Tag: Mohazcom Trading

  • GOLD RUSH TO GOLD DUST: How a Nairobi Forex Trader Scammed a Lawyer of Sh32 Million in a Phantom Gold Scheme

    GOLD RUSH TO GOLD DUST: How a Nairobi Forex Trader Scammed a Lawyer of Sh32 Million in a Phantom Gold Scheme

    It began, as so many Nairobi gold scams do, with a promise glittering enough to blind even the most cautious of investors. A Dubai shipment. Nearly half a tonne of gold. A lucrative payday waiting just around the corner.

    For John Sodipo, a lawyer at the helm of Sodipo Law Group and the American businessman behind the deal, it all seemed airtight. The paperwork was in order. The escrow account was ready. The gold dealer appeared credible. What Sodipo did not know was that he was walking straight into one of the oldest tricks in Nairobi’s flourishing fake-gold underworld.

    On Wednesday, February 19, 2026, Mohammed Noor Muhyadhin Mohammed stood before a Milimani magistrate and denied everything.

    The charges against him read like a financial crime textbook: conspiracy to defraud, obtaining money by false pretences, money laundering, acquisition of proceeds of crime, possession of proceeds of crime, and use of proceeds of crime. Six counts. Sh32.3 million. A scheme prosecutors say was executed with surgical precision over just 33 days.

    The Setup: A Lawyer, A Gold Deal, and an Elaborate Web of Trust

    The story starts in September 2025 when Gershonov Oleg, a business associate of the American lawyer John Sodipo, first flew into Nairobi hunting for gold. Oleg was no stranger to high-value commodity deals.

    But during that trip, investigators say, he made contact with Willis Onyango Wasonga, a man who goes by the street alias “Marcus” and who detectives now describe as the principal architect of the fraud.

    Wasonga presented himself as a credible gold facilitator, spoke the language of legitimate international trade, and cultivated a relationship that would later cost the Americans dearly.

    By early 2026, negotiations had escalated. Sodipo agreed to pay chartering fees for 495 kilograms of gold to be smelted and shipped to Dubai. The sum was enormous: $250,500, equivalent to Sh32.3 million at prevailing exchange rates. To add a veneer of legitimacy, the funds were deposited into what was presented as a secure escrow account held by advocate Michael Otieno Owano of MOAC Advocates.

    Nairobi advocate Michael Otieno Owano of MOAC Advocates
    Nairobi advocate Michael Otieno Owano of MOAC Advocates

    The law firm’s involvement made the deal look bulletproof. Oleg even flew back to Kenya to personally oversee the shipment. He was waiting for gold that would never come.

    The Heist: Money Moves at Lightning Speed

    On February 3, 2026, the moment the money cleared from the MOAC Advocates accounts at the National Bank of Kenya, the clock started ticking. According to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI), $217,900, the equivalent of Sh28.1 million, was wired almost immediately into a National Bank of Kenya account held by Mohazcom Trading, a company registered to Mohammed Noor himself.

    The remaining funds had been routed through SPK Logistics, another entity prosecutors say was used to dress up the scheme as a legitimate freight and settlement arrangement.

    What happened next shocked even seasoned financial crime investigators. Within hours of the transfer landing in his account, Mohammed Noor allegedly wired the entire sum overseas, straight to accounts held by Tecno Mobile Limited at Citibank in Hong Kong.

    The stated reason? A new shipment of mobile phones. The phones have never arrived in Kenya. Detectives now believe the rapid offshore transfer was a deliberate layering tactic designed to distance the money from its fraudulent origins and complicate any attempt at recovery.

    The Forex Connection: A Decade of Cross-Border Transfers Under the Microscope

    What makes this case particularly alarming to investigators is the role allegedly played by Mohammed Noor’s forex bureau connections. DCI detectives have established that Noor maintained a business relationship spanning over a decade with a forex bureau on Standard Street in Nairobi’s central business district.

    The bureau, investigators say, routinely facilitated substantial cross-border transfers and is now believed to have been central to the laundering architecture. In court on Wednesday, Noor’s defence lawyer Mohammed Ali described his client as an established businessman with a forex bureau and multiple electronics outlets.

    He urged the court to release him, which it did, on a Sh1 million bond or an alternative cash bail of Sh350,000.

    Noor did not remain silent in the dock. He told the magistrate he had cooperated fully with police upon his arrest and pledged to continue assisting detectives to expose what he described as a wider cross-border gold racketeering network. It was an unusual move for someone protesting his innocence, and prosecutors took note.

    The Director of Public Prosecutions, through counsel Irene Sema, told the court the case would be consolidated with that of Willis Onyango Wasonga, who was arraigned days earlier on February 16, 2026, at the same court. Both matters are scheduled for mention on March 2, 2026.

    A City Awash in Phantom Gold

    This case is far from an isolated incident. Nairobi has quietly emerged as the epicentre of Africa’s most sophisticated fake gold industry, and the scale of the problem is staggering.

    In the past six months alone, at least 20 people, both Kenyans and foreign nationals, have been arraigned at the Milimani magistrates court over gold fraud cases with a combined declared value of at least Sh5 billion, according to court records.

    In January 2026, a separate American investor, David White Odell, lost Sh37 million in a Kilimani safe house scam where bars he believed to be gold were later laboratory-tested and found to be brass.

    Earlier, Italian businessman Dr Satninder Singh testified to losing more than 2 million euros, over Sh342 million, after being walked through staged smelting operations, fake customs officers, and a fictitious Congolese court order demanding millions more before release of a shipment that never existed.

    The syndicates, investigators say, operate with military-like precision from upscale addresses in Karen, Kilimani, Westlands, Muthaiga and Runda. They equip themselves with Ministry of Mining logos forged onto fake export permits, electronic gold-testing guns, weighing machines, and gold-plated sample bars convincing enough to fool sophisticated buyers on first inspection.

    They stage smelting operations. They plant actors posing as government officials. They manufacture urgency. And when the money finally moves, it moves fast, straight out of the country and beyond easy reach.

    The DCI has intensified crackdowns, arresting 11 suspects in April 2025 over a Sh70 million fraud and four more in Runda in May 2025 over a Sh25.8 million deal targeting a foreign national. Three additional suspects in the Sodipo case remain at large. Investigators are now combing through financial records, corporate filings, and cross-border transaction histories to determine how deep the network runs.

    The Cost Beyond the Money

    Beyond the staggering sums lost by victims, Kenya’s gold scam pandemic is inflicting a quieter but equally damaging cost on the country’s reputation as a destination for legitimate international investment.

    Nairobi is the largest economy in East Africa, a city that prides itself on being a regional business hub. Yet its formal gold mining sector contributes barely one percent of national GDP.

    The contradiction is glaring: foreign investors arrive drawn by promises of mineral wealth in a country with legitimate gold deposits in Migori, Turkana and Kakamega, only to be swallowed by an informal market riddled with criminality and almost zero regulatory oversight.

    For now, Mohammed Noor walks free on bond, his case adjourned and his alleged accomplices either in court or still being hunted. The gold he promised never existed.

    The $250,500 is gone. And somewhere in the web of Nairobi forex bureaus, fake logistics firms, and offshore bank accounts in Hong Kong, the money trail grows colder by the day.

  • Second Suspect, A Regional Tecno Distributor, Nabbed In Sh28 Million Gold Scam Targeting American Investor, Rogue Lawyer Michael Owano On The Run

    Second Suspect, A Regional Tecno Distributor, Nabbed In Sh28 Million Gold Scam Targeting American Investor, Rogue Lawyer Michael Owano On The Run

    NAIROBI, Kenya — The walls are closing in.

    Barely a week after the first arrest in a brazen gold scam that robbed an American businessman of USD 217,900, detectives from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations have hauled in a second suspect whose role in the scheme is as audacious as it is damning. Mohammed Noor Muhyadhin Mohammed, a Nairobi-based mobile phone trader with business tentacles stretching all the way to Hong Kong, was this week arrested by sleuths from the Operations Support Unit (OSU) for his alleged role in laundering millions of shillings that passed through his hands like sand through a sieve.

    What makes this arrest remarkable is not just the scale of the fraud, now one of the most investigated gold scam networks in recent Nairobi history, but the identity of the man caught in the crosshairs. Mohammed is the sole proprietor of Mohazcom Trading, a registered Kenyan business that sources mobile phones primarily from Tecno Mobile Limited, one of the most recognised handset brands in East and Central Africa.

    The revelation that a legitimate electronics distribution business allegedly served as a conduit for criminal proceeds has sent shockwaves through Nairobi’s trading corridors.

    His arrest follows the February 16 arraignment of Willis Onyango Wasonga, known in shadier circles by the street alias “Marcus,” who now faces a thunderclap of charges at Milimani Law Courts: conspiracy to defraud contrary to Section 317 of the Penal Code; obtaining money by false pretences contrary to Section 313; and three counts under the Proceeds of Crime and Anti-Money Laundering Act (POCAMLA No. 9 of 2009), covering acquisition, possession, and use of proceeds of crime.

    Willis Onyango Wasonga
    Willis Onyango Wasonga

    Wasonga pleaded not guilty and was released on a bond of Ksh 1 million, with the case returning for mention on March 3, 2026. The bond, critics say, was a bargain price for a man accused of engineering a multi-million shilling con.

    The scheme itself reads like a crime thriller.

    An American businessman, John Sodipo, and his Russian associate, Gershonov Oleg, were wooed into a deal for the purchase and chartered export of 495 kilograms of gold to Dubai.

    The promise was glitter. The delivery was dust. Sodipo deposited funds into what he was assured was a legitimate escrow arrangement handled by MOAC Advocates, the law firm of one Michael Otieno Owano, a Nairobi advocate who has now earned the unenviable distinction of appearing at the centre of three separate fraud investigations targeting foreign investors.

