Tag: Kaplan and Stratton Advocates

  • The Confession, The Child, The Forged Documents and The Silenced Commission: Havi Lays Bare The Full Architecture Of Corruption Behind The Tuju Property Saga

    The Confession, The Child, The Forged Documents and The Silenced Commission: Havi Lays Bare The Full Architecture Of Corruption Behind The Tuju Property Saga

    Nelson Havi has been practising Kenyan law for three decades. He has stood before every court the country possesses. He has served as president of the Law Society of Kenya and, by general consensus across the bar, has no institutional territory left to protect that would require him to moderate what he says in public.

    When Havi speaks in the language of accusation, the legal profession listens, because he has shown no hesitation in putting his name to things that others only say in their cars.

    In the past 72 hours, he has put his name to the most concentrated series of judicial corruption allegations to emerge from a single dispute in Kenya’s post-independence legal history. He has named a sitting High Court judge as the intended recipient of a bribe. He has alleged that one of the arrested men claims to share a child with that judge.

    He has pointed to forgery of documents filed in court by a Senior Counsel at a leading Nairobi law firm. He has alleged that the English arbitration award forming the foundation of the entire debt recovery exercise was itself corruptly procured. And he has accused the Judicial Service Commission not merely of inaction but of active participation in protecting corrupt judges by accepting bribes to dismiss formal complaints.

    Each allegation is serious on its own.

    Together they constitute a theory of total institutional capture: a commercial dispute in which the corruption did not begin with the Karen auctioneers who showed up on Monday morning, but with the original deal, ran through the London arbitration, infected the Kenyan court proceedings, enlisted the document process, co-opted the disciplinary commission, and finally placed a disgraced former judge at the gate of a former Cabinet secretary’s property to collect one last payment for the judge now presiding over the case.

    “The level of corruption in the Judiciary in general, and in this matter in particular, is so egregious that I cannot agree to be persuaded by the popular but uninformed narrative that this is a case of a defaulter debtor abusing the legal process not to pay. It is not.”

    The Confession and the Child

    Havi’s most incendiary disclosure is not the naming of Lady Justice Josephine Wayua Wambua Mongare as the alleged beneficiary of the Sh10.4 million bribery scheme. It is what he added about the personal relationship alleged between the judge and one of the men arrested on March 9, 2026 by the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission.

    “One of the men arrested on Monday soliciting for a bribe represented that he has a child with the judge on whose behalf he was soliciting,” Havi wrote. He did not name which of the four arrested suspects made this claim. The EACC has confirmed that former High Court judge Joseph Mutava, advocate Kimani Wachira and two other individuals were taken into custody and processed at the Integrity Centre Police Station in Nairobi. The commission has said the matter will be forwarded to the Director of Public Prosecutions for charging. It has not addressed the claim about the child.

    Havi has separately stated, in what amounts to direct attribution, that Mutava confessed to investigators that he was collecting the money on behalf of Mongare.

    The significance of this claim is structural. Mutava was removed from the High Court bench in 2016 following a tribunal chaired by David Maraga that found him to have improperly handled cases, including a matter involving businessman Kamlesh Pattni. His removal was upheld by the Supreme Court.

    A man with that record, allegedly dispatched by a sitting judge to collect money from a litigant on the day that judge delivers her ruling in his case, is not a peripheral detail in the story of how the Kenyan judiciary functions. It is the story.

    Mongare has not commented. Her chambers have issued no statement. The Chief Justice’s office has been silent. The JSC has produced nothing. Mongare continues to sit as a judge of the Commercial and Tax Division at Milimani, her cases proceeding on schedule, as if none of this exists.

    The Forgery Allegation: A Senior Counsel and a Leading Law Firm

    The second strand of Havi’s expanded statement concerns the integrity of the documents on which the entire case was built. Addressing those who frame the Tuju dispute as a simple matter of debt evasion, he asked: “Why are you disregarding the forgery of documents filed in Court by a Senior Counsel in a leading Ivy League Law Firm?”

