Tag: Pevans East Africa

  • Top Lawyer Faces Criminal Probe in Brazen SportPesa Forgery Scandal

    Top Lawyer Faces Criminal Probe in Brazen SportPesa Forgery Scandal

    Karauri’s Camp Accused of Manufacturing Court Documents to Eliminate Business Rival

    A senior advocate is staring at possible criminal prosecution after investigators uncovered a sophisticated forgery scheme designed to eliminate a key shareholder from the high-stakes battle for control of the SportPesa betting empire.

    The Directorate of Criminal Investigations has opened file OB 23/08/09/2025 targeting the prominent lawyer who allegedly doctored a High Court order to permanently bar businessman Paul Wanderi Ndung’u from protecting his multi-billion shilling stake in Pevans East Africa, the original owners of the SportPesa brand.

    The scam, now exposed by the Court of Appeal, involved transforming a routine two-week interim injunction issued on January 12, 2023, into a fabricated permanent restraining order.

     

    The fake document was then strategically filed at the Court of Appeal, successfully deceiving three appellate judges into blocking Ndung’u from crucial litigation over the SportPesa trademark.

    The Forged Order

    Court records reveal the authentic High Court order merely restrained Ndung’u from dealing in Pevans East Africa affairs for fourteen days ending January 24, 2023.

    However, the manufactured version presented to the appellate court bore “different wordings” suggesting a perpetual injunction had been granted.

    The forgery proved devastatingly effective.

    On February 11, 2023, Justices Daniel Musinga, Mumbi Ngugi and George Odunga unwittingly relied on the fraudulent document to dismiss Ndung’u’s application to join litigation challenging a controversial consent between Milestone Games and the Betting Control and Licensing Board.

    Paul Wanderi Ndung’u
    Paul Wanderi Ndung’u

    It took nearly two years before the same bench discovered they had been duped.

    In their recent ruling reversing the 2023 decision, the judges noted pointedly that “the said orders were interim in nature and lapsed by operation of the law as they had not been extended.”

    More damning was their observation that Milestone Games—the vehicle through which SportPesa CEO Ronald Karauri and his allies have seized control of the betting brand—never challenged Ndung’u’s claim that the order had expired. The silence speaks volumes.

    Karauri’s Fingerprints

    While the lawyer under investigation remains unnamed pending formal charges, the timing and beneficiaries of the forgery paint a clear picture.

    The fake order emerged precisely when Karauri and his co-directors at Milestone Games were desperately trying to cement their control over the SportPesa brand while permanently sidelining Ndung’u and fellow shareholder Asenath Wachera Maina.

    The consent agreement that Ndung’u sought to challenge and which the forged order prevented him from contesting was itself deeply suspect.

    Five out of seven BCLB directors disowned the deal and rejected claims they had approved Milestone’s use of the SportPesa trademark.

    The manufactured court order conveniently eliminated the most vocal opponent just as this questionable consent was being pushed through the courts. Coincidence? Hardly.

    Karauri and Robert Macharia, who held merely three percent in the original Pevans company, now control Milestone Games with 71 percent and 14 percent stakes respectively.

    They’ve effectively hijacked a brand that generated dividends totaling Sh7.6 billion in just four and half years to June 2019.

    Corporate Theft Wrapped in Legal Procedure

    Ndung’u and Maina, who held 17 percent and 21 percent stakes respectively in Pevans, now face being forced out without compensation. Ndung’u’s shareholding has been diluted from 17 percent to a paltry 0.8 percent through what he terms “an irregular dilution scheme.”

    The coup began in October 2022 with a general meeting in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, where a special resolution was passed to expel Ndung’u and Maina. When the expelled shareholders attempted to fight back through the courts, they were met with the forged injunction.

    The playbook is clear: expel inconvenient shareholders, manufacture legal documents to silence them, then use compliant lawyers and questionable consent agreements to legitimize the corporate theft.

    Questions Mount

    Who instructed the lawyer to forge the court order? Who drafted the fake document? Who filed it at the Court of Appeal? And most critically—who paid for these services?

    The lawyer under investigation didn’t act in a vacuum. Legal forgery of this sophistication requires detailed instructions from a client with both motive and means.

    Karauri and his directors at Milestone sought court orders stopping Ndung’u and Maina from filing cases on behalf of the company, claiming they had been expelled and lacked authority.

    When legitimate court processes proved insufficient, did they resort to forgery?

    Pevans’ operations remain dormant while its assets continue to be used by Milestone Games—a corporate corpse being stripped of valuable organs while the rightful heirs are locked out by forged court orders.

    The Reckoning

    The Court of Appeal’s scathing reversal has blown open what may be one of Kenya’s most brazen cases of judicial fraud in a commercial dispute.

    The three appellate judges made clear that Ndung’u’s “alleged expulsion as a shareholder of Pevans is one that requires proper interrogation”—interrogation that was deliberately prevented by the forged order.

    For Karauri, the unraveling forgery scandal threatens to expose the questionable foundations upon which Milestone’s control of SportPesa rests.

    Multiple consent agreements, dubious shareholder expulsions, and now criminal forgery—this is the murky legal swamp from which his betting empire has emerged.

    The senior lawyer facing investigation should prepare for more than professional embarrassment. Manufacturing court orders strikes at the heart of judicial integrity.

    The Law Society of Kenya will certainly want answers. So will the courts that were deceived.

    But the bigger question remains: who gave the orders? In whose interest was this brazen forgery committed? The DCI investigation file OB 23/08/09/2025 may yet reveal that the lawyer was merely the scribe for a darker conspiracy to steal a multi-billion shilling business empire.

    For now, both Karauri and his unnamed legal accomplice must be sweating as investigators close in.

    The forged order that seemed so clever in 2023 has become a ticking time bomb in 2025—one that threatens to blow up not just legal careers, but the entire edifice of Milestone’s questionable claim to the SportPesa brand.

    Justice, as they say, may be slow. But forgery leaves a paper trail that doesn’t disappear.

  • PEA loses bid to return to Sportpesa gambling

    PEA loses bid to return to Sportpesa gambling

    Pevans East Africa-the firm that was managed under the gambling brand SportPesa until June 2019 has lost its case in the Court of Appeal where it sought to reverse the High Court ruling that allowed the  Betting Control and Licensing Board (BCLB) to revoke its licence.

    The appellate court on Friday upheld the ruling by Judge John Mativo issued on August 30, 2019 which dismissed PEA’s  application that challenged BCLB’s move to deny them a new licence.

    The regulator revoked PEA’s licence on July 1, 2019 after they discovered that the gambling firm was heavily involved in rinsing of dirty money and withholding taxes. The firm was embroiled involving a disputed tax demand from the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA).

    The taxman issued a Sh15 billion tax demand on the firm which was later investigated and rose to Sh95 billion.

    Judges Roselyn Nambuye, Fatuma Sichale and Hannah Okwengu of the Court of Appeal dismissed PEA’s appeal arguing that BCLB is mandated to discipline rogue firms and demand for tax documents.

    “We think we have stated enough reasons as to why this appeal is for dismissal. It is hereby dismissed with costs,” reads the judgment in part.

    The controversial Sportpesa CEO Ronald Karauri [p/courtesy]
    The ruling will lock out the firm from betting after his founders also fell out over management differences and embezzlement of billions of shillings. This comes after some shareholders acquired a newly formed company called Milestone Games Limited to which now operates the popular SportPesa gaming brand.

    PEA’s chief executive Ronald Karauri and Francis Waweru Kiarie acquired 95.3% stake in Milestone through several investment vehicles in a move that has blocked out the initial owner’s who got the licence from BCLB.

    The regulator has however managed to shut down Milestone’s operations twice but the new company has been securing temporary court orders to continue with it’s operations.

    On October 30, 2020, Milestone was stopped from using the sportpesa trade name on grounds that it belonged to PEA but it was later revealed that Mr Karauri was among other officials who had transferred it to its UK-based affiliate Sportpesa Global Holdings Limited (SPGHL) which later assigned it to Milestone on September 15, 2020.

    The transfer of the popular sportpesa brand name has been challenged by Paul Ndung’u, a Nairobi based businessman who owns a 17 % stake in PEA. Mr Ndung’u is claiming that the move was not authorised by the board.

    Again on December 4, 2020 the regulator terminated Milestone’s licence arguing that the decision was based on the entry of the new shareholders who were not vetted and authorized to complete the share transactions.