrupt the police officer.

As Glenn Neil Scicluna and Roderick Stabile admitted the charges brought against them by Superintendent Mario Spiteri, Chief Investigator at the Police Internal Investigations Unit, they were each jailed for 18 months, however their sentence was suspended pending their appeal.

Scicluna denied the charges AND is set to re-appear before a Magistrate next month.

The scandal was revealed by MaltaToday last month, after hunter  Eric Scicluna had allegedly spilt the beans that some officers were ‘on the take’, in a bid to turn a blind eye to irregularities while patrolling areas for illegal hunting.

Scicluna, who is quite known to the police, was photographed and appeared in the media last April when he was spotted while hunting illegally by passers-by in the Mtarfa area on April 12.

He was and arrested and interrogated by Inspector Paul Miruzzi of the ALE who happens to be married to PC Kenneth Sevasta's wife's sister.

When cautioned during interrogation, Scicluna reportedly asked to see Police Commissioner John Rizzo and revealed the racket in an apparent bid to save his face after learning that he was facing jail time for relapsing after being identified with a shotgun in the Mtarfa area on April 12.

Earlier this year, Eric Scicluna was fined €6,000 after being found guilty by a court for illegal hunting at sea, and now faces a minimum six months’ imprisonment as he will be charged for illegal poaching in Mtarfa, apart from the corruption charges.

But as he denied this in a judicial letter to this paper, senior police investigators confirmed that Scicluna gave exhaustive information about the racket, while also opening up and alleging other cases he knew about where officers were on the take by other hunters in different areas of the island.

The revelations reportedly shocked the Commissioner, who launched an immediate internal investigation.

PC Kenneth Sevasta was arrested and suspended immediately from duty.

MaltaToday is informed that Scicluna has been questioned at least twice in relation to alleged bribery and had also been warned that he too may be charged for corrupting police officers.

Further investigations were launched by Police Commissioner John Rizzo after this paper also revealed how the same hunter evaded internal security checks and was granted a police license to work as a private guard with a known security firm.

MaltaToday questioned the police and the ministry of home affairs over the anomaly of the issuance of such a license that permitted Eric Scicluna to be employed by a security firm that placed him as a guard at Mater Dei Hospital.

Scicluna – who has since been placed on forced leave pending a full investigation has had a string of convictions by the Magistrates Court that include attempted bribery of a public officer in 2005, and grievous bodily harm on four persons at sea in August 2009.

Despite these convictions, no red flags were raised when the Commissioner of Police issued the licence to Scicluna.

In replies to MaltaToday this week, the Police Commissioner confirmed that Eric Scicluna’s security guard license has been suspended, given that he faces criminal proceedings.

The news rocked the entire police force as a number of officers spoke to MaltaToday about what was happening inside the ALE unit and revealed how police chiefs were reportedly told months ago by their subordinates that they had a ‘rat’ within their unit who informed hunters on raids.

“We had told our superiors many times that somebody amongst us was being quite funny, as on almost each raid we carried out, we found the hunters literally waiting for us…” a police constable told MaltaToday, adding that it was “impossible for anybody not to notice what was going on.”

The policeman was speaking under anonymity as further investigations are still ongoing.

“Some of the hunters would greet us with smiles,” the policeman explained. “They enjoyed embarrassing us in front of the bird watchers, and in many cases there would be little we could do because the illegal hunters would have had enough time to hide their weapons and pretend they were in the fields for a picnic.”

This situation was corroborated by BirdLife Malta director Tolga Temuge who explained that “since BirdLife Malta started conducting systematic surveillance operations, we have been noticing specific cases on particular persons or areas where the police response (district or ALE) was either null nor inefficient.”

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May all individuals in this case have God's strength to learn from their mistakes, perhaps a moment of weakness - and be able to move forward in life a stronger person.
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Everyone has a price, some is cheap, some is not cheap and some is expensive.
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Its not a matter who you let in.The problem is that we live in a corrupt society from top to bottom.
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Albert Zammit
We have to be careful who to admit in the Police Force.