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Petitioners Accused of Sidestepping Core Evidence in Karugu Estate Will Dispute

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Submissions presented by petitioners, namely Kaplan and Stratton’s Peter Gachuhi, Optimum Registrar’s Jane Gitau Kabiu, lawyer William Kimani Richu, and four others, paint a true picture of an attempt to cover up a crime against the Estate of the late former Attorney General James Karugu. At first reading, the Petitioners’ submissions appear technical. They speak the language of constitutional restraint and urge that the matter be treated not as a dispute about a forged Will but as a narr

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Submissions presented by petitioners, namely Kaplan and Stratton’s Peter Gachuhi, Optimum Registrar’s Jane Gitau Kabiu, lawyer William Kimani Richu, and four others, paint a true picture of an attempt to cover up a crime against the Estate of the late former Attorney General James Karugu. At first reading, the Petitioners’ submissions appear technical. They speak the language of constitutional restraint and urge that the matter be treated not as a dispute about a forged Will but as a narr

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Petitioners Accused of Sidestepping Core Evidence in Karugu Estate Will Dispute
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@munene · 13h

Submissions presented by petitioners, namely Kaplan and Stratton’s Peter Gachuhi, Optimum Registrar’s Jane Gitau Kabiu, lawyer William Kimani Richu, and four others, paint a true picture of an attempt to cover up a crime against the Estate of the late former Attorney General James Karugu.

At first reading, the Petitioners’ submissions appear technical.

They speak the language of constitutional restraint and urge that the matter be treated not as a dispute about a forged Will but as a narrow question about prosecutorial discretion. Beneath that polished surface lies a far more telling reality.

This is not a defence. It is an evasion.

The Petitioners’ central claim is deceptively simple.

This is not a case about whether the Will is forged. It is, they say, merely about whether the decision to prosecute was proper. Yet everything about their position depends on the very issue they seek to exclude. The prosecution they are trying to stop arises from allegations of forgery.

The investigation, by their own admission, includes forensic reports, witness statements, and documentary analysis. They acknowledge that the dispositive issue across proceedings is the validity of the Will. Still, they insist that the issue must not be examined here.

The contradiction is clear. They rely on the existence of the forgery allegation to challenge the prosecution while also insisting that no one should examine whether the allegation is true.

This is not legal discipline. It is strategic avoidance.

Their attack on parallel proceedings follows the same pattern. They argue that allowing criminal and civil processes to run concurrently risks conflicting outcomes and undermines fairness. Yet the law permits such parallel processes. The framework they challenge was designed to ensure that civil disputes do not become a shield against criminal accountability. More revealing still is their reliance on precedent.

They invoke authority to suggest that prosecutions may be halted where they are abusive. Those same authorities affirm that criminal proceedings should proceed where evidence exists to support them.

Here, the Petitioners do not argue that there is no evidence. On the contrary, they acknowledge the existence of a full investigative file, forensic examination reports, and multiple witness accounts. It becomes difficult to maintain that the prosecution is abusive.

A process grounded in evidence is, by definition, the opposite of arbitrary. To label it as such without demonstrating malice or bad faith is not a legal argument. It is an assertion in search of support.

The repeated invocation of abuse of process deepens the inconsistency. The suggestion is that the criminal case is being used to gain advantage in a succession dispute and that it is a weapon rather than a legitimate legal response. These claims are not substantiated. There is no indication that investigators acted improperly.

There is no evidence that the decision to prosecute was made without inquiry. There is no demonstration of ulterior motive. What exists instead is a documented sequence: a complaint, an investigation, forensic analysis, and a decision to prosecute. To describe that sequence as abuse requires more than suspicion. It requires proof, and that proof is absent.

Perhaps the most revealing aspect of the submissions is the effort to exclude the complainant. The argument is framed as technical.

The complainant’s interests are already represented, her participation would be duplicative, and her evidence would expand the scope of the proceedings. Beneath this framing lies a more substantive concern. The complainant is central to the factual matrix.

Her complaint triggered the investigation, her position provides context, and her materials illuminate the history surrounding the disputed Will.

To exclude such a figure is not merely to streamline proceedings. It is to narrow the field of vision. The concern is not duplication. It is disclosure. What is presented as procedural discipline reveals itself as an attempt to limit what can be seen and what can be tested.

Taken together, the Petitioners’ arguments follow a consistent pattern. They avoid defending the authenticity of the Will. They resist any examination of forensic evidence. They shift focus to procedural technicalities. They seek to limit participation by those most closely connected to the facts. It is a defence built not on rebuttal but on redirection.

One is left with an unavoidable inference. If the substance of the case were strong, it would be addressed. Instead, it is carefully sidestepped. What emerges is not merely a legal argument but a strategy that seeks to transform a question of alleged forgery into a debate about process, to elevate form over substance, and to ensure that the central issue is never squarely confronted. Process cannot exist in a vacuum. Where there is documented evidence, forensic analysis, and a structured investigative record, the legitimacy of prosecution arises from material that warrants examination. To insist that such material be ignored is not to protect fairness. It is to prevent examination.

In the end, the Petitioners’ own words tell the story. They acknowledge the evidence yet resist its examination. They invoke the law yet rely on interpretations that do not support them. They call for restraint yet seek to control the narrative. Most tellingly, they build an argument around avoiding the very question that gave rise to the dispute.

A genuine defence confronts the facts. This one carefully walks around them. One should see this procedural framing for what it is. It is not a shield of principle. It is a barrier against truth

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