The purpose of this study is to critically examine the governance crisis, corruption dynamics, and democratic transformation challenges within the South African Police Service (SAPS) in the context of post-1994 reforms. It further analyses the implications of the Madlanga Commission of Inquiry (2025–2026) alongside other oversight mechanisms, including the Zondo Commission (2022), the National Development Plan (NDP 2030), and the National Anti-Corruption Strategy (2019–2030), in assessing the effectiveness of policing reform in South Africa. Despite extensive post-apartheid reforms aimed at transforming SAPS into a professional, accountable, and community-oriented institution, systemic corruption, political interference, and weak internal governance mechanisms continue to undermine institutional legitimacy, operational effectiveness, and public trust. The central problem is that SAPS has not successfully institutionalised democratic accountability and ethical governance, resulting in sustained corruption, vulnerability to organised criminal infiltration, and declining public confidence, as evidenced by findings from the Madlanga Commission, Zondo Commission, and IPID oversight reports. This study adopts a qualitative systematic document analysis approach. It draws on triangulated secondary data sources, including government policy frameworks (e.g., NDP 2030 and NACS), official commission reports (Zondo Commission and Madlanga Commission), Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) annual reports, and credible international governance indices such as the World Bank Governance Indicators and Transparency International reports. The data were systematically analysed through thematic content analysis focusing on governance, corruption patterns, institutional accountability, and reform effectiveness within SAPS. The study reveals that corruption within SAPS is systemic rather than incidental, characterised by entrenched networks of misconduct, procurement irregularities, and infiltration by organised criminal groups. Oversight institutions such as IPID and parliamentary mechanisms face limitations in enforcement capacity, resulting in weak accountability outcomes. The findings further indicate a persistent gap between policy frameworks and implementation, where reform strategies such as the NDP 2030 and National Anti-Corruption Strategy have not fully translated into operational effectiveness. The Madlanga Commission reinforces these concerns by exposing prima facie evidence of governance failures, political interference, and compromised policing integrity. International comparative data further confirm that weakened rule of law and institutional corruption significantly erode public trust and legitimacy in law enforcement institutions. The study concludes that the South African Police Service is experiencing a deep-seated governance and legitimacy crisis driven by systemic corruption, weak institutional accountability, and implementation failures in reform policies. While comprehensive policy frameworks exist, their impact is undermined by structural weaknesses in leadership, oversight coordination, and ethical enforcement. The Madlanga Commission highlights the urgency of transitioning from policy reform to enforceable institutional transformation, requiring strengthened oversight mechanisms, depoliticisation of policing structures, and enhanced integrity systems. Without decisive reform, SAPS risks continued erosion of public trust and democratic legitimacy, thereby undermining the broader criminal justice system and democratic consolidation in South Africa.