    He did not name the firm or the counsel in this particular post.

    But the identity of the Senior Counsel concerned is already a matter of public record, established by Tuju himself in a formal complaint submitted to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations in February 2026.

    Tuju named Senior Counsel Fred Ojiambo of Kaplan and Stratton Advocates as the subject of his report, accusing Ojiambo of fabricating evidence and filing false affidavits in cases linked to the East Africa Development Bank.

    Tuju’s complaint to the DCI alleged that Ojiambo’s conduct amounted to fabricating evidence contrary to Section 113 of the Penal Code, conspiracy to defeat justice contrary to Section 117 and providing false information to a public servant contrary to Section 129.

    He accused Ojiambo of invoking what he characterised as a non-existent diplomatic immunity for the EADB at the High Court, a manoeuvre Tuju alleged had caused proceedings in a related Magistrates Court matter to stall for over a year. He also alleged that the false affidavits filed in the EADB dispute bore resemblance to documents previously submitted at the Supreme Court level in the proceedings against him and his company, Dari Limited.

    Ojiambo denied the allegations when contacted by media, stating that he had never forged court documents or affidavits. The DCI confirmed it had received Tuju’s complaint and would make recommendations to the DPP. No charges have been filed.

    But the complaint sits on the public record, now amplified by Havi’s platform, and it answers the specific question that commentators and legal bloggers have persistently raised: if Tuju’s dispute is simply a debt he cannot pay, why is he making allegations about forged documents? According to Havi, and now according to a DCI complaint with specific penal code references, the answer is that the documents may not all be genuine.

    The timing of this allegation is notable because of what else was happening inside the courtroom during the same period.

    In November 2025, before Justice Mongare in an application by Dari Limited seeking to reopen the enforcement question, the EADB’s own former Kenya Country Manager, David Odongo, took the stand and, according to Tuju’s account of his testimony, completely recanted the affidavit evidence he had previously filed.

    Tuju described this as newly discovered material capable of altering the entire outcome of the matter. Justice Mongare dismissed the application on March 9, 2026, ruling that the recanted evidence was neither new nor capable of altering her earlier findings and that the matter was barred by res judicata and sub judice principles.

    For Havi, the sequence in which a bank officer recants his sworn evidence, a Senior Counsel is accused of forgery, and the court nevertheless proceeds to grant the bank’s position in full on the same day that the presiding judge’s alleged bagman is arrested outside does not resolve as a coincidence. It resolves as a system.

    The Arbitration: Corrupting the Foundation

    The third element of Havi’s argument is the most legally sophisticated, and the one with the largest structural consequences if pursued. He asked, with visible impatience, why commentators were “ignoring the uncontested allegations of corruption between the arbitrator and one of the parties together with its Advocate” in the English proceedings that produced the foundational award.

    The dispute’s genesis in English courts is well established in the public record. The East African Development Bank obtained a judgment from the High Court of Justice in England in June 2019, after arbitration proceedings, ordering repayment of over USD 15 million arising from a loan facility agreement signed in April 2015 between the bank and Tuju’s company, Dari Limited.

    That judgment was recognised and registered in Kenya in 2020, upheld by the Court of Appeal in 2023, and allowed to stand by the Supreme Court’s refusal to suspend enforcement. Every Kenyan court to have considered the matter has treated the English award as valid, final and enforceable.

    Havi’s position, delivered without qualification, is that the award is not valid. His legal basis for that position is elementary and well-established in international arbitration jurisprudence: an award or judgment obtained by corruption is null and void. This is not a controversial proposition.

    The principle that corruption vitiates an arbitral award is deeply embedded in the public policy exception to enforcement recognised in the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which Kenya has ratified.

    It is the principle on which Nigeria succeeded in the English High Court in 2023 in overturning an USD 11 billion arbitration award in the P&ID case, where the court found that the award had been obtained through the most severe abuses of the arbitral process.

    Havi has further pointed to what he described as cases where securities given for lending have been exempted from realisation through auctions or private treaties on account of corruption, fraud, unfairness and unconscionableness on the part of the bank.

    He grounded this in a reference to the Supreme Court Act, noting that it initially contained a section for the invalidation of a judgment of a judge removed from office for unsuitability to serve, a section that was, in his words, “removed mysteriously.”

    The implication is that the legislative architecture which would have provided a direct remedy for a corrupted judgment was deliberately dismantled, and that the absence of that provision now forces the courts to rely on more cumbersome paths to the same destination.

     

    Whether Tuju’s legal team can produce the evidence necessary to ground a corruption challenge to the English award is a question that will determine the future of this litigation. But Havi’s point is prior to that evidentiary question. He is asking why the institutional commentators, the bar association, the Judiciary, the media, are treating the award as sacrosanct when its procurement has been publicly alleged to be corrupt and those allegations have not been contested on the merits.

    The Debt Argument: ‘Sisi Siyo Wajinga’

    Havi addressed directly the popular framing that Tuju is simply a debtor evading his obligations. He did not dispute that Tuju and his companies owe money. He made a more provocative and more interesting argument.

    “Listen friends and enemies, the issue is not whether Raphael Tuju and his companies are in debt or default. Everyone is. In fact, the Government of Kenya is in debt and in default,” he wrote. He asked whether the conclusion to be drawn is that goons should be sent to government offices, and everyone in debt should face corruptly obtained auction orders.

    He turned to the specific buyers who allegedly arrived at the Karen property claiming to have purchased it: Mr Chebet, Mr Kiprono and Mr Kiprop, named by Tuju himself. “You want to tell me that it is only Kiprono, Kiprop and Chebet who have billions of shillings in the collapsed economy to buy someone’s hotels in an auction when everyone, including the Government of Kenya where they serve and/or are doing business with, are broke? Sisi siyo wajinga ma Fren.”

    The argument is not legally technical. It is politically shrewd. In an economy where the government has repeatedly acknowledged its own fiscal distress, where debt service consumes the majority of the national budget and Treasury bills are sold to bridge monthly salary obligations, the emergence of private buyers with the immediate liquidity to acquire multi-billion shilling properties at distressed auction prices invites questions about the origin of that capital that no court in the country is currently asking. Havi is asking them in public.

    His framing also serves a secondary purpose. By establishing that debt and default are universal conditions in the current Kenyan economy, he dissolves the moral framework in which the bank, the auctioneers and the court are cast as enforcers of legitimate commercial order against an unworthy debtor.

    If the enforcement mechanism is itself corrupt, from the arbitration through the documents through the judge through the commission, then the identity of Tuju as a debtor becomes irrelevant to the question of whether the process is legitimate.

    The JSC: A Commission That Watches and Does Nothing

    The Judicial Service Commission received a public allegation from a Senior Counsel on a verified social media platform stating that a sitting judge was the intended recipient of a criminal bribe in an active case. It has said nothing. This is not unusual. The commission has a documented history of inaction in the face of specific, evidenced complaints about individual judges, including complaints filed by Havi himself.

    In July 2025, Havi filed a formal sworn petition seeking the removal of Lady Justice Mongare over her conduct in a separate commercial matter.

    In January 2025, he filed a formal petition seeking the removal of Justice Alfred Mabeya over a pattern of conduct in the Commercial Division that Havi described as gross misconduct and misbehaviour. In August 2025, the JSC dismissed the Mabeya petition on jurisdictional grounds.

    The Mongare petition produced no recorded outcome. Havi’s allegation this week is that both judges bribed their way clear of formal accountability, rendering the commission not a safeguard against judicial corruption but its most reliable protection.

    The Mabeya complaint record adds texture that the JSC has not been required to account for publicly. A 2015 complaint against Mabeya was withdrawn after the complainant was, according to reporting at the time, financially induced to abandon it.

