Arrested were (in alphabetical order): •
Lionel Bernstein, architect and member of the
South African Communist Party (SACP) •
Denis Goldberg, a
Cape Town engineer and leader of the
Congress of Democrats •
Arthur Goldreich •
Bob Hepple •
Abdulhay Jassat •
James Kantor, brother-in-law of Harold Wolpe •
Ahmed Kathrada •
Nelson Mandela •
Govan Mbeki •
Raymond Mhlaba •
Andrew Mlangeni •
Moosa Moolla •
Elias Motsoaledi,
trade union and ANC member •
Walter Sisulu •
Harold Wolpe, prominent attorney and activist Goldberg, Bernstein, Wolpe, Kantor, and Goldreich were
white Jewish South Africans; Hepple was of
English descent on his father's side and Dutch and
Jewish on his mother's. where he was serving a five-year sentence for inciting workers to striketrade unions were illegal for black workersand leaving the country illegally. The government took advantage of legal provisions allowing for accused persons to be held for 90 days without trial, and held the defendants incommunicado. Withstanding beatings and torture, Goldreich, Jassat, Moolla, and Wolpe escaped from jail on 11 August. Their escape infuriated the prosecutors and police, who considered Goldreich to be "the arch-conspirator". , site of the trial The chief prosecutor was
Percy Yutar, deputy attorney-general of the
Transvaal. The presiding judge was
Quartus de Wet, judge-president of the Transvaal. The first trial indictment document listed 11 names as the accused. The trial began on the 6 October 1963 til 12 June 1964. Counsel for the accused successfully challenged the legal sufficiency of the document, with the result that Justice de Wet quashed it. Prior to dismissal of the first indictment, the state withdrew all charges against Bob Hepple. He subsequently fled the country, without testifying. He stated "that he never had any intention of testifying". Mlangeni, who died on 21 July 2020, was the last surviving Rivonia defendant following the death of Goldberg on 29 April that same year. == Defence lawyers ==