Home » The Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna Syndicate: How Olekurto Police Are Selling Their Badges to Nakuru Land Fraudsters
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The Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna Syndicate: How Olekurto Police Are Selling Their Badges to Nakuru Land Fraudsters

The Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna Syndicate: How Olekurto Police Are Selling Their Badges to Nakuru Land Fraudsters
Francis Mwangi, a central figure in the Muthera Farm land dispute. Allegations suggest he works with Konene Nkuruna to lead a syndicate that uses rogue police from Olekurto and Njoro to terrorize genuine landowners. Locals are now urging the EACC to investigate his alleged collaboration with police units to seize ancestral land.

The safety of property ownership in Nakuru County now faces a massive threat from those sworn to uphold the law.

Specifically, a dangerous alliance has formed in Muthera Farm and Kongasis between notorious land fraudsters and rogue elements of the National Police Service.

Recent investigative reports suggest that the OCPD and the DCIO of Olekurto Police Station have abandoned their jurisdictional boundaries in Narok County.

Consequently, they now provide illegal security for criminal activities in Nakuru County.

This breach of police hierarchy proves that greed has superseded professional ethics. Furthermore, it shows that these senior officers have effectively become private mercenaries for hire.

The Architects of Chaos: Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna

At the heart of the unrest in Muthera Farm stand two individuals who represent land terror: Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna.

These men lead a syndicate that targets genuine landowners through a campaign of physical disturbance and psychological warfare.

Although their actions are criminal, their true power stems from the protection they receive from the Olekurto police.

Witnesses say Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna, for example, walk with an air of invincibility.

Armed officers often accompany them and watch in silence as these fraudsters harass genuine owners.

Because of this collaboration, Muthera Farm has become a lawless enclave where criminals treat official title deeds as mere pieces of paper.

The Breach of Command: The Olekurto Police Interference

The most disturbing aspect of this syndicate involves the complete breakdown of police protocol.

While Olekurto Police Station sits within Narok County, its leadership now deploys officers across the county border into Nakuru.

By operating in Kongasis and Muthera without authorization from the Nakuru County police command, the Olekurto OCPD and DCIO are committing a grave administrative offense.

This cross-border interference is not an accident. Instead, it is a calculated move to bypass local Nakuru authorities who might refuse to participate in the fraud.

Therefore, the greed of these officers has led them to sell their badges to satisfy their personal appetites.

This creates a jurisdictional vacuum that Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna exploit with total impunity.

Institutionalized Greed and the Failure of Oversight

The cooperation between the Olekurto police and the land cartels led by Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna reveals a deep-seated rot.

Moreover, it points to a systematic failure of oversight within the regional police command.

When a DCIO from one county can facilitate land theft in another county without consequence, the entire security apparatus fails.

As a result, the victims in Muthera Farm and Kongasis are losing faith in the state.

The fact that these fraudsters continue to terrorize the public while police aid their activities remains a daily insult to the residents of Nakuru.

Clearly, the greed of the Olekurto police leadership has replaced their duty to serve and protect.

A Call for Immediate Internal Accountability

Ultimately, the exposure of the Francis Mwangi and Konene Nkuruna syndicate places the National Police Service at a crossroads.

The Inspector General and the Independent Policing Oversight Authority must now address how a neighboring county police force became the primary enforcer for land fraud in Nakuru.

Because the names of the involved officers and their civilian partners are now public, the Ministry of Interior must make the next move.

If they fail to act against the Olekurto OCPD and DCIO, they essentially endorse jurisdictional mercenary work.

This will only embolden cartels like the one led by Mwangi and Nkuruna to use the police as tools for economic sabotage and social chaos.

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