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Archive for December 14th, 2009

Kenyan Dies In Maryland

Posted by Administrator on December 14, 2009

 

The Late John Muturi

The Late John Muturi

It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the passing on to glory of late John Njoroge Muturi of Chevy Chase Maryland, USA, on 11th December 2009 at Washington Adventist Hospital, Takoma Park, Maryland, USA, after a faith-filled battle with illness. He was the son of the late James Muturi and Eddah Muturi of Karura Kanyungu, Gikuni, Kikuyu. He was the husband to Mrs. Jane Waithira Njoroge and father to James Muturi, Evans Ndungu, both of Banana Hills, Kenya, and George Wainaina of USA. He was father-in-law to Grace Wanjiku Muturi.

He was brother to Jennifer Gatura, the late Karen Mugure, Rahab Njeri, George Wainaina, Mary Kamau, Nancy Munyua and Tom Thuo, all of Kenya. He was grandfather to John Njoroge Muturi. Son-in-law to the late Mr and Mrs John Ndungu Murimi and brother-in-law to Mrs. Rachel Wanjiku Gathu, Mrs Peris Njeri Karanja, Margaret Nyambura Nguyo, all of USA, Mrs. Njuhi Wangombe of Gatanga, Mrs. Lucy Mugure Gichuhi, Mrs. Nduta Kinyanjui and Wambui Ndungu, all of Nyathuna.
His body will be laid to rest in Maryland, USA, on 26th December 2009.
Family and friends are meeting every evening at 2811 Terrace DR, APT No. 115, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-3815.
Send your contributions to  Mrs. Jane Njoroge at 2811 Terace DR., APT No. 115, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-3815.
For more details,Please Contact:

George Wainaina – 240 350 1534

Peter Chege-301 806 0511
Peris Karanja-301452 2800
Pastor Gatambia-301 802 8794
 

Posted in Obituaries | Comments Off

Just jail me, only let me read

Posted by Administrator on December 14, 2009

Information is power, as these inmates at the Naivasha Maximum Security Prison know only too well. A former inmate at the reform facility, Joel Mwangi, has expressed his desire to return to jail to pursue higher education. Photo/ MACHARIA MWANGI.

Information is power, as these inmates at the Naivasha Maximum Security Prison know only too well. A former inmate at the reform facility, Joel Mwangi, has expressed his desire to return to jail to pursue higher education. Photo/ MACHARIA MWANGI.

The ex-prisoner approached the prison gates with a peculiar request — to be re-admitted into prison.

At first, Naivasha Maximum Security Prison authorities thought it was a sick joke, but the reality is finally dawning on them. They are now grappling with how to deal with the rare appeal from Joel Mwangi, 33.

Mr Mwangi, with four other former inmates, are willing to walk back to jail — not to serve fresh terms, but to pursue studies, which they did not finish after completing their jail terms.

Mr Mwangi had been sentenced to one-year by a Naivasha court for a minor offence in 2001. Immediately after conviction, he was thrown into a spin.

“I thought all my dreams had hit a dead end, and I was depressed. But I decided to accept the inevitable,” he recalls.

He was first taken to Annex Prison next to the main jail where he was assigned kitchen duties. “I was a sweeper, a task I found totally boring. Keeping the dining hall clean was eating into my confidence,” he said.

Soon he, requested to be transferred to the Maximum Prison to pursue higher education, a plea that a senior officer willingly acceded to. He began by studying business calculations but before he could finish, Mr Mwangi was freed following a Presidential Amnesty after serving only six months.

“By the time I was released, I was already booked for the exam,” he said.

He returned and sat the exam, scoring impressive grades. For the former part-time secondary school teacher; the certificate was a big boost.

They teamed up with another inmate, Bonaventure Mtalii, and helped to establish the secondary school section at the penal institution.

“Few inmates were willing to take up studies, but we were determined,” says Mr Mwangi. The pioneer teacher taught mathematics.

He was soon to realise the certificate he acquired was not enough to secure him a well-paying job. After more than eight years since leaving prison, Mr Mwangi found the going getting tough and could only secure contractual jobs.

“My potential employers have been categorical that I must attain a diploma,” he says.

Motivational speaker

He toyed with ideas on how to improve his grades, but the cash was his main undoing.

“I finally settled on returning to jail where studying was for free,” he confesses.

Mr Mwangi who doubles up as motivational speaker could not think of committing a crime to land back into jail. It would set a bad precedent.

He decided to visit the local probation office and ask for help. But they, too, were taken aback by the request.

“The call was unusual, and we had to consult the relevant authorities,” said district probation officer Jane Wairimu Mwenja.

But early in the week, Mr Mwangi decided to pay visit to his former abode and express his desire to the local Prisons boss, Mr Patrick Mwenda.

And the return was nostalgic. Former inmates were at hand to welcome back a jovial Mr Mwangi. He seemed at home in prison.

His former tutor and inmate, Mtalii, could not hide his joy. The reunion was emotional as other inmates unaware of what was happening, watched from a distance. The warm hugs and pleasantries told it all. Momentarily, Mr Mwangi felt as if his wish had been granted.

The attentive Mr Mwangi was in for more surprises. A former inmate Justin Tony Mabuka had secured an A- in the 2008 KCSE. His dream of starting the secondary section was finally paying off.

Mr Mwenda, the prison boss, was unsure of what to make of it. Maybe prison was the place to be.

“I have never in my career witnessed such a phenomenon. Few people who have been jailed would dream, let alone imagine, returning to prison under whatever capacity,” said the prison boss.

The unfolding scenario was like a script from a movie.

But Mr Mwenda too was categorical about Mr Mwangi’s wish.

“Currently, we have no such provision within the Prisons Department. But we are greatly humbled by your request,” he told him.

He promised to consult further on the issue. However, Mr Mwenda cited a programme in Canada known as Halfway Home, where inmates spend their time within the prison quarters after being released.

“If we had such a programme maybe Mr Mwangi could have benefited from it,” the prison boss said.

Meanwhile, Mr Mwangi is soldiering on, hopeful that his request will be looked into. He is now engrossed in his training programme as an accomplished athlete.

He is the national 100 meters champion in the T-46 category. He beat a classy field to emerge the winner during national trials held at Kasarani.

But with no qualified coach, Mr Mwangi has been conducting his own training and hopes to join a team in the near future.

“I have what it takes to be the next Usain Bolt in the T-46 category,” he boasts.

Mr Mwangi lost the use of his right hand after he was involved in an accident while driving in a family car at the age of 12, but the father of two is ready to pick up the pieces and excel both in academics and athletics.

After the interview, it was crystal clear that Mr Mwangi has his future cut out, if only his extraordinary petition is granted. He is keeping his fingers crossed.

Source: DAILY NATION

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Marriage bill seeks to scrap paying dowry

Posted by Administrator on December 14, 2009

By NATION CorrespondentPosted Monday, December 14 2009 at 22:00

Couples will not have to pay dowry to get married if the Marriage Bill is passed by Parliament into law.

The Bill, which is one of the three family bills undergoing debate, seeks to make payment of dowry optional, and couples who would have stayed together as husband and wife for at least two years will be considered legally married.

The other bills include the Matrimonial Property and the Domestic Violence (Family Protection) Bill 2007.

According to chairperson of National Commission on Gender and Development Dr Regina Mwatha and lawyer Judy Thongori, said dowry usually leaves women vulnerable when the husband dies.

Mutual benefit

Marriage would be considered a complete contract irrespective of the dowry, the two said Monday.

But, persons who choose to marry under the customary law may still opt to pay dowry.

Ms Thongori explained the proposed law does not outlaw dowry and those willing to pay can continue with it.

“Hopefully, the Bill will serve to break the yoke and allow for the recognition of marriage as a voluntary union that is intended for mutual benefit,” she added.

Source: Daily Nation

Posted in Kenya | Comments Off

Kenyan Native Admits To Elaborate Fraud

Posted by Administrator on December 14, 2009

Angella Muthoni Chegge-Kraszeski

Angella Muthoni Chegge-Kraszeski

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A Kenyan native admitted in federal court Monday that she did the legwork in an international scheme that redirected a $920,000 payment intended for a state vender to a dummy corporation.

Angela Chegge-Kraszeski, 33, who grew up in Kenya but has lived in Raleigh, N.C., for the last few years, pleaded guilty to mail and wire fraud.

In May, the case made headlines in West Virginia, when state Auditor Glen Gainer III’s office discovered that three payments totaling roughly $2 million had not reached their intended destinations.

The following month, a federal grand jury indicted Chegge-Kraszeski in the scheme. In November, five more Kenyans based in Minnesota were charged with defrauding multiple state governments, including West Virginia, out of $3.34 million.

During Monday’s plea hearing, Chegge-Kraszeksi said she knew that she was involved in something illegal, but was largely in the dark about the scope of the scheme.

In 2008, during a visit to Kenya to visit her 14-year-old son and mother, she posed for a picture that was used by others to create a fake South African passport under the name Christina Ann Clay, she said.

The passport was express-mailed to her from Dubai, according to the indictment against her five alleged co-conspirators.

 Following instructions e-mailed by her handlers in Kenya, she used that passport to incorporate dummy corporations with names very close to actual companies that provided services to West Virginia, she said. Instead of Deloitte Consulting LLC and Unisys Corp., the fake companies were named Deloite Consulting Corp. and Unisyss Corp.

Later, she traveled to Minnesota and opened bank accounts under the names of the dummy corporations, she said. She also bought postage for and mailed multiple envelopes, which she later

learned contained fraudulent eVendor Agreement forms, which rerouted legitimate payments to the new bank accounts, she said.

“I would send them out per instructions,” she said.

Subsequently, on March 19, a $919,916 payment intended for Deloitte Consulting LLC, which performed consulting services for the state’s Department of Health and Human Resources, was rerouted to TCF Bank in Minneapolis.

Under questioning from U.S. District Judge John T. Copenhaver Jr., Chegge-Kraszeski admitted that she submitted invoices to help transfer the bulk of the funds to Kenya. In addition, she negotiated a $70,000 cashier’s check and distributed the funds to Michael M. “Mikie” Ochenge, 33, and Albert E. Gunga, 30, two of the Minnesota defendants.

Using the Internet, her Kenyan handlers could monitor the accounts to see when payments arrived, but they could not transfer funds online, said federal public defender Mary Lou Newberger, Chegge-Kraszeski’s attorney. They wanted the transfers spread out, so Chegge-Kraszeski traveled to Minnesota several times to arrange for the funds to be wired abroad, Chegge-Kraszeski said.

“Did it occur to you that someone had been swindled out of that money?” Copenhaver asked.

“Yes, your honor,” Chegge-Kraszeski replied in a voice so soft that the courtroom’s microphones barely picked it up.

Ochenge, Gunga and the three other alleged co-conspirators — Robert M. “Robe” Otiso, 36, Paramena J. Shikanda, 35, and Collins A. Masese, 20 — are scheduled to be arraigned on Dec. 21.

A tearful Chegge-Kraszeski blew a kiss to her husband in the gallery as U.S. Marshals led her out of the courtroom. She faces up to 10 years in prison and restitution of $919,916 plus interest when she is sentenced on May 11. She may also be deported, Copenhaver said.

The investigation has been a joint operation with the Secret Service and the Internal Revenue Service taking the lead, with some help from the U.S. Postal Service and U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Susan Robinson.

In addition to West Virginia, Chegge-Kraszeski set up dummy corporations and bank accounts that targeted the state governments of Kansas and Florida, according to a stipulation of facts entered as part of her plea agreement.

According to the November indictment, before officials caught on, the scheme netted $919,916 from West Virginia, with an additional $1,288,037 stolen from Massachusetts, $869,546 from Kansas and $301,571 from Ohio.

Reach Andrew Clevenger at acleven…@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1723

Posted in Diaspora News | Comments Off

 
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