    A 2020 petition seeking his removal was similarly withdrawn in circumstances that were never explained. In December 2024, Havi named specific Senior Counsel who he alleged had never lost a case before Mabeya, suggesting a structured commercial relationship between the judge and certain practitioners in the Commercial Division.

    The JSC received Havi’s formal petition in January 2025 and disposed of it in August 2025 on grounds that kept the substance of the allegations entirely unexamined.

    If Havi’s characterisation of the commission is accurate, then the body constitutionally charged with maintaining judicial integrity has been converted into a mechanism for laundering judicial corruption. Complaints enter. Money changes hands. Complaints exit, classified as jurisdictionally defective or lacking in merit. The judges return to their benches. The cases continue. The auctioneers arrive.

    Tuju at the Wall

    Raphael Tuju stood at the gate of his Dari Business Park on Ngong Road this week and delivered the statement of a man who has decided that the language of law cannot reach him any further. “They will have to kill me first and organise a big burial for me in Rarieda before they take this property.” He has litigated in London.

    He has appealed in Nairobi. He has petitioned the Supreme Court. He has filed complaints with the Land Registrar, the DCI, the EACC. He has watched his applications dismissed. He has watched property transfers proceed through what he alleges were subsisting court orders.

    He has watched a DCI officer escort buyers from Ultra Eureka Limited to his premises in January 2025. He has watched a bank official who swore affidavits against him recant those same affidavits on the witness stand, only for the recantation to be classified as evidence that could not alter the outcome.

    And now he has watched a former judge be arrested at his gate, claiming to collect money for the judge inside.

    Nelson Havi’s warning is the one that the legal establishment most needs to hear, even if it is the one least likely to be acknowledged.

    When a man who has exhausted every available legal remedy concludes that the institutions are not failing him by accident but by design, and when a Senior Counsel with three decades of standing says publicly that he agrees, the conversation has moved beyond procedural reform and entered the territory of constitutional emergency.

    The Judicial Service Commission has not spoken. Lady Justice Mongare has not spoken. The Chief Justice has not spoken.

    Kenya’s courts have a long tradition of demanding that litigants trust the process. Raphael Tuju has trusted the process. He trusted it in London in 2019. He trusted it in Nairobi in 2020. He trusted it before the Court of Appeal in 2023.

    He trusted it before Justice Mongare’s bench on March 9, 2026, the day she dismissed his case and the day the EACC arrested the man who allegedly told investigators he was collecting money for her. Whatever the process has been doing with that trust, it has not been using it to produce justice.

  • THE FIRM IN THE DOCK: How Kaplan and Stratton Became the Most Scrutinised Law Firm in Kenya

    THE FIRM IN THE DOCK: How Kaplan and Stratton Became the Most Scrutinised Law Firm in Kenya

    In the annals of Kenyan legal history, few institutions have carried the weight of Kaplan and Stratton Advocates with as much quiet authority as that firm has for decades.

    Founded in the colonial era and now commanding a client portfolio that spans blue-chip corporations, international development banks, insurance conglomerates and the country’s wealthiest families, it has long projected an image of impeccable legal craftsmanship.

    That image is now in serious jeopardy.

    Within the space of a single week in February 2026, two senior partners of the same firm have found themselves at the centre of separate but thematically identical storms: allegations of document fraud, manufactured evidence and the manipulation of Kenya’s highest judicial processes for private gain.

    The convergence of these two matters has sent tremors through the Nairobi bar and raised questions that will not be easily answered about the culture, oversight and accountability within one of the country’s most prestigious commercial law practices.

    THE DEAD MAN’S SIGNATURE

    The first and more advanced of the two matters concerns the estate of James Boro Karugu, Kenya’s second Attorney General, who died on November 9, 2022, aged 86. Karugu was, by every account, a man of towering legal intellect and fierce personal integrity.

    He had resigned as Attorney General under President Daniel arap Moi on June 2, 1981, just fifteen months into the role, rather than bend his principles to the pressures of the administration.

    He retreated to Kiamara, his coffee farm in Kiambu, named his holding company Mathara Holdings after the syllables of his late wife Margaret Githara’s name, and spent four decades quietly building one of the most substantial private estates in the country’s history.