    That is where Mohammed enters the picture, and where the story darkens further.

    Investigators have established that on February 3, 2026, USD 217,900 was transferred in a swift transaction from MOAC Advocates’ account at the National Bank of Kenya directly into Mohammed’s company account at the same institution.

    The speed and precision of the transfer raised immediate red flags.

    Within the same breath, Mohammed wired the entire amount overseas to accounts held by Tecno Mobile Limited at Citibank in Hong Kong, purportedly to finance a new shipment of mobile phones that, investigators note pointedly, has yet to set foot on Kenyan soil.

    In a city where Nairobi’s murky gold underworld is estimated to be worth USD 28 billion, making it larger than the country’s entire national budget, the mechanics of laundering criminal proceeds through legitimate-seeming businesses is nothing new.

    What separates this case is the sophistication of the paper trail assembled to cover the crime.

    MOAC Advocates presented detectives with a debt settlement agreement allegedly signed by Mohammed and a second suspect still at large, a document investigators have now dismissed as what they describe as a mere smokescreen, a paper shield crafted to sanitise what was in reality a straightforward money laundering operation.

    The threads connecting Mohammed to the broader syndicate do not end with a single suspicious transfer.

    Investigators have dug deeper and established that he has maintained a decade-long business relationship with a forex bureau operating along Standard Street in the heart of Nairobi’s central business district.

    This bureau, whose proprietor worked in close coordination with Mohammed, is believed to have routinely facilitated substantial cross-border transfers, including the very transaction now under scrutiny. Detectives say the bureau played a key role in the layering and concealment of criminal proceeds, the classic hallmarks of organised money laundering.

    The name looming over everything, however, is that of Michael Otieno Owano.

    Owano, the advocate behind MOAC Advocates, has found himself cast not as a professional servant of the law but as the alleged operational linchpin of a criminal enterprise targeting foreigners.

    His firm’s accounts are now the subject of forensic investigation in connection with three separate fraud operations.

    In November 2024, he was arrested following a Ksh 182 million fake tender scheme that targeted an American firm, Underground Pipeline Rehabilitation Company, with his firm receiving USD 90,000 in purported legal fees while the victim was deceived into paying over USD 1.6 million for fictitious government contracts bearing the names of the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority and the Kenya Meteorological Department.

    He was released on bail while the Director of Public Prosecutions reviewed the matter.

    Nairobi advocate Michael Otieno Owano of MOAC Advocates
    Nairobi advocate Michael Otieno Owano of MOAC Advocates

    In August 2025, Owano was arrested again in connection with a Sh79 million fake gold scheme targeting a Canadian investor, in which a proforma invoice of USD 318,400 was issued by a company called EAI Logistics, with funds wired directly into his firm’s account.

    The victim was also pressured into sending USDT 300,000 in cryptocurrency. In that case, Owano was linked to a Cameroonian national, Francis Ouafo, identified as the mastermind of that operation.

    Now Owano is wanted in connection with this latest case. Detectives are described as being hot on his heels, and sources indicate that three additional suspects remain at large. The rogue advocate has not been publicly apprehended as of press time, and the DCI has confirmed investigations are ongoing.

    Three cases. Three sets of foreign victims. Three sets of criminal allegations. And a man who remains a licensed advocate, bound by the Law Society of Kenya to uphold ethics that, investigators allege, he has systematically trampled underfoot.

    Nairobi’s reputation as a gold scam capital is not a new wound.

    The DCI Director-General himself has described the problem as a huge cartel involving Kenyans, Congolese, Liberians, Nigerians, and Ghanaians, operating in a very sophisticated manner, with the upmarket Kilimani residential area specifically fingered as Africa’s fortress of gold scams.

    The United Nations and international investigative agencies have documented massive discrepancies between what Kenya officially exports in gold and what the UAE alone reports importing from Kenya, suggesting a shadow economy of staggering proportions flowing beneath the surface of the country’s commercial life.

    For Mohammed, the next stop is a magistrate’s court. He is currently in custody, undergoing processing for arraignment. For Wasonga, it is a court date on March 3. For Owano, it is a manhunt that detectives say is closing in by the hour.

    For Kenya, it is a reckoning.

    The country’s credibility as a destination for serious foreign investment depends in part on its ability to chase down and punish the conmen who have turned the promise of gold into a weapon against the very investors the country needs.

    Every shilling stolen from a foreign businessman is not just a personal loss. It is a message broadcast to boardrooms in New York, Toronto, and beyond: that Kenya’s legal system, its licensed professionals, and its registered businesses can be instruments of fraud.

    Whether the courts will deliver that reckoning remains to be seen. What is no longer in doubt is that the DCI is now pulling hard on threads that lead, investigators believe, to a syndicate far larger than the two men so far arraigned.

    The gold was never real. The lawyers may have been. The reckoning is coming regardless.

    The case returns for mention on March 3, 2026.