Jimnah and ilk

I was reading this article by Owaaah about the history of failed banks in Kenya. The article is a clear chronological account of how we have been milked by bank owners since the 70s. LINK:
http://owaahh.com/kenyan-banks-fail/

He also mentions one wealthy eye shiner and a tell-tale tweet about how things are run in those corner offices. What we see with Chase bank has been replicated in the insurance industry and stock brokerages and probably elsewhere.

At the moment I’m contemplating moving my money from Dyer and Blair coz I remembered one incident a few years ago with Nyaga stock brokers. Tweet ndio hii…

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It was around 2006-8 huko and my buddy had a substantial portfolio na Nyaga Stockbrokers, a fellow eye shiner. We support our people. He got his statement in the mail and mjamaa was on the edge after realizing some of his shares were not adding up. He hadn’t sold any for a while coz he plays it long. He planned a meeting to sort out this mess. It turned out that they were using people’s money to trade without their authorization i.e. Kucheza kamari with no risk on yourself since pesa si zako. After threats and all, he got his money back plus bonus Juu to keep it quiet. He closed his account and soon after, the brokerage went belly up.

Same thing with insurance. There was that MediPlus guy Nguyai who run against Muite with people’s money, soon after the company collapsed, and won. Where is he now? Corporate crime pays in Kenya i tell you.

Wizi Mzuri ni Biashara- Mashifta

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Damn it

[ATTACH]36681[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]36681[/ATTACH] Eish! !! ! ! ! ! Wakenya jameni!!! ! ?

The first Kenyan-owned banking institution to fail, in July 1984, was Rural Urban Credit Finance. Owned by a former Nairobi mayor, Andrew Ngumba, for whom Ngumba estate is named, that failure set the stage for what has become an all-familiar tale. Ngumba founded and used his banking institutions to campaign for the Mathare political seat. He gave unsecured loans to his would-be constituents to buy matatus, and then cleverly cooked the books to hide the widening hole in bad loans.
this HTML class. Value is http://owaahh.com/ke

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Will I be right to say Jimnah Mburu past is somehow shaky.

These people!

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Rectified.

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Na hii tweet yake niliwaulizia hapa http://www.kenyatalk.com/index.php?threads/okiya-na-other-economics-analysts.17222/

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Are you going to play the game or sit on the sidelines and watch?

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Jimnah is also but one of the many thugs in the system. Kuna tweet alituma hapo twitter jamaa akammulika na hii story… akalenga ni kama hakuiona.

[SIZE=6]'A wave of deceit’ costs Mbaru firm, CfC Stanbic Bank Sh418m[/SIZE]

The court reduced the amount to Sh300 million plus interest. The two are jointly liable.

An investment bank owned by businessman Jimnah Mbaru and a South African bank have been ordered to pay an investor about Sh418 million arising from what the High Court termed as “a complicated wave of deceit” perpetuated by the two companies.

In a judgment delivered by Justice Eric Ogola, Dyer & Blair Investment Bank and CFC Stanbic Bank are to pay Mr John Kung’u Kiarie - a former director of the Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB) - over Sh300 million plus interest at 16 per cent per year from October 21, 2007 to date for under-declaring his returns on investment.

“It is the finding of this court that the 2nd defendant (Stanbic Bank) joined the 1st defendant (Dyer & Blair Investment Bank) in a complicated wave of deceit whose aim was to trade with the plaintiff’s money without accounting for interest,” Justice Ogola ruled.

It is a ruling with huge financial implications not only for the pair, but also regulators coming just when the Central Bank of Kenya and Capital Markets Authority have tightened the laws to rein in misconduct.

Mr Kung’u had been a longtime customer of Dyer & Blair, who occasionally invested in the stock markets.

In April 2003, he met the then Dyer & Blair general manager, Mr Mohamed Hassan - current chairman of National Bank of Kenya board of directors - and they agreed that he would invest Sh100 million in the bond markets, among other places.

It is at this point that the wave of deceit kicked in as Justice Ogola would note; “Just when the money was being received for the further re-investment, an investigation on the plaintiff’s account was commenced by the Central Bank of Kenya Fraud Investigation Unit and immediately, and allegedly in synchrony, and as if they were waiting for this, the first defendant- unilaterally and unlawfully froze the plaintiff’s account, thereby rendering the reinvestment and access thereto impossible.”

CONSPIRACY
The criminal case would run from 2003 to 2007, during which time the two institutions are said to have continued illegally holding Mr Kiarie’s funds.

Evidence adduced shows that the account continued to be drawn in what the court concluded Mr Kiarie’s money was being actively traded with by the two institutions.

But it is the basis of the freezing orders that help in joining the dots to a conspiracy to defraud.

In his ruling, the judge said that from the evidence, the freezing orders were nothing but a creation of Dyer & Blair through letters written by Mr Hassan, who offered to freeze the account even when no such request was asked by the banking fraud unit.

“The first defendant (Dyer & Blair) volunteered freezing the account by telling the Central Bank of Kenya Fraud Investigation Unit that following your inquiry,… we will also freeze the account until further instructions from yourself."

“This appears to have been a clever and mischievous act by first defendant (Dyer & Blair) to found a basis of alleging that the instructions - to freeze the account- came from CBK.”

In concluding that the two financially benefited from the scheme, the judge added: “The issue then is why first defendant (Dyer & Blair) would engage in such falsehood unless it had something to gain from it?”

Noting that the person (Mr Hassan) who negotiated and signed agreement with Mr Kiarie to invest the fund was the same person who signed the letter to “freeze” the account.

On the collapse of the criminal case, Mr Kiarie filed the case against Dyer & Blair and Stanbic for Sh465 million, as his return on investment for the five-year period.

The court reduced the amount to Sh300 million plus interest. The two are jointly liable.

Source: http://www.nation.co.ke/business/A-wave-of-deceit-costs-Mbaru-firm-and-bank-Sh418m/-/996/3137050/-/e4h7vtz/-/index.html

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hii watu yote ni mavi ya kuku. with their paltry interest rates I better buy a safe and store my cash in it.

He forgot to include these “shades” in his impressive 37? page resumè when he was vying the Nrb Gubernatorial position.

A little correction with Nguyai and Mediplus. He ran against Muite and lost the first time. He had used all the Mediplus money on the campaign trail mostly on women groups all over the constituency. For five years he was dead broke and everybody in Kabete knew about it . In 2007 he won without money largely through the sympathy vote.

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Interesting!!.. as advised by one @wheelz real estate will be my bank

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