Nairobi – In a scandal that shreds the façade of Kenya’s justice system, high-powered lawyer Cecil Guyana Miller is using his legal clout to crush truth-tellers. Activist Solomon Maina has been dragged into court by Miller for daring to expose what he alleges are the lawyer’s dirty secrets.
Meanwhile, outspoken blogger Maverick Aoko accuses Miller of running a “buy-off the media with cash” empire tilted against ordinary Kenyans.
According to Aoko’s posts, Miller has a sordid track record of smearing critics into silence. On X she alleges he scammed one client out of Ksh 24 million, then turned around and sued a whistle-blower for daring to expose him. Aoko publicly tagged the Law Society of Kenya and asked: “Kenya Judiciary – until when?”

But Aoko isn’t just posting tweets.
She has staked a reputation as a fearless “media you can’t reckon”, unafraid to call out the elite from Nairobi’s legal corridors.
Her sudden disappearance in late 2024—found weeks later near the Kenya-Tanzania border—added fuel to the fire, raising questions about whether Miller’s legal machine is only the start of a darker campaign.
Meanwhile Miller’s own legal history raises alarm bells.
He sued the Nation Media Group in 2016 for defamation after an article he claimed portrayed him as a wife-beater.
Earlier this year he issued a demand letter against blogger Nelson Amenya for alleging that Miller pocketed Sh30 million for non-existent work.
Sources say a fresh complaint was filed before the Advocates Disciplinary Committee by one Peter M. Maina accusing Miller of misappropriating client funds—an explosive charge that could rock the legal profession if substantiated.
For Kenyans watching, this is not just another lawyer-vs-blogger drama.
It’s a lightning-rod case spotlighting systemic collapse: when the men entrusted with justice morph into predators, and the courts become tools for vengeance rather than redress.
If Miller’s empire of influence holds, truth-telling may cost more than reputation—it may cost your freedom.
The question now: will the system fight back—or fold under pressure? The ordinary Kenyan deserves to know.
