MountainTop SOS: Brave Farm Wife (81) Scales Peaks to Free Kidnapped Husband as Attackers Get 20 Years
BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA
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SMITHFIELD — An extraordinary act of raw survival and physical bravery by an 81-year-old farm wife has led to the high-speed capture and heavy sentencing of two ruthless house robbers who stabbed her, ransacked her home, and left her elderly husband tied to a tree.
Free State Provincial Commissioner, Lieutenant General Thabang Lesia, on Saturday, 6 June 2026, highly lauded the effective 20-year direct prison terms handed down to Sechaba Silence Maseli (29) and Sammy Pakiso Paint (38).
The swift judicial resolution follows a terrifying Sunday afternoon ambush on 3 August 2025 at a farm homestead just outside Smithfield.
The Church-Day Ambush and Digital Extortion
According to the police docket, the elderly victims—aged 78 and 81—had just returned to their farm after attending a morning church service. Approaching the house, the 81-year-old wife noticed the kitchen door was ajar. Stepping inside to check, she was instantly lunged at and overpowered by two armed men.
The attackers subjected her to a brutal beating, stabbed her through the hand, and dragged her outside at knifepoint to corner her approaching husband. The couple was forced back into the house, thrown to the floor, and bound tightly with plastic cable ties.
The robbers then systematically cleaned out the house, stealing cellphones, cash, and family heirlooms. However, the crime took a highly calculated, digital turn:
The criminals forced the 78-year-old farmer to unlock his banking app and execute an immediate electronic transfer of R15,000 directly into a bank account belonging to a relative of one of the suspects. After cracking open the main safe to pocket an extra R6,000, the gang bundled the farmer into his own luxury Mercedes-Benz, drove him deep into the bush, and left him bound to a tree trunk before speeding off.
The Mountaintop Escape
What the attackers did not count on was the unyielding resilience of the injured 81-year-old woman.
Bleeding heavily from her stab wound, the elderly wife managed to painfully rub and break her cable ties. Realizing there was no signal at the farmhouse to call for help, she walked out into the winter afternoon and physically climbed up a nearby rugged mountain peak.
Once she reached the high-altitude crest, her phone picked up a single bar of cellular reception. She instantly launched an emergency broadcast, alerting neighboring farmers and activating the local police tracking networks.
Former Employee Intercepted on the Run
The mountain SOS triggered an immediate, massive law enforcement dragnet. Within hours, public order police and local farm-watch units spotted the hijacked Mercedes-Benz fleeing on the gravel backroads heading toward Bethulie.
The vehicle was successfully boxed in, and both Maseli and Paint were hauled out at gunpoint. Police successfully recovered 100% of the stolen items, jewellery, and cash inside the car, and rushed to untie the stranded farmer from the bush. Detective Constable Larochell Macpherson of the Provincial Serious and Violent Crime Unit quickly uncovered a bitter betrayal: the mastermind, Sechaba Maseli, was a disgruntled former employee who had previously worked on the very farm he targeted.
"This sentence sends a clear message that attacks on our farming communities will be met with the full might of the law. These dangerous criminals have been swiftly removed from society," said Lieutenant General Thabang Lesia.
The Sentence Sheet: Cybercrimes Act Enforced
Confronted with an airtight forensic case and the fact that they were caught driving the victim's car with his stolen money transferred into their family bank accounts, both men collapsed their defense and pleaded guilty to all counts.
The Smithfield court hammered the duo across multiple statutory acts, using new electronic laws to punish the digital transfer:
- Robbery with Aggravating Circumstances: 20 years imprisonment
- Kidnapping: 5 years imprisonment
- Contravention of the Cybercrimes Act: 4 years imprisonment
- Common Fraud: 4 years imprisonment
- Possession of Suspected Stolen Property: 1 year imprisonment
The presiding judge ordered all auxiliary sentences to run concurrently alongside the heaviest count. This results in an effective, flat 20 years of direct imprisonment behind bars for both Maseli and Paint. Additionally, both men have been permanently declared completely unfit to ever legally possess firearms in South Africa.
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