    That estate, when it came to be contested in the courts, encompassed over 753 acres of land spread across Nairobi, Nakuru, Murang’a, Kwale and Kiambu Counties, Treasury bonds valued at Sh404.7 million, shares in Kenya Power, Nation Media Group and Maramba Holdings, as well as a commercial building along Kenyatta Avenue in Nairobi’s central business district. Control of Mathara Holdings and its ten subsidiaries forms the beating heart of the dispute.

    Weeks after Karugu was buried at his Kiamara farm, a will dated April 2, 2014 was presented to family members at a hotel in Kiambu.

    Alongside it came a trust deed establishing the JBK Foundation, a vehicle that, if recognised by the courts, would place the entirety of Karugu’s assets not directly distributed by the will into a trust administered by named executors. The documents were unknown to the family during the former AG’s lifetime and emerged only after his burial.

    Victoria Nyambura Karugu, the former Attorney General’s firstborn daughter, who had managed the family’s business affairs as Chief Executive of Mathara Holdings after her father’s dementia took hold in 2015, was having none of it.

    She told investigators the documents were fabrications.

    She pointed to a 2010 will drawn up by Patel and Patel Advocates as representing her father’s authentic last wishes. And she lodged a formal complaint with the Directorate of Criminal Investigations.

    What followed that complaint was, by the account of investigators, one of the more disturbing forensic discoveries in recent Kenyan legal history.

    Chief Inspector Duncan Maina, acting on behalf of the DPP and the DCI, filed an affidavit in the High Court detailing how forensic examiners discovered that the questioned documents bore grammatical errors, arithmetic mistakes, spelling blunders and erratic page numbering suggesting the documents had been assembled from multiple sources.

    The execution page allegedly bore deliberate obscurity concealing its page number, raising red flags about tampering.

    “The impugned Will and Trust Deed as presented bear several drafting concerns that do not resonate with professional standards of a man of the stature of the deceased, an impeccable lawyer and second Attorney General of the Republic of Kenya,” investigators stated in their affidavit. The initials appearing on all pages of the two questioned documents, attributed to Karugu, were declared a forgery.

    Witnesses gave conflicting accounts of the will’s execution, with some admitting they signed on different days. Crucially, none could confirm witnessing the settlor or other trustees sign the document, a fundamental requirement for valid execution.

    One of the petitioners initially resisted producing the original documents for forensic examination before eventually surrendering copies. The examiner found that the questioned initials and signatures were not those of James Boro Karugu.

    On December 23, 2025, the Director of Public Prosecutions approved charges for forgery, uttering false documents and conspiracy to defraud. Six individuals were to face prosecution.

    Among those named were Karugu’s son Eric Mwaura Karugu, Jane Wangechi Kabiu, William Kimani Richu, Eliud Mwaura Gatambia, Joshua Mwaura Kimani and lawyer Peter Mbuthia Gachuhi, a senior partner at Kaplan and Stratton.

    THE LAWYER WHO BARELY KNEW THE MAN

    The inclusion of Peter Mbuthia Gachuhi in the list of suspects is not simply sensational. It is, to those who have followed this succession battle, the logical culmination of a pattern that Nyambura Karugu had been pointing to for some time.

    Gachuhi, together with Joshua Mwaura Kimani and Eliud Mwaura Gatambia, had filed a petition for a grant of probate on July 5, 2023, through Kaplan and Stratton Advocates, seeking permission for the three to execute the contested will.

    Nyambura alleged that Gachuhi had met her father only once in the eight years preceding his death, was not present at his funeral or memorial service, and was not a close friend or confidant of the former Attorney General.

    She further alleged a conflict of interest with damning precision.

    Gachuhi and Kaplan and Stratton had previously represented Karugu in 2016 when Lucy Githire Muthoni claimed to have been married to the former Attorney General.

    The firm was also instructed in a similar claim by another woman, Wambui Mwangi. In that matter, they were instructed to deny all claims but also to seek a settlement confirming that Muthoni and Karugu had never been married.

    For Nyambura, a lawyer who had represented the man in such intimate personal matters and was now presenting himself as the executor of the man’s estate under a will of highly questionable authenticity presented a conflict that went well beyond the merely procedural.

    In a separate affidavit filed in the constitutional petition proceedings, Nyambura alleged that the motive of Senior Counsel Fred Ojiambo and Kaplan and Stratton was to be found in what she described as a very profitable retainer by the purported executors of the forged will and trust deed.

    Lawyer Fred Ojiambo.
    Lawyer Fred Ojiambo.

    She argued that the assets of the deceased would be placed under the direct control of Kaplan and Stratton until their full depletion, to the grave prejudice of the legitimate beneficiaries.

    THE ATTEMPT TO SILENCE THE STATE

    When it became clear that prosecution was imminent, the six suspects moved.

    On January 19, 2026, they secured ex parte conservatory orders from the High Court, restraining the DPP and the DCI from summoning, arresting or charging them in relation to the will.

    The orders were obtained, according to lawyers representing Nyambura, shortly before the suspects were due to be arraigned. Murgor and Murgor Advocates wrote to the DPP characterising the timing as deliberate and designed to pre-empt imminent prosecution.

    The letter also accused Fred Ojiambo of previously obstructing investigations by declining to produce the original will for forensic examination.

    In correspondence dated May 12, 2025, Ojiambo had reportedly claimed that the document was being held by his firm under the authority of the succession court, a claim the complainant’s lawyers characterised as false.

    They argued that no court order existed authorising the firm to withhold the document and that the conduct amounted to interference with lawful investigations.

    When the matter came before Justice Bahati Mwamuye, it was Ojiambo himself who appeared in court on behalf of Gachuhi and the other petitioners.

    He told the court he had not been served with the relevant documents. The judge directed that the matter be mentioned on March 16 for further directions.

    The Attorney General, Dorcas Oduor, has now formally entered the arena on the side of the prosecution.

    In grounds of opposition dated February 17, 2026, she urged the Constitutional and Human Rights Division of the High Court to dismiss the petition by Gachuhi and his co-petitioners, arguing that criminal investigations cannot be stopped merely because succession proceedings are ongoing.

    The State was blunt in its characterisation of the petition.

    It described the application seeking conservatory orders as incompetent, misconceived and an abuse of the court process.

    It argued that the existence of High Court Succession Cause No. E916 of 2023 does not bar investigators from probing whether criminal offences were committed. It reminded the court that the Family Division has no jurisdiction to determine criminal culpability, including offences such as forgery.

    The AG stated that forgery is a criminal offence under the Penal Code and cannot be resolved in a family or succession court, adding that the existence of a succession case does not stop criminal investigations.

    THE SECOND STORM: TUJU AND THE BILLION-SHILLING PROPERTY

    Before the ink had dried on the Attorney General’s opposition papers in the Karugu matter, the firm found itself facing a second and separately explosive allegation.

    On February 16, 2026, former Cabinet Secretary and Jubilee Party Secretary General Raphael Tuju walked into DCI headquarters and formally recorded a criminal complaint against Senior Counsel Fred Ojiambo, the most senior lawyer at Kaplan and Stratton and the very same advocate who had appeared in court the previous day to defend Gachuhi.

    Raphael Tuju.
    Raphael Tuju.

    At the centre of Tuju’s complaint is a prime property in Karen valued at Ksh 1.5 billion.

    The dispute traces its origins to a commercial loan extended by the East African Development Bank to Tuju’s company, Dari Ltd, and enforcement proceedings the bank subsequently initiated against the property.

    What began as a loan dispute has, in Tuju’s account, metastasised into something far more sinister.

    Tuju told journalists outside DCI headquarters that he had written to the DCI ten days prior to personally presenting himself and had arrived bearing what he described as documentary evidence of criminal conduct by Ojiambo.

    At the core of his allegations was a claim that Ojiambo and other advocates at the firm had procured and manufactured falsehoods from a former Kenya Country Manager of the East African Development Bank and deposited those fabricated falsehoods in sworn affidavits filed before both the High Court and the Supreme Court of Kenya.

    He alleged the affidavits were presented as having been properly commissioned before a Commissioner for Oaths when they were no such thing.

    If that allegation is established, it would mean that sworn documents presented to Kenya’s apex court were fraudulent.

    Tuju also alleged that Ojiambo had persuaded the High Court to recognise a diplomatic immunity claim on behalf of the East African Development Bank, an immunity that Tuju flatly asserts does not exist in law, thereby freezing a separate criminal matter before the Magistrates Court for over a year.

    Most dramatically, he told investigators of what he described as a fake international warrant of arrest emanating from a Ugandan magistrate’s court and deployed against him as an instrument of intimidation.

    Ojiambo, reached for comment, dismissed the allegations with equanimity. “We haven’t falsified any affidavit on any matter whatsoever,” he said. He maintained he was unaware of the specifics of Tuju’s complaint at the time but denied categorically that he or his firm had engaged in any of the alleged conduct.

    Tuju was not prepared to extend the same courtesy.

    Standing outside DCI headquarters with his lawyer Duncan Okach at his side, he delivered what has since become one of the most quoted lines in recent Kenyan legal discourse. “Fred Ojiambo is a Bible-carrying fraud with a fake British accent,” he declared.

    He then deliberately drew a line between the two crises afflicting the same firm.

    He noted that Gachuhi, his colleague at Kaplan and Stratton, was already facing prosecution over the alleged forgery of former Attorney General Karugu’s will and asked, pointedly, what this said about the institution they both called home.

    “If this can happen to persons like the late former AG James Boro Karugu and me, who have had the privilege of serving this country in high office, what is the situation for other Kenyans who cannot afford to engage teams of lawyers?” Tuju said.

    A FIRM UNDER THE LENS

    Kaplan and Stratton has not issued any formal institutional statement in response to either matter. The firm’s website continues to list both Ojiambo and Gachuhi among its senior practitioners without amendment.

    Ojiambo is described as Senior Partner and Gachuhi as Partner, with his practice areas spanning civil litigation, banking, competition law and arbitration. He was admitted to the bar in 1990 and is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators.

    The convergence of these allegations against practitioners of the same firm within a single week has raised uncomfortable questions for Kenya’s legal establishment that go beyond the guilt or innocence of any individual.

    They touch on the adequacy of internal governance structures within large commercial law firms, the conflicts of interest that can arise when a firm simultaneously advises an individual client and later seeks to profit from that client’s estate, and the capacity of Kenya’s criminal justice system to hold members of the bar to the same standard it holds everyone else.

    The Law Society of Kenya has not publicly commented on either matter.

    WHAT COMES NEXT

    The constitutional petition filed by Gachuhi and his co-petitioners is scheduled for further directions before Justice Bahati Mwamuye on March 16, 2026. The succession cause concerning Karugu’s estate is also due for mention in March.

    The DCI complaint by Tuju against Ojiambo is at the investigative stage, and no charges have been preferred. Both Ojiambo and Gachuhi are entitled to the presumption of innocence and have denied wrongdoing.

    But the trajectory of both matters is clear enough. The State has made its position known. The Attorney General has described the attempt to halt the Karugu prosecution as an abuse of process.

    The DCI has before it a formal complaint implicating a Senior Counsel in manufactured affidavits placed before the Supreme Court.

    And two daughters of a man once described as Kenya’s most principled Attorney General are watching a legal institution attempt to inherit their father’s empire.

    For James Boro Karugu, the barefoot boy who once sat in the gallery of the High Court mesmerised by men in white wigs, the irony is one that history will not easily forgive.

    Allegations reported in this article are contested and subject to ongoing judicial proceedings. All parties are presumed innocent unless and until found guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction.