Tag: Kelvin “Sonko” Otieno Onyango

  • Wash Wash Paradise: When Lawyers Become Part of The Criminal Enterprise

    Wash Wash Paradise: When Lawyers Become Part of The Criminal Enterprise

    How Kenya’s legal practitioners have become key enablers in transnational gold fraud schemes targeting foreign investors

    In the plush offices of Kilimani’s China Wu Yi Plaza, where legitimate businesses operate alongside shadowy enterprises, a disturbing trend has emerged in Kenya’s “wash wash” economy – the systematic recruitment of lawyers as key facilitators in elaborate gold fraud schemes.

    Recent arrests by the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) have exposed how legal practitioners are no longer just providing professional services to fraudsters, but have become integral players in criminal syndicates that have cost foreign investors millions of dollars.

    The Lawyer-Criminal Nexus

    The most recent case involves Michael Otieno Owano, an attorney and proprietor of Otieno M.O. Law Advocates, arrested in connection with a scheme that defrauded a Canadian national of $618,000.

    According to DCI investigations, Owano’s law firm received $318,400 directly from the victim, who was promised 250 kilograms of gold for export to Dubai via private jet.

    This case illustrates a sophisticated evolution in Kenya’s fake gold industry, where lawyers provide the veneer of legitimacy that criminal enterprises desperately need to convince foreign investors.

    “The involvement of lawyers adds a layer of credibility that makes these schemes particularly dangerous,” says a senior DCI detective who requested anonymity. “Victims feel more secure when dealing with registered advocates, not knowing they’re part of the criminal network.”

    Michael Otieno Owano and Kelvin ‘Sonko’ Otieno while in police custody.
    Michael Otieno Owano and Kelvin ‘Sonko’ Otieno while in police custody.

    The Escrow Account Deception

    The documents reveal how lawyers have weaponized escrow accounts – traditional instruments meant to protect buyers from fraudsters – into tools of deception.

    Thomas Otieno Ngoe and other legal practitioners have been implicated in creating fake escrow arrangements that give victims false confidence in transactions.

    In the 2010 Meranti Holdings case documented in the leaked files, Caroline Wamba asked the South African company to open an escrow account with a Nairobi bank for “lifting costs.”

    The lawyers involved put disclaimers to absolve themselves, but the money vanished once it landed in their accounts.

    “The lawyers put a disclaimer in order to absolve themselves from any liability. The money vanishes once it lands in their accounts,” according to the investigation files.

    Recent Cases Expose Expanding Network

    The arrest of Kelvin Otieno Onyango alias Kevo Sonko, director of SwiftTaxis Logistics Ltd, in February 2024, revealed another dimension of lawyer involvement.

    Onyango was charged with forging mineral export documents in a Sh151 million fraud case. His office in China Wu Yi Plaza had become a hub where “negotiations and finalization of deals were carried out,” according to investigators.

    Francis Talla Ouafo, a Cameroonian mastermind arraigned at Milimani Chief Magistrate’s Court in July 2025, operated with a network that included several legal practitioners who provided documentation and banking services for fake gold transactions.

    Lupemba Lorenzi Olivier, a Congolese national arrested for defrauding a Gabonese investor, similarly relied on legal accomplices to create the paperwork necessary to convince victims of the legitimacy of his gold deals.

    Modus Operandi: How Lawyers Enable Fraud

    Investigations reveal a consistent pattern in how lawyers facilitate these schemes:

    Documentation Manufacturing: Lawyers create fake mineral dealers’ licenses, export permits, and assay reports purportedly issued by government agencies. The sophistication of these documents, complete with official letterheads and stamps, makes them difficult for foreign investors to detect as fraudulent.

    Banking Facilitation: Legal practitioners open and manage accounts that receive victim payments, often using their professional standing to convince banks of the legitimacy of large international transfers.

    Negotiation Venues: Law offices provide respectable locations for meetings with potential victims, with some lawyers directly participating in negotiations and providing legal opinions that reassure foreign investors.

    Regulatory Exploitation: Some lawyers exploit their knowledge of Kenyan mining and export regulations to create believable narratives about licensing requirements and export procedures.

    The Kenya Revenue Authority Connection

    The 2011 case involving KRA Assistant Commissioner Joseph Cheptarus, who was murdered while investigating a gold syndicate, highlighted how deeply these networks penetrate Kenya’s institutions.

    Current investigations suggest some lawyers have cultivated relationships with KRA officials to provide authentic-looking tax clearance certificates for non-existent gold exports.

    International Diplomatic Incidents

    The lawyer-enabled schemes have reached such proportions that they’ve triggered international diplomatic interventions.

    The 2011 emergency visit by DRC President Joseph Kabila and the 2019 concerns raised by UAE Vice President Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum demonstrate how these frauds are affecting Kenya’s international relationships.

    Weak Prosecution Record

    Despite the scale of these crimes, Kenya’s prosecution success remains dismal.

    Among prominent cases involving lawyers and fake gold, only Kevin Obia has been successfully convicted, receiving a mere Sh300,000 fine or one-year imprisonment option for defrauding an Austrian national of Sh15.7 million.

    The weakness of Kenya’s legal framework is evident in Section 313 of the Penal Code, which prescribes only three years imprisonment for obtaining money through false pretenses – a penalty that pales compared to the millions of shillings these schemes generate.

    The Political Protection Problem

    Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i’s 2022 warning that “up to 40 percent of holders of elective office” could be “well-known wash-wash dealers” appears to extend to the legal profession. Some lawyers involved in these schemes reportedly have political connections that complicate prosecution efforts.

    The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission’s (EACC) submitted adverse reports against 241 politicians, but the electoral commission cleared most, citing legal provisions.

    This same weak vetting mechanism appears to apply to lawyers, with the Law Society of Kenya struggling to discipline members involved in criminal enterprises.

    The lawyer-enabled fraud schemes have transformed upscale Nairobi neighborhoods into criminal hubs. Kilimani, Kileleshwa, Riverside Drive, and Westlands – areas traditionally associated with legitimate professional services – now house what investigators describe as “safe havens for the purveyors of dirty money.”

    The economic impact extends beyond individual victims.

    Kenya’s grey-listing by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) for being a “wash wash playground” has international implications for the country’s banking and investment environment.

    The Technology Evolution

    Recent cases show how lawyer-enabled schemes have adapted to digital currencies.

    The Canadian victim in the Otieno Owano case was instructed to transfer USDT 300,000 to a cryptocurrency wallet, showing how legal practitioners are adapting traditional escrow fraud to new financial technologies.

    The systematic involvement of lawyers in Kenya’s fake gold industry represents a disturbing evolution in transnational crime.

    When legal practitioners – bound by professional ethics and public trust – become criminal facilitators, they undermine not just individual victims but the integrity of Kenya’s legal system itself.

    The DCI’s recent arrests signal a potential crackdown, but without stronger laws, better institutional coordination, and professional accountability mechanisms, Kenya risks becoming a permanent haven for lawyer-enabled fraud schemes that target foreign investors and damage the country’s international reputation.

    As investigations continue, the question remains whether Kenya’s justice system can overcome the powerful networks that have made “wash wash” not just a criminal enterprise, but a parallel economy where lawyers, politicians, and criminals operate with apparent impunity.

  • Wash Wash: Kelvin “Sonko” Otieno Charged In Sh151M Fraud

    Wash Wash: Kelvin “Sonko” Otieno Charged In Sh151M Fraud

    Flamboyant serial fraudster Kelvin “Sonko” Otieno Onyango was today charged with making a document without authority, a grave offense under Section 357(a) of the Kenyan Penal Code.

    According to documents from the Milimani Law Courts, Sonko stands accused of fabricating a document (Mineral dealer’s [trading] licence registration No. MDL/T DTL/2024/044 for Cargocare freight forwarders) and presenting it as authentic, despite being fully aware of its falsity.

    Sonko was arrested on February 22, 2024 in his office at the China Wu Yi Plaza in Kilimani by officers from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI)’s Operation Support Unit (OSU).

    The investigation into Sonko’s alleged fraudulent activities, led by the Officer in Charge (OCS) of Kilimani Police Station, continues to uncover intricate details surrounding the case.

    The Republic of Kenya, represented by the National Police Service, serves as the complainant, with four key witnesses identified in the charge sheet: CPL Francis Matheka, CPL Evans Nyamanga, IP Nicholas Njoroge and additional individuals yet to be named by the Kenya Police Service.

    ‘Sonko’ hiding his face in court.

    Sonko’s arrest is part of a broader probe into allegations of fraud and conspiracy, including his suspected involvement with key suspects in a case where a Chinese national reportedly lost Sh151 million.

    The Chinese businessman had paid for containers of Tantalum minerals, purportedly from Congo but intercepted in Mombasa, revealing them to be soil instead.

    The investigation also suggests connections to fake gold scammers operating in Nairobi’s Kilimani area using Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) as their passageway.

    While about ten suspects were arrested from Sonko’s office, all were released except Sonko himself.

    Authorities suspect Sonko’s network may have shifted operations to Mombasa, colluding with officials from the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) and the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA).

    DCI intercepted a consignment at the Mombasa container terminal (MCT), revealing reconditioned metallic drums loaded with sand instead of tantalum minerals.

    At the heart of the investigation lies Lumumba Patrick, suspected of collaborating with fake gold scammers in Congo and Uganda, suggesting a broader network of criminal activity.

    Charge sheets.