Police are investigating people believed to be part of an extortion ring accused of frustrating the payment of about Ksh14 billion to Co-operative Bank shareholders through a series of suspicious court cases filed in the name of Sacco officials and shareholders.
Police are expected to establish who authorized the cases, whether the listed Sacco officials genuinely approved them, whether signatures were forged, and whether the legal process was being abused to force a private settlement from the bank.
Leading the scheme is a former senator, who is accused of moving in shortly after Co-op Bank notified shareholders of its proposed restructuring plan and the introduction of a holding company. People familiar with the matter say the politician allegedly presented himself as acting on behalf of Sacco interests in Nyamira and Kisii, then prepared legal documents meant to frustrate the bank’s restructuring process.
The plot reportedly began with demand letters and draft suits sent to the bank, followed by messages inviting bank representatives to “talk” in an attempt to pressure the bank into negotiations away from the formal shareholder and legal process.
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The matter took a new twist after genuine cooperative movement leaders in Nyamira and Kisii reportedly discovered their names and institutions had been linked to the cases. After questions were raised, the individuals behind the filings are said to have changed lawyers, altered the nature of the suits, and repackaged the dispute as a shareholder-led case.
Investigators are also said to be examining claims that signatures of Sacco officials were forged or misