Tag: Guy Spencer Elms

  • The Karen Predator: Agnes Kagure Has Spent A decade Trying To Steal A Dead Briton’s Land, And Now Betting On A Technicality Loophole

    The Karen Predator: Agnes Kagure Has Spent A decade Trying To Steal A Dead Briton’s Land, And Now Betting On A Technicality Loophole

    There is a peculiar industry that has flourished in Kenya’s prime real estate belts, particularly in Karen, Runda, Lavington, and the corridor bordering the Ngong Forest. It preys on a specific category of property owner: the foreign national, the elderly absentee landlord, the dying man with no local family, the deceased with a complicated estate. The predators identify the land, manufacture documents establishing a prior purchase or gift, move in physically while litigation crawls, and then exploit every procedural crack in the legal system to outlast the estate’s legitimate representatives. They are patient, well-connected, and practiced at using the police, the lands registry, and the courts simultaneously as weapons and shields.

    Agnes Kariuki Kagure, who prefers the polished shorthand ‘Agnes Kagure’ for her political branding, has become the most prominent face of this playbook in Nairobi’s legal and land circles. Across more than a decade, her name has appeared at the centre of multiple land disputes, each bearing the same hallmarks: a deceased or elderly owner, documents of suspicious provenance, allegations of forgery, police involvement on her side of the fence, and a determination to keep litigation alive long after courts have ruled against her. The most audacious of these battles concerns a six-acre estate in Karen along Ushirika Road, bordering the Ngong Forest, that once belonged to Roger Bryan Robson, a childless British national who made Kenya his permanent home until his death on August 8, 2012. More than thirteen years after Robson died, Kagure is still fighting for land that a High Court has told her she never bought, that Robson’s own family has sworn was never sold, and that a judge declared was clearly intended for wildlife conservation and charity.

    The latest chapter, reported in late May 2026, involves a courtroom manoeuvre that encapsulates everything about how this playbook works. Kagure’s lawyer, Conrad Maloba, extracted an admission from Robson’s estate executor, Guy Spencer Elms, that neither the will nor the associated title deeds had been fully certified by the relevant authorities as Kenyan succession law demands. In the theatre of cross-examination, the trap was elegantly laid. But what Maloba is carefully not highlighting, and what no headline has yet fully exposed, is the breathtaking audacity of that argument: a woman whose own documents have been denounced as forgeries by witnesses, judges, and forensic examiners across multiple proceedings is now trying to benefit from procedural shortfalls in the legitimate executor’s paperwork. The mouse is arguing that the cat has untidy whiskers.

    A woman whose documents have been denounced as forgeries by witnesses, judges and forensic examiners is now trying to benefit from procedural shortfalls in the legitimate executor’s paperwork.

    ROGER BRYAN ROBSON: THE MAN AND THE ESTATE

    Roger Bryan Robson was no eccentric hermit stumbled upon by a predator. He was a British businessman of means who had lived in Kenya long enough to own substantial property, accumulate legal affairs managed by a qualified Kenyan advocate, and make considered decisions about his estate while in full possession of his faculties. On March 24, 1997, he walked into the office of his trusted lawyer, Guy Spencer Elms, and executed a will. The document was witnessed by two persons and drafted by an advocate, satisfying every formal requirement Kenyan law imposes on testamentary instruments.

    He was explicit in his directions: his six-acre Karen plot, identified as LR No. 2327/10 and LR No. 2327/117, and a block of Upper Hill apartments were to be sold upon his death, with proceeds distributed among his nephew, the Kenya Wildlife Service, the Kenya Forest Service, and an educational charity. He appointed Elms and a second executor, Sean Battye, to carry this out. Battye eventually left Kenya and renounced his executorship, leaving Elms solely responsible. Robson’s health declined in his final years. Witnesses who appeared before Justice Maureen Odero during the extended succession hearing described a man who by 2011 was frail, with hand tremors that made his signature appear unsteady and jerky. Lawyer David Michuki, who represented Robson in separate rate disputes with the Nairobi City Council as recently as 2011, told the court that the signatures Kagure produced on her purported sale documents did not resemble Robson’s genuine signature. He was blunt: the photo on her conveyance document was not even of the deceased.

    On August 5, 2012, Robson was taken to Nairobi West Hospital by a man named Jackson Mulinge. He died three days later, childless, his estate intact. His brother, Michael Fairfax Robson, appearing by video link from the United Kingdom during the protracted proceedings, told the court unequivocally that between January 2011 and the day his brother died, Roger remained in possession of all his land and entered into no agreement to sell any of it to anyone. A handwritten letter Robson sent his brother in March 2011, the very period Kagure claims a sale was executed, contained no mention of any transaction with a Nairobi businesswoman.

    THE CLAIM THAT CAME FROM NOWHERE

    Kagure’s account of how she came to own Roger Robson’s Karen land has never been supported by a single piece of independently verifiable evidence. She maintains she purchased parcels in Karen from Robson in November 2011 for Sh100 million, making her the legitimate owner of land that, under her account, Robson simply forgot to mention in his will, to his brother, to his lawyer, or to anyone else in any documented form. She produced documents purporting to show a sale agreement. The estate said the signatures on those documents were not Robson’s.

    In one of the most telling exchanges during the trial before Justice Odero, Kagure’s conveyance documents were placed before David Michuki. He had represented Robson himself in his final years and knew his signature intimately. Michuki said the signature on Kagure’s documents did not look like Robson’s. The photograph affixed to the document, he added, was not of the man he knew. A police forensic examiner, Chief Inspector Susan Wanjiru, told the court that signatures on the will appeared to come from different individuals. The defence’s own expert, forensic document examiner Jacob Oduor, told the High Court in 2022 that he had examined Robson’s known signatures and found no evidence of forgery on the genuine will.

    What the evidence could not accommodate was Kagure’s total inability to produce a payment trail. Sh100 million paid in 2011 to a British businessman in Kenya would have generated a bank transaction, a money transfer record, a stamp duty receipt, a valuation report, something. Courts heard no such evidence. Robson’s estate never received or acknowledged any such payment. The Karen property remained encumbered by a bank charge during Robson’s lifetime, a fact Elms pointed out, which by itself would have made any outright cash transfer of title legally impossible without the bank’s express release.

    Courts heard no payment trail. No bank record. No stamp duty receipt. No valuation. Just documents bearing what witnesses say are not Robson’s signatures.

    THE PHYSICAL INVASION AND THE POLICE’S ROLE

    While litigation was being prepared, Kagure was not content to wait for courts. Elms appeared before Justice Mary Gitumbi in 2015 and told the court what had happened at the Karen property. Kagure, he said, had hired men who arrived at Ushirika Road accompanied by police officers. They ejected the estate’s caretaker. Then construction of a perimeter wall began around the six-acre estate. Justice Gitumbi issued an injunction barring Kagure and her agents from laying claim to, encroaching upon, trespassing on, or otherwise dealing with the property. The wall went up anyway.

    When Elms subsequently visited the property, he found it fenced and manned by individuals who prevented him, the court-recognised personal representative of the estate, from entering land he was legally charged with protecting. A subsequent ruling by Justice Lucy Njuguna went even further, making an observation that should have triggered institutional response but largely did not. The judge found that police were actively aiding fraudsters in attempts to dispossess Elms of the land. Police escorting people conducting what a court would eventually find to be a fraudulent property seizure. Officers of the law enabling exactly what the law prohibits. That explosive finding passed with minimal public accountability. Kagure faced no criminal charges for the physical invasion. No police officer faced discipline for facilitating it.

    A SYNDICATE AND ITS METHOD

    What happened at Ushirika Road in Karen follows a recognisable operational template that investigators, land lawyers, and property registrars privately describe as an organised acquisition playbook. It works in phases.

    Phase one is target selection. Vulnerable estates are identified through a network of informants that includes hospital workers, estate agents, court clerks, and registry insiders who can flag properties with probate delays, foreign ownership, or absent heirs. Properties bordering forests or national parks attract premium interest because supply is permanently constrained.

    Phase two is document manufacture. This is where rogue advocates, complicit notaries, and registry insiders become essential. A backdated sale agreement is drafted, typically predating the owner’s death by a year or two to avoid obvious impossibility. The deceased’s signature is replicated using samples obtained from genuine documents held at the lands registry or in court files. A power of attorney, also backdated, may be manufactured to add a veneer of authority. Stamp duty receipts can be counterfeited or, in more sophisticated operations, genuine stamps obtained through bribed officials. Witnesses to the purported transaction are recruited, sometimes people who share surnames with the deceased’s associates.

    Phase three is registration. The title is transferred at the lands registry using the manufactured documents. Where complicit registry officials are involved, the transfer is processed without scrutiny. Once a questionable title is on the register, it carries the presumption of legality that the Land Registration Act confers on registered titles, placing the burden of disproving it on whoever challenges it.

    Phase four is physical occupation. The grabber moves in, typically using hired muscle with a veneer of legal authority from the questionable title. Police connections matter enormously here. A police-assisted occupation is significantly harder to dislodge than a purely private trespass, because any counter-force immediately becomes a public order problem rather than a civil trespass matter.

    Phase five is legal attrition. The legitimate estate files suit. The grabber files a counter-suit, typically alleging that the estate’s documents are themselves forgeries. Criminal complaints are filed against the legitimate executor. The DCI investigates. Forensic reports are disputed. The DPP files charges. The High Court’s Family and Succession Division, the Environment and Land Court, and the magistrates’ courts all become active simultaneously. Each thread of litigation takes years. Court backlogs in Kenya’s property divisions routinely stretch to a decade or more.

    Phase six is the technicality harvest. After years of failed frontal assaults, syndicate lawyers mine the estate’s procedural history for formal defects. Did the will get certified by every required authority? Was the grant of probate stamped by the correct office? Were title deeds transmitted through every step of the succession process without a single procedural lapse? In a complex probate spanning a decade, across multiple court divisions, with a cast of executors who come and go, the probability of finding at least one procedural gap approaches certainty. That gap, however minor relative to the substance of the case, becomes the escape hatch.

    In a complex probate spanning a decade, the probability of finding at least one procedural gap approaches certainty. That gap becomes the escape hatch.

    THE CERTIFICATION TRAP: WHAT MALOBA IS NOT SAYING

    At the hearing reported on May 27, 2026, Maloba drew from Elms an admission that neither Robson’s will nor the associated title deeds had been fully certified by the relevant authorities as Kenyan succession law demands. Under the Law of Succession Act and the Land Registration Act, a will must be probated through the High Court with a formal grant, and titles passing through an estate require a chain of transmission documents, death certificates, and official endorsements before they are fully regularised in the lands register. If those steps were not completed to the letter, Maloba’s argument runs, the estate’s documents are fatally defective, potentially invalidating Elms’s standing entirely.

    The argument is technically creative. Courts do take succession formalities seriously, and incomplete probate documentation can create genuine complications. What Maloba is carefully not highlighting, however, is that the same technical scrutiny applied to Kagure’s own documents would obliterate her claim entirely. She has produced no probated purchase agreement. She has produced no independently verified payment record. She has produced documents that forensic experts and two of Robson’s own advocates told courts do not bear his genuine signature. Justice Hillary Chemitei, in a 33-page judgment delivered in June 2025, found no shred of evidence that Robson was coerced, that the will was properly executed and witnessed, and that Kagure’s claim had no factual foundation.

    That judgment was supposed to end it. The Environment and Land Court was directed to handle the residual title questions. But the criminal proceedings against Elms, which Kagure’s original complaint set in motion in 2017, remain alive, and the certification argument is now being pressed in what appears to be a parallel track designed to either force a settlement or create enough procedural chaos to make the estate’s position untenable.

    THE PERSECUTION OF GUY SPENCER ELMS

    Senior Lawyer Guy Spencer Elm giving his witness testimony
    Senior Lawyer Guy Spencer Elm giving his witness testimony on 27 May, 2026.

    Guy Spencer Elms has spent nearly a decade as a criminal defendant for doing his job. In 2017, then-Director of Public Prosecutions Keriako Tobiko directed his arrest on charges that he had forged Robson’s will and power of attorney, fraudulently obtaining letters of administration over the estate. The stated basis was forensic findings that purported signatures on the will were not genuine.

    The charge sheet is worth reciting in full because of how badly it has aged. Count one alleged that on or before March 24, 1997, Elms made a false document, namely Robson’s will, purporting it to be genuine. Count two alleged that on February 10, 2015, he presented that forged will to DCI Corporal Samuel Kamau at DCI headquarters. Count three alleged he forged a power of attorney dated January 24, 2010. Count four alleged he uttered that forged power of attorney to Kamau on the same date. Count five alleged that on October 30, 2013, at the High Court, he filed the forged will to obtain probate over land valued at Sh100 million. Elms denied all counts and was released on Sh400,000 cash bail.

    What followed was a procession of findings that systematically demolished the prosecution’s theory. By 2019, DCI investigators themselves found insufficient evidence to sustain the case and the criminal probe effectively collapsed. In November 2022, forensic document examiner Jacob Oduor appeared before the High Court and testified that after examining Robson’s known signatures across multiple documents, he found no evidence of forgery on the will. In June 2025, Justice Chemitei’s comprehensive judgment upheld the will in every particular, stating it was lawfully executed, properly witnessed, and showed no sign of coercion or mental incapacity.

    Logically, these findings should have triggered the DPP to drop the criminal charges. The DPP agreed. An application was filed in the Milimani magistrate’s court to withdraw the charges, informing Magistrate Ben Mark Ekubi that Justice Chemitei’s judgment had definitively validated the very will that was the subject of the prosecution. Ekubi declined not once but twice. The DPP appealed to the High Court. In January 2026, Justice Martin Muya dismissed that appeal, ruling there was no good reason to interfere with Ekubi’s decision. Kagure’s side had successfully argued that the criminal case should continue even though the civil court had fully validated what the criminal case alleged was a forgery.

    In August 2025, the absurdity intensified. Elms failed to appear for a court mention, his lawyer citing a sick child. Magistrate Ekubi issued an arrest warrant. The charges against Elms for possessing and submitting a document that a High Court has found to be genuine remain, technically, active. He is living a wanted man’s existence for having been, courts have now found, a faithful executor of a legitimate will.

    The charges against Elms for submitting a document a High Court found to be genuine remain, technically, active. He is wanted for having been a faithful executor.

    A PORTFOLIO OF PREDATION

    The Karen operation is the grandest entry in Kagure’s property dispute portfolio, but it is far from the only one. A picture assembled from court records spanning nearly a decade reveals a pattern that goes well beyond bad luck in property transactions.

    The Makadara case is the most operationally brazen. Ruth Wambui Kimani, a widow, told the Environment and Land Court in case 345 of 2018 that her late husband Kimani Mungai had purchased a plot along Jogoo Road in Makadara in 1997 and the family remained in possession until 2015, when Kagure appeared claiming she had bought it for Sh10 million. The transfer bearing Mungai’s signature was registered on October 7, 2015. The problem: Wambui produced a death certificate showing her husband died on October 26, 2010, nearly five years before the transfer. The land had been, on the face of the documents, sold by a corpse.

    When the case came to court, something extraordinary happened. A man identifying himself as Francis Kimani Mungai appeared, very much alive, seeking to join the proceedings and confirming he had sold the land to Kagure on July 30, 2015, for Sh10 million. Kagure’s side produced a living man to contradict the death certificate. Whether that man was the genuine Kimani Mungai or someone recruited to perform the role, the widow maintained her husband had died in 2010 and the transfer was impossible. In April 2025, Judge Oguttu Mboya issued a permanent order stopping Kagure from entering, occupying, or claiming the Eastlands plot, ruling that the registration of the property in her favour was premised on illegal and unlawful documents and was therefore void.

    Joel Munyoki Munene had a comparable experience. In ELC case 65 of 2017, Munene sued Kagure over a Nairobi Eastlands plot valued at over Sh20 million. He had acquired the property in 2002 and obtained a formal allotment letter from Nairobi City County, but found when he went to formalise his title that Kagure had somehow registered it in her name through what Judge Mboya would later describe as illegal and unlawful documents.

    Then there is the matter of the German investor. In late 2022, three months after losing the Nairobi gubernatorial election, Kagure was introduced to Uwe Heinz Odenthal, a German national, through a chain of connections involving his compatriot Jurgen Haese and Haese’s Kenyan wife Rose Kirimi. The vehicle was Trojan Six Oil 2019 Ltd, a petroleum company in which Kagure, Said Mohamed Farah, and Franklin Were Juma are listed as directors. Odenthal says he was presented with annual dividends of 30 percent on his invested capital and handed over one million euros, approximately Sh142 million, after taking out a bank loan in Germany to fund part of it. He received nothing. He filed a report with the DCI saying he had been cheated, stolen from, and defrauded. Kagure dismissed the allegation as politically motivated noise.

    THE POLITICAL REINVENTION AND WHY IT SHOULD ALARM NAIROBI

    Kagure first entered political consciousness in 2018, when Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko nominated her to replace the departed deputy governor Polycarp Igathe. She was a leading candidate for confirmation. Then the Karen and Makadara cases became public. Sonko, who had made public theatre of his anti-land-grabbing stance, quietly shelved the nomination without ever formally withdrawing it. Kagure’s political ambitions survived intact. She ran for Nairobi governor as an independent candidate in August 2022, finishing fourth behind Johnson Sakaja, Polycarp Igathe, and Harman Grewal. She then pivoted immediately into preparation for 2027, declaring her candidacy through social media in early 2025 with the backing of a section of the Kikuyu Council of Elders.

    Her public persona across this period has been carefully curated. She presents as a women’s empowerment advocate, a philanthropist, a mentor to the youth, a businesswoman who built herself from nothing. Her social media is professionally managed. When allegations resurface, she frames them as politically motivated attacks by rivals threatened by her ambitions. ‘Ever since I hinted at my political ambitions, I have been seeing all sorts of attacks and stories that date back as far as 1901,’ she wrote on social media in October 2024, after the German investor story broke. Every documented allegation becomes, in her telling, a fabrication by political enemies.

    What that framing cannot explain is why the attacks come from judges, not politicians. Judges Oguttu Mboya, Hillary Chemitei, Mary Gitumbi, Maureen Odero, and Lucy Njuguna have all made findings, issued injunctions, or delivered rulings against Kagure across these various disputes. None of these judicial officers is known to be aligned with any of her political rivals. Justice Njuguna’s finding that police were actively aiding fraudsters in the Karen case was not a political statement. It was a judicial observation on what the evidence before the court showed.

    THE CERTIFICATION GAMBIT AND WHAT COMES NEXT

    Back in the courtroom in May 2026, Conrad Maloba’s cross-examination of Elms was not a philosophical exercise. It was a calculated move in a long game. By extracting Elms’s acknowledgment that the will and title deeds were not fully certified through every required authority, Maloba has created an argument that, if accepted, could do one of two things. It could void the estate’s standing entirely, theoretically opening the door for Kagure’s contested documents to be treated as the only surviving claim. Or it could create enough uncertainty about the estate’s title that a settlement becomes attractive to Elms and the beneficiaries, particularly the charities and conservation bodies that have been waiting since 2012 for proceeds from Robson’s generosity.

    What Maloba cannot explain away, and what the court will be required to weigh when the hearing resumes in October 2026, is the full context. The certification shortfall, if it exists, is a procedural defect in documents that a High Court has already found to be substantively genuine. Justice Chemitei’s June 2025 ruling did not say the will might be genuine. It said there was no shred of evidence of coercion, that the will was properly executed and witnessed, and that it satisfied every legal test of validity. Procedural cures exist for estates with technical registration gaps. Kenya’s courts have ample equitable jurisdiction to regularise probate processes where the underlying instrument is found to be genuine.

    The court will also have to reckon with the underlying reality that Kagure’s own documents have never survived forensic scrutiny. No payment trail has ever been produced. Robson’s family swore under oath that no sale occurred. Two of Robson’s own advocates confirmed that the signatures on Kagure’s documents were not consistent with Robson’s genuine signature. The property was under a bank charge at the time of the alleged sale, making a clean title transfer impossible. That is the substance that sits behind Maloba’s procedural argument, and it is deeply unflattering to his client.

    The hearing resumes in October 2026. If Kagure’s certification argument fails, she is left without a legal avenue on the Karen property. If it somehow succeeds, an extraordinary injustice will have been done: a man appointed executor of a genuine will, prosecuted for a forgery courts have found never occurred, subjected to a decade of litigation, will have watched the beneficiaries of Robson’s generosity lose because of a stamp not applied to documents every substantive finding has validated.

    If Kagure’s technicality argument succeeds, conservation charities and Robson’s nephew will lose because of a missing certification stamp on documents every court has validated as genuine.

    THE LOOPHOLE AND THE LAW: WHAT KENYA MUST CONFRONT

    The certification argument, even if legally ambitious, exposes a systemic vulnerability extending far beyond this case. Kenya’s succession system is a labyrinth. The Law of Succession Act, the Land Registration Act, the Civil Procedure Act, and the various practice directions governing probate together create a process that, for complex cross-border estates, can generate decades of procedural irregularities through nothing more sinister than administrative delay, bureaucratic turnover, and institutional dysfunction. A title that passes through a genuine estate but is not certified precisely as required at every step is not necessarily a fraudulent title. It is a common title with a fixable procedural gap.

    The land grabbing syndicate’s genius is that it understands this systemic reality better than most legitimate executors. Predators do not need to prove they own the property. They only need to create enough doubt about whether the estate’s documents are perfect. In a system where perfection is rare, doubt is cheap. Kagure’s lawyers have invested more than a decade manufacturing doubt. The question for October 2026 is whether any Kenyan court will reward that investment with a six-acre Karen estate that was willed to elephants, forests, schoolchildren, and a British nephew who has been waiting since 2012 to honour his late brother’s wishes.

    Agnes Kagure will call whatever follows a politically motivated attack. She will write on social media that her enemies fear her. She will appear at women’s empowerment events and give speeches about resilience. But in the High Court in October 2026, the record will speak for itself. It will speak of a British man who made a clear, witnessed, legally executed will in 1997. Of an executor who has been prosecuted for implementing it. Of a businesswoman who has never produced a single document of purchase that survives forensic scrutiny. Of police officers a judge found were aiding fraudsters. Of a dead man’s signature appearing on transfer documents long after his death in at least one of her other disputed acquisitions. And of a Karen estate, six acres of Nairobi’s most valuable land bordering the Ngong Forest, that has not yet reached the charities and conservationists its owner intended it to benefit.

    That is not a politically motivated attack. That is a court record. And it is damning.

  • Slippery British Lawyer Guy Elms Spencer Dodges Karen Land Fraud Charges Again as Questions Mount Over Decade-Long Legal Maneuvering

    Slippery British Lawyer Guy Elms Spencer Dodges Karen Land Fraud Charges Again as Questions Mount Over Decade-Long Legal Maneuvering

    Guy Elms Spencer has become something of a legal phantom in Nairobi courtrooms, a British lawyer who appears to possess an almost supernatural ability to slip through the fingers of justice.

    His latest escape act came last week when High Court Judge Martin Muya granted him a temporary reprieve from facing forgery charges in a Sh100 million Karen land fraud case, pushing the matter to October 13.

    But this is merely the most recent chapter in what has become an embarrassingly protracted saga that raises uncomfortable questions about how well-connected foreign lawyers can game Kenya’s justice system.

    The facts are damning.

    Spencer stands accused of forging the will of a deceased British national, a crime that allegedly occurred more than a decade ago. Yet here we are in 2025, and the man has yet to enter a plea.

    The case has been withdrawn, revived, delayed, appealed, and twisted through so many legal contortions that one might reasonably wonder whether Spencer’s true expertise lies not in law but in the dark art of procedural manipulation.

    Consider the sheer audacity of his current position. After Magistrate Benmark Ekhubi rightly rejected yet another attempt by the Director of Public Prosecutions to withdraw the charges against him, Spencer had the temerity to rush to the High Court seeking to overturn that decision.

    His argument drips with the kind of technical sophistry that gives lawyers a bad name. He claims the magistrate misdirected himself on the law, ignored a civil court judgment, and violated his constitutional rights.

    This from a man who has been dodging his day in court for years.

    The timing of the DPP’s withdrawal attempts deserves scrutiny. This is the second time Renson Ingonga’s office has tried to pull the plug on Spencer’s prosecution.

    Magistrate Ekhubi, displaying the kind of judicial backbone that has been sorely lacking in this case, called out this pattern in language that should make every Kenyan sit up and pay attention.

    He spoke of the DPP speaking from both sides of the mouth, of arbitrary and capricious decisions, of a system that appears designed to shield certain accused persons from accountability.

    Spencer’s legal strategy reveals a man who understands that in Kenya’s overburdened courts, delay equals victory.

    He points to a High Court judgment from June 2025 that dismissed similar forgery allegations regarding the same will, arguing that forcing him to face criminal charges amounts to double jeopardy.

    But this conveniently ignores a fundamental principle of law that any first-year student understands. Civil and criminal proceedings serve different purposes, carry different standards of proof, and can proceed independently.

    The magistrate made this crystal clear, yet Spencer persists in conflating the two.

    What makes this particularly galling is Spencer’s invocation of constitutional rights. He claims his right to a fair trial is being violated, that he is being subjected to double jeopardy.

    This is rich coming from someone who has avoided trial altogether through an endless succession of procedural gymnastics.

    A fair trial means facing your accusers and letting the evidence speak. Spencer seems to prefer a different definition, one where fairness means never having to answer uncomfortable questions under oath.

    The magistrate’s ruling laid bare what appears to be a systemic problem. The complainant, the actual victim in this case, was not consulted before the DPP attempted to withdraw charges.

    This is not some minor procedural hiccup.

    It suggests that decisions about whether to prosecute are being made in smoke-filled rooms rather than in the open court of law. It points to the kind of behind-the-scenes maneuvering that corrodes public confidence in the justice system.

    Spencer’s defense team will no doubt paint him as a victim of prosecutorial overreach, a man caught in the crosshairs of a system that refuses to accept the findings of a civil court.

    Guy Spencer Elms is battling mounting fraud cases in Nairobi and Kwale, with his alleged Freemason ties painting the picture of a lawyer who built power on forged papers and arrogance now facing the weight of justice.
    Guy Spencer Elms is battling mounting fraud cases in Nairobi and Kwale, with his alleged Freemason ties painting the picture of a lawyer who built power on forged papers and arrogance now facing the weight of justice.

    But the public is entitled to ask harder questions. Why has it taken more than a decade to bring this case to trial? Who benefits from these endless delays? What influence does a well-connected British lawyer wield in Nairobi legal circles that allows him to repeatedly avoid the dock?

    The alleged forgery involves property worth Sh100 million in Karen, one of Nairobi’s most exclusive neighborhoods.

    This is not some trivial dispute over a garden fence. If Spencer indeed forged a will to fraudulently acquire such valuable property, he deserves to face the full force of the law.

    If he is innocent, he should welcome the opportunity to clear his name in open court rather than hiding behind procedural objections.

    Justice Muya’s decision to grant a temporary order halting the plea-taking is procedurally correct but practically frustrating. It means more delay, more legal fees, more time for memories to fade and witnesses to disappear.

    It means the complainant must endure yet another period of uncertainty while Spencer’s lawyers craft their next objection.

    The pattern is unmistakable.

    File an application, get a temporary order, argue for months, lose, appeal, get another temporary order, and repeat. It is a strategy that works brilliantly in a system where judges are overworked, court files go missing, and the wheels of justice turn at glacial speed.

    For a man facing serious criminal charges, time is the most valuable commodity, and Spencer has proven himself a master at buying it.

    Magistrate Ekhubi deserves credit for seeing through the smoke and mirrors.

    His insistence that Spencer must finally take a plea, his recognition that the DPP cannot simply withdraw cases at will without proper consultation, and his clear statement that civil proceedings do not bar criminal prosecution show judicial courage.

    His ruling reflects an understanding that justice delayed is justice denied, not just for victims but for society as a whole.

    Yet here we are, with Spencer having successfully deployed his legal nuclear option.

    The High Court review application has given him exactly what he wanted, more time, more breathing room, more opportunity to work the angles.

    October 13 will come, and if past is prologue, there will be another application, another technical objection, another reason why this British lawyer cannot possibly be expected to stand in a Kenyan court and answer for his alleged crimes.

    The case raises broader questions about how foreign nationals, particularly those with legal training and connections, navigate Kenya’s justice system.

    Does Spencer receive treatment that an ordinary Kenyan accused of similar crimes would never enjoy? Would a local lawyer have been allowed to drag out proceedings for over a decade? The uncomfortable answer seems obvious.

    Kenya’s legal system prides itself on independence and fairness, on the principle that all are equal before the law regardless of race, nationality, or social standing.

    The Spencer case tests that principle. If a British lawyer accused of forging a will worth Sh100 million can avoid trial for more than ten years through procedural warfare, what message does that send? It suggests that justice in Kenya is not blind but selective, that the scales can be tipped by those who know which levers to pull.

    The prosecution now faces a critical test.

    When the matter comes before Justice Muya on October 13, they must be prepared to counter Spencer’s arguments with equal vigor and superior evidence.

    They must demonstrate why the magistrate’s decision was correct, why Spencer must finally face trial, and why the constitutional protections he invokes do not shield him from accountability for alleged criminal conduct.

    More fundamentally, this case demands that we examine the systems and practices that allow such protracted delays. The DPP’s office must explain its pattern of attempting to withdraw charges in this matter.

    The judiciary must find ways to prevent accused persons from indefinitely postponing justice through serial applications and appeals. Parliament must consider whether the procedural rules need tightening to prevent abuse by those with deep pockets and legal sophistication.

    Guy Elms Spencer may ultimately prove innocent of the charges against him.

    That is for a court to decide after hearing evidence and weighing testimony. But his innocence or guilt is almost beside the point now.

    What matters is that a man accused of serious economic crimes has managed to avoid trial for more than a decade, making a mockery of the criminal justice system in the process.

    Whether through his own legal brilliance or through the failure of prosecutors and courts to hold the line, Spencer has demonstrated that in Kenya, if you have the resources and the know-how, you can run out the clock on justice itself.

    As October 13 approaches, Kenyans will watch to see whether this will finally be the day when Guy Elms Spencer stands before a court and enters a plea, or whether he will pull yet another rabbit from his legal hat.

    The smart money, based on his track record, knows which way to bet. And that, more than any single case outcome, is the real scandal here.

  • Blow To Lawyer Elms Spencer As Court Directs To Take Plea In Sh100M Karen Land Fraud

    Blow To Lawyer Elms Spencer As Court Directs To Take Plea In Sh100M Karen Land Fraud

    Senior Principal Magistrate rejects DPP’s withdrawal bid as British lawyer faces five criminal charges over disputed will

    British lawyer Guy Spencer Elms suffered a major legal setback yesterday when a Nairobi court rejected the Director of Public Prosecutions’ attempt to withdraw fraud charges against him, ordering him to take plea on October 7 in a case involving a disputed Sh100 million Karen property.

    Senior Principal Magistrate Ben Mark Ekhubi dismissed the DPP’s application to discontinue the matter, ruling that the long-running case must proceed to trial despite prosecution claims of insufficient evidence.

    The decision marks a dramatic turn in the contentious legal battle that has stretched over several years, centering on allegations that Spencer forged the will of late British businessman Roger Bryan Robson to fraudulently claim valuable real estate.

    Five Criminal Charges

    Spencer faces a litany of charges under the Penal Code, including making a false document, uttering forged documents, and demanding property through fraudulent means.

    The prosecution alleges that on or before March 24, 1997, Spencer created a fake will purporting to be signed by Robson, who died almost 13 years ago. The forged document was allegedly presented to police at DCI headquarters in February 2015, with Spencer claiming it was genuine.

    British lawyer Guy Spencer Elms
    British lawyer Guy Spencer Elms

    Court documents reveal Spencer also stands accused of forging a Power of Attorney dated January 24, 2010, in Robson’s name, which he similarly presented to investigators as authentic.

    Most significantly, prosecutors claim that on October 30, 2013, Spencer filed the forged will at the High Court to obtain a Grant of Probate in succession case No 935 of 2013, seeking to inherit the deceased’s substantial estate.

    Failed Legal Maneuvers

    The case has been marked by numerous legal maneuvers and delays.

    In August 2025, Magistrate Ekhubi issued an arrest warrant against Spencer after he failed to appear in court, with his lawyers claiming he had traveled to London to attend to a sick child.

    The magistrate rejected these explanations, ruling there was no justifiable reason for the accused’s absence.

    Wednesday’s court session saw Spencer’s legal team request additional time to file applications challenging the court’s position, arguing their client had consistently complied with court directions and that complainants had no role in dictating plea dates.

    DPP’s Failed Withdrawal Bid

    The DPP had argued that proceeding with the trial would constitute an abuse of process, citing insufficient evidence to secure a conviction.

    Spencer’s defense team initially supported this position, maintaining that the will’s validity had already been contested in separate succession proceedings where Spencer acted merely as executor, not beneficiary.

    However, complainants in the matter vehemently opposed the withdrawal application, insisting that the alleged forgery raised serious criminal questions that could only be resolved through a full trial.

    Their opposition proved decisive, with Magistrate Ekhubi ruling that the matter must proceed in the interests of justice.

    Property Dispute Background

    The disputed estate includes prime beachfront property in Msambweni, Kwale County, and has been the subject of intense litigation involving multiple parties claiming ownership.

    Court documents indicate that Robson’s death sparked a succession battle, with various parties presenting conflicting claims about the billionaire’s final wishes regarding his substantial property portfolio.

    The case has raised serious questions about document authentication and the vulnerability of high-value estates to fraudulent claims, particularly involving foreign nationals’ property in Kenya.

    Legal experts suggest the case could set important precedents for handling disputed wills and succession matters involving substantial estates.

    The rejection of the DPP’s withdrawal application signals the court’s determination to ensure that serious allegations of document forgery are properly ventilated through trial proceedings, regardless of prosecutorial reservations.

    Spencer’s case also highlights ongoing challenges in Kenya’s property registration system and the need for robust verification mechanisms to prevent fraudulent transfers of high-value assets.

    With Spencer currently out on a Sh50,000 personal bond, all eyes will be on the October 7 plea session where the British lawyer must formally respond to the charges against him.

    The prosecution has confirmed its readiness to proceed, though it indicated it would not object to brief delays if Spencer’s legal team requires additional preparation time.

    The case represents one of the most significant property fraud allegations involving a foreign national in Kenya’s recent legal history, with implications extending beyond the immediate parties to broader questions of estate security and document integrity.

    As the matter heads to trial, it serves as a stark reminder of the complex legal challenges surrounding high-value property disputes and the lengths some parties may go to secure valuable assets through potentially fraudulent means.

    The October 7 proceedings will mark the beginning of what promises to be a closely watched trial that could finally resolve questions that have lingered for over a decade about Robson’s true final wishes and the authenticity of documents presented in his name.

  • Puzzle Over Tycoon’s Beachfront Estate As Daughters Claim Ownership

    Puzzle Over Tycoon’s Beachfront Estate As Daughters Claim Ownership

    A complex inheritance battle has erupted over a prime 53-acre beachfront estate in Msambweni, Kwale County, with multiple parties claiming ownership of the valuable coastal property left by the late billionaire businessman Pritam Singh Panesar.

    The dispute has evolved into a multi-layered legal puzzle involving disputed title deeds, alleged document forgery, and the sudden emergence of two women claiming to be the tycoon’s daughters.

    The controversy centers around city lawyer Guy Spencer Elms and accountant Nileshkumar Mohanlal Shah, who initially presented what they claimed was a legitimate title deed for the sprawling beachfront property.

    However, their ownership claim faced immediate scrutiny from the Ministry of Lands, which revoked their documentation in 2024, citing serious irregularities in the property registration process.

    The ministry’s action was temporarily halted by a January court order, allowing the legal contest to continue while the matter undergoes judicial review.

    The case took an unexpected turn when two women identifying themselves as Tanmeet Kaur Panesar and Jasmeet Kaur Panesar stepped forward through a public notice published in local media, introducing themselves as the late tycoon’s daughters and claiming to be the ultimate beneficiaries of his estate.

    In their statement, the sisters defended Spencer and Shah as legitimate executors acting purely on their instructions, insisting the pair had “no beneficial interest” in their late father’s property in Kwale’s Msambweni area.

    However, this defense creates additional complications, as the names of Tanmeet and Jasmeet do not appear anywhere in the will that Spencer and Shah deposited in court.

    Their sudden emergence in the public domain has raised fundamental questions about the true structure of Panesar’s estate and the identity of his legitimate heirs. Legal observers note that their absence from the original will documentation presents significant challenges to their claims of inheritance.

    Forgery claims

    The legitimacy of the entire succession process came under serious question when the Directorate of Criminal Investigations forensic unit became involved in analyzing the disputed documentation.

    DCI forensic document examiner Alex Mwongera conducted detailed analysis comparing signatures on the contested will against those on Panesar’s national identity card.

    The forensic investigation concluded that the signatures did not match, suggesting potential document manipulation or forgery.

    Central to the legal dispute is gazette notice number 14724, dated November 8, 2024, and signed by Kwale Land Registrar SN Mokaya.

    The registrar officially degazetted the title deed that had been issued to Spencer and Shah on July 28, 2023, ruling that it had been unlawfully procured.

    The gazette notice affirmed that the only valid title deed remained the original one issued to Panesar on July 9, 2009, more than a decade before his death in July 2018.

    Speaking to a local daily, Land Registrar Mokaya confirmed the nullification of the disputed document, stating that “the duo misrepresented facts and when we noticed, we initiated the degazettement.”

    He explained that while their title remains technically valid due to the court injunction preventing final degazettement, the proper procedure would have required the first title to be surrendered for cancellation before any new title could be issued.

    The gazette notice directed Spencer and Shah to surrender their disputed title within 60 days.

    When they failed to comply with this directive, the registrar declared the 2023 title “cancelled, of no effect, and null and void.”

    This administrative action effectively stripped them of any legal claim to the beachfront estate, though the court injunction continues to prevent final resolution of the matter.

    The complexity of the case deepened further with the involvement of three additional claimants: Mohammed Ruwa Maridadi, Anthony Michael Mwanza Mulwa, and Ahmed Ouma Randa.

    These men have mounted their own legal challenge for the prime beachfront parcel, claiming to have acquired rights over the property through adverse possession after living on the land for over twelve years.

    They requested that the title be transferred into their names based on their extended occupation of the property.

    However, their claim was quashed in court after Spencer and Shah successfully applied to set it aside, arguing that as the duly appointed executors and trustees of the estate, they should have been joined in the original adverse possession case.

    This legal victory provided temporary relief for Spencer and Shah, though it did not resolve the fundamental questions about the authenticity of their appointment as executors.

    The late Pritam Singh Panesar, who died in July 2018, left behind a vast business empire stretching from Nairobi to the Coast.

    His fortune has become the center of multiple legal battles, with various parties claiming different portions of his estate.

    The beachfront property in Msambweni represents one of the most valuable assets in his portfolio, making it a particularly contentious piece in the overall succession puzzle.

    Legal experts following the case have noted the unprecedented nature of the dispute, which combines elements of property law, succession planning, document authentication, and criminal investigation.

    The involvement of forensic analysis in determining the authenticity of crucial documents represents a significant development in Kenyan property law, potentially setting new precedents for how similar disputes are resolved.

    The daughters’ public statement claiming that the will has never been challenged directly contradicts court filings and forensic reports that clearly document ongoing disputes over its authenticity.

    This discrepancy has raised additional questions about their understanding of the legal proceedings or their access to accurate information about the case’s status.

    The case highlights broader systemic issues within Kenya’s land registration system, particularly regarding the verification of property transfers and the prevention of fraudulent documentation.

    The ability of parties to obtain seemingly legitimate title deeds through questionable means has exposed vulnerabilities that could affect property rights across the country.

    As the legal battle continues, all parties await resolution through the judicial system.

    The outcome will likely establish important precedents for property inheritance disputes in Kenya and could influence how succession matters involving high-value coastal real estate are handled in the future.

    The beachfront estate remains under legal protection while the various claims are adjudicated, ensuring that this valuable piece of coastal property cannot be sold or developed until clear ownership is established.

    The Panesar succession battle appears far from resolution, with each new development adding layers of complexity to what has become one of the most closely watched inheritance disputes in recent Kenyan legal history.

    The final determination of rightful ownership will require careful judicial consideration of forensic evidence, document authenticity, and the legitimate claims of all parties involved in this intricate legal puzzle.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Going After The Dead Foreigners’ Land: Singer Ringtone and Politician Agnes Kagure’s Disturbing Parallels

    Going After The Dead Foreigners’ Land: Singer Ringtone and Politician Agnes Kagure’s Disturbing Parallels

    In Nairobi’s upscale neighborhoods of Karen and Runda, a troubling pattern has emerged involving prime properties once owned by deceased foreigners. At the center of multiple high-profile disputes are two notable Kenyan personalities: gospel musician Alex Apoko, known as Ringtone, and Nairobi politician Agnes Kagure.

    Both have become entangled in remarkably similar controversies—laying claim to valuable properties shortly after the deaths of their foreign owners, raising serious questions about Kenya’s property rights protections.

    The systematic targeting of deceased foreigners’ estates

    Court records reveal striking similarities in how both Ringtone and Kagure have attempted to acquire properties worth millions of dollars.

    In both cases, they’ve claimed to have purchased the properties from elderly foreign owners shortly before their deaths, presenting documentation that experts have later questioned as potentially fraudulent.

    “This appears to be a calculated pattern targeting vulnerable elderly expatriates with valuable land holdings and limited local family connections,” says property lawyer Martin Ochieng, who specializes in estate litigation.

    “Once the original owner dies, suddenly these powerful individuals emerge with purported sales agreements that the deceased’s representatives know nothing about.”

    Gospel artist Ringtone, who rose from street life to musical fame, now faces criminal charges for allegedly defrauding Teresiah Adhiambo Odhiambo of land worth Sh50 million in Runda.

    Court documents show Ringtone claimed adverse possession, asserting he had lived on the property since 2001 a claim investigators found questionable after reviewing land registry records showing Ms. Odhiambo had legally purchased the property in 2000 and built a house there in 2009.

    This isn’t Ringtone’s first such dispute.

    In 2023, he was charged with malicious damage to property and assault after a confrontation with a South Sudanese family over a Karen property registered to their late father, Kongkong Paulino Matip.

    Perhaps most notably, in 2021, Ringtone became involved in a legal battle over a Runda property belonging to deceased Swedish national Mona Ingegard Bjorklund, who died in 2007.

    Despite a contested will being on record, Ringtone claimed Bjorklund had “rescued him from the streets” and allowed him to live on her property for over 20 years.

    In another incident in 2016, Ringtone attempted to evict a family from a Runda home that had belonged to a deceased foreigner, claiming he had been paying rent and living there for two years—while the family maintained they had lived there for 35 years.

    Kagure’s Sh600 million Karen land battle

    Agnes Kagure.
    Agnes Kagure.

    Meanwhile, Agnes Kagure, who unsuccessfully contested the Nairobi gubernatorial seat in 2022, is fighting her own legal battle over prime Karen land worth Sh600 million, formerly owned by British businessman Roger Bryan Robson, who died in 2012.

    Kagure claims she purchased the property from Robson for Sh100 million in cash a year before his death in 2011.

    However, lawyer Guy Spencer Elms, who was named executor in Robson’s will dated March 24, 1997, has contested this claim.

    Robson’s will intended to leave his properties to wildlife charities and a nephew in England.

    The dispute intensified when Kagure filed court papers in October 2017 seeking to revoke Elms’ grant of probate, claiming the will was fraudulent.

    She presented a sale agreement and transfer conveyance deed dated November 18, 2011.

    In a dramatic twist, Elms reported to police that Kagure had fraudulently obtained transfer documents.

    After forensic investigations, Elms himself was arrested and prosecuted in 2017 for allegedly forging the will—charges that were later dismissed in March 2019.

    Additional witness testimony has further complicated Kagure’s claims.

    Robson’s brother, Michael Fairfax, testified from the UK that Robson never sold the land to Kagure and was still living on the property when he died in August 2012.

    Another witness stated that Robson’s signature on Kagure’s sale agreement did not match authentic examples and noted that the photo on the conveyance documents wasn’t even of Robson.

    A British Lawyer’s Nightmare

    The case involving Kagure has had particularly serious consequences for British lawyer Guy Elms.

    According to UK media reports, Elms has been “shot at, held at gunpoint and threatened with prison” since attempting to execute Robson’s will.

    Despite obtaining a court order in July 2015 instructing Kagure to vacate Robson’s house, the property reportedly remained occupied as police failed to enforce the order.

    A forensic analysis by Kenya’s National Land Commission in March 2015 found that Robson’s estate had been targeted by “fraudsters working for influential people in the government” and “criminal goons enjoying political and police protection.”

    The commission’s deputy director of investigations described the 2011 conveyance presented by Kagure as an “outright forgery.”

    Troubling Connections

    Investigations have revealed potential political connections that may explain the prolonged disputes.

    Phone records obtained during Elms’ trial reportedly showed that Kagure exchanged over 49 text messages and calls with then-Governor of Nairobi Mike Sonko during the court proceedings in 2017.

    Her nomination for deputy governorship was later shelved when these land dispute cases gained wider attention.

    Legal experts point out that both Ringtone and Kagure appear to target similar victims—elderly foreigners with limited family connections in Kenya but substantial property holdings in upscale neighborhoods.

    “I suspect the reason they targeted Roger’s land was that he was white, a recluse, and did not have any obvious relatives in the area,” Elms told British media. “I think this is not the first time it’s happened. I think some elderly whites are regarded as vulnerable and they are targeted to see what they can get away with.”

    These cases highlight significant concerns about property rights protection in Kenya, particularly for foreign nationals and their estates.

    They also raise questions about potential corruption within land registration systems and law enforcement agencies.

    “When foreigners die in Kenya, their properties become extremely vulnerable,” says Catherine Mumbi, a property rights advocate. “The combination of slow-moving courts, potential corruption, and determined land cartels creates a perfect storm that can overwhelm even the most carefully drafted wills.”

    Both the Ringtone and Kagure cases remain ongoing in Kenyan courts, with hearings often delayed and proceedings moving at a glacial pace. For now, the disputed properties remain in limbo, as do the charitable intentions of their deceased owners.