logo
Prominent Cape Town attorney accused of demanding payment for father to see his children

Prominent Cape Town attorney accused of demanding payment for father to see his children

IOL News26-06-2025
Kaamilah Paulse is under intensifying scrutiny as fresh allegations emerge that her firm, acting for a mother in a heated custody dispute, allegedly demanded a R300 000 payment in exchange for a father to see his children.
Image: Supplied
Herold Gie Inc, Kaamilah Paulse is under intensifying scrutiny as fresh allegations emerge that her firm, acting for a mother in a heated custody dispute, allegedly demanded a R300 000 payment in exchange for a father to see his children. The fresh allegations are made by the father, Asif Casoojee, and his attorney, Nazeer Parker of Nazeer Parker and Associates.
The claim, described by legal experts as 'unprecedented' and 'deeply unethical if proven,' has now been added to the Legal Practice Council (LPC) investigation on Paulse.
The dispute stems from Casoojee's application to the Western Cape High Court earlier this year, seeking permission for his children to attend his brother's wedding in Johannesburg. The father, separated from his children who live in Cape Town, argued that an interim court order entitled him to 'as much contact as possible' with them.
Despite the children allegedly expressing enthusiasm for the trip—including the daughter choosing outfits and sending them to her father — Paulse, acting on behalf of the mother, refused the request.
In a shocking twist, Parker claims that Paulse's team, through Advocate Adri Heese, made a settlement offer to him before the court hearing: Casoojee could have access to the children that weekend, if he paid R300 000 into the trust account of Herold Gie Attorneys.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
'My client firmly instructed that his children are not items for sale and he was not prepared to pay over such a sum to Paulse in exchange for his children attending his brother's wedding,' Parker told the court. 'We were stunned. As legal practitioners, we have never been asked by an opposing side for money in return for access to one's own children.'
The Western Cape High Court heard the urgent application in February 2025. Though the Family Advocate's office supported the trip, noting it would 'strengthen familial bonds,' the matter remains unresolved, and contact between Casoojee and his children continues to be contested.
This latest controversy comes on the back of a damning March 2025 ruling by the LPC Appeals Tribunal, which found prima facie evidence of professional misconduct by Paulse. The ruling has led to formal disciplinary proceedings.
The Tribunal found Paulse improperly obtained a protection order against Casoojee without proper service or due process and allegedly contributed to parental alienation by obstructing his access to school, medical, and emotional communication with his children.
The Tribunal also flagged Paulse's alleged use of unlawfully obtained financial documents and her participation in a WhatsApp group where personal details about Casoojee's business were circulated.
The Casoojee matter is not isolated. Paulse also faces allegations in a separate case brought by businessman Zamer Harneker, who has accused her of similar conduct during his custody battle. Harneker alleges Paulse interfered with his rights as a parent, citing instances of alienation and misuse of confidential financial information.
On a call with The Star's editor, Paulse denied all accusations. 'Adri Heese did no such thing. I will send a complete pack of what happened. Mr Casoojee gave you the wrong information. It is not my side of the story; it is my client's side of the story. What he's alleging is not true'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vehicle used in brutal child murder forfeited to state
Vehicle used in brutal child murder forfeited to state

The Citizen

time3 days ago

  • The Citizen

Vehicle used in brutal child murder forfeited to state

A court orders the forfeiture of the vehicle used by Daniel Hugo Smit to kidnap and murder 13-year-old Jerobijn Van Wyk. The Western Cape High Court has ordered the forfeiture of the vehicle used by Daniel Hugo Smit to brutally kidnap and murder 13-year-old Jerobejin Van Wyk in February 2022. On Thursday, Judge James Dumisani Lekhuleni granted the unopposed forfeiture order for Smit's vehicle at the High Court sitting at Vredenburg Magistrate's Court. The vehicle was used to pursue Van Wyk, knock him over, and kidnap him before brutally murdering him. Car used to kidnap and murder Van Wyk forfeited The order was granted after the Asset Forfeiture Unit's (AFU) decision to apply for preservation and a forfeiture order. The AFU submitted the application because it believed Smit had used the vehicle as an instrument to commit the offences for which he was convicted and sentenced on 5 November 2024. ALSO READ: Tshwane fire toll at 7 as shack fire kills child The court sentenced Smit to effective life imprisonment following his conviction on attempted murder, kidnapping, murder, violation of a corpse, and defeating the administration of justice. The court sentenced him to 15 years' direct imprisonment for attempted murder, 10 years' direct imprisonment for kidnapping, life imprisonment for murder, five years' direct imprisonment for violating a corpse, and three years' direct imprisonment for defeating the administration of justice. National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) regional spokesperson Eric Ntabazalila said that during the trial, AFU successfully applied for a preservation order, and Judge Hayley Slingers granted it on 19 March 2025. Car was instrumental in Smit's crimes 'In its application, the unit argued that Smit used the vehicle to pursue the deceased, knock him over, kidnap and murder him, and that it was an instrumentality of the offences listed in items 1, 3, and 7 of Schedule 1 of POCA (Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998), that being murder, kidnapping, assault, and child stealing,' Ntabazalila said. AFU had ninety days to submit a forfeiture application in accordance with POCA Section 40, after which the preservation order would expire. ALSO READ: Eswatini man arrested after child's burnt body found Judge Lekhuleni granted the order unopposed on Thursday. Officials served the application on Smit in prison on 10 April 2025. The brutal murder of the 13-year-old shocked South Africa, largely due to the horrific manner in which it was committed. On 2 February 2022, Van Wyk and his friend entered Smit's property and stole fruit from his garden. Smit claimed that he became angry when the boys mocked him during their conversation. Brutal kidnapping and murder 'After pursuing them with his vehicle and catching Van Wyk, he took the boy home, broke his neck, put his body in the freezer, and later dismembered it,' Ntabazalila said. The accused burnt the boy's corpse using techniques he said he picked up from a Chinese occult he joined as a teenager. During sentencing mitigation, Smit claimed that the occult had influenced him, attempting to lessen his responsibility. ALSO READ: Lesotho family's three-year-old still not buried six months after tragic shack fire in SA However, Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions, Advocate Louise Freister-Sampson, rejected his claim of occult influence. Freister-Sampson argued that Smit had not been active in the occult for more than 20 years; he had not performed rituals for more than 20 years, had converted to Christianity, and had the Aramaic words of God painted on his house walls and his vehicle. The prosecutor also argued that Smit was in control when he committed the premeditated murder, that he was not influenced by the occult, and could not claim diminished responsibility. The court concurred. NPA welcomes forfeiture The NPA Director in the Western Cape, Advocate Nicolet Bell, welcomed the successful forfeiture of the vehicle. 'This forfeiture forms part of the NPA's broader strategy to ensure that crime does not pay by targeting not only the perpetrators but also the tools and proceeds of criminal conduct,' Ntabazalila said. NOW READ: Toddler found abandoned on pathway in KZN

Casoojee's plea to Justice Minister regarding his partenal struggle
Casoojee's plea to Justice Minister regarding his partenal struggle

The Star

time3 days ago

  • The Star

Casoojee's plea to Justice Minister regarding his partenal struggle

Sifiso Mahlangu | Published 1 hour ago In an emotional and public plea, Cape Town businessman Asif Casoojee has called on Justice Minister Mmamoloko 'Nkhensani' Kubayi to urgently intervene in what he describes as a deeply painful legal struggle that has kept him separated from his children for more than a year. Casoojee accuses attorney Kaamilah Paulse, who represents his ex-wife, of manipulating the legal system to isolate him from his children and deny him meaningful access. Once married to Paulse, Casoojee says their post-divorce custody dispute has turned into a campaign of alienation, with him being systematically removed from his children's lives. Speaking to the media outside the Western Cape High Court this week, Casoojee described how his rights as a father have been eroded through what he calls calculated legal tactics. 'I am pleading with Minister Kubayi to look into this case. I have followed the law and respected the court process, but I am being punished for wanting to be a father. The system has been used to silence me.' Casoojee claims Paulse has overstepped her role as attorney, taking on functions beyond legal representation, such as appointing herself as the children's main school contact. Despite paying school fees and supporting his children financially, Casoojee says he is treated like an outsider. He recounted being denied entry to a Father's Day event in 2024, saying the school told him that Paulse was registered as next of kin. 'That day broke me,' he said. 'I was told I could not participate in an event made for fathers. My children saw that. They saw me being turned away.' Earlier this year, the Legal Practice Council's Appeals Tribunal found prima facie evidence that Paulse had committed professional misconduct. According to The Star and IOL , the case includes allegations of parental alienation, as well as an alleged attempt to condition Casoojee's access to his children on a R300,000 payment. The matter has since been referred to the LPC's Disciplinary Committee. Civil society organisations such as Fathers for Equality and Right to Justice have stepped in to support Casoojee's call for intervention. They argue that his case is not an isolated one, but part of a larger problem where fathers are stripped of rights due to unchecked legal practices. 'Too many fathers are being erased from their children's lives not because they are unfit, but because the system enables legal manipulation,' Casoojee said. 'This is not just about me. It is about the thousands of fathers who quietly suffer while their children grow up believing their dads abandoned them.' Attorney Kaamilah Paulse, through her law firm Herold Gie Attorneys, has denied any wrongdoing. The firm has stated it intends to challenge the tribunal's findings and maintains that Paulse acted lawfully and ethically throughout. Still, Casoojee remains determined. 'I want my children to know I never walked away. I was kept away,' he said. 'Minister Kubayi, please help fathers like me reclaim our rightful place in our children's lives.'

Casoojee's plea to Justice Minister regarding his partenal struggle
Casoojee's plea to Justice Minister regarding his partenal struggle

IOL News

time3 days ago

  • IOL News

Casoojee's plea to Justice Minister regarding his partenal struggle

Cape Town businessman Asif Casoojee has called on Justice Minister Mmamoloko 'Nkhensani' Kubayi to urgently intervene Image: File In an emotional and public plea, Cape Town businessman Asif Casoojee has called on Justice Minister Mmamoloko 'Nkhensani' Kubayi to urgently intervene in what he describes as a deeply painful legal struggle that has kept him separated from his children for more than a year. Casoojee accuses attorney Kaamilah Paulse, who represents his ex-wife, of manipulating the legal system to isolate him from his children and deny him meaningful access. Once married to Paulse, Casoojee says their post-divorce custody dispute has turned into a campaign of alienation, with him being systematically removed from his children's lives. Speaking to the media outside the Western Cape High Court this week, Casoojee described how his rights as a father have been eroded through what he calls calculated legal tactics. 'I am pleading with Minister Kubayi to look into this case. I have followed the law and respected the court process, but I am being punished for wanting to be a father. The system has been used to silence me.' Casoojee claims Paulse has overstepped her role as attorney, taking on functions beyond legal representation, such as appointing herself as the children's main school contact. Despite paying school fees and supporting his children financially, Casoojee says he is treated like an outsider. He recounted being denied entry to a Father's Day event in 2024, saying the school told him that Paulse was registered as next of kin. 'That day broke me,' he said. 'I was told I could not participate in an event made for fathers. My children saw that. They saw me being turned away.' Earlier this year, the Legal Practice Council's Appeals Tribunal found prima facie evidence that Paulse had committed professional misconduct. According to The Star and IOL, the case includes allegations of parental alienation, as well as an alleged attempt to condition Casoojee's access to his children on a R300,000 payment. The matter has since been referred to the LPC's Disciplinary Committee. Civil society organisations such as Fathers for Equality and Right to Justice have stepped in to support Casoojee's call for intervention. They argue that his case is not an isolated one, but part of a larger problem where fathers are stripped of rights due to unchecked legal practices. 'Too many fathers are being erased from their children's lives not because they are unfit, but because the system enables legal manipulation,' Casoojee said. 'This is not just about me. It is about the thousands of fathers who quietly suffer while their children grow up believing their dads abandoned them.' Attorney Kaamilah Paulse, through her law firm Herold Gie Attorneys, has denied any wrongdoing. The firm has stated it intends to challenge the tribunal's findings and maintains that Paulse acted lawfully and ethically throughout. Still, Casoojee remains determined. 'I want my children to know I never walked away. I was kept away,' he said. 'Minister Kubayi, please help fathers like me reclaim our rightful place in our children's lives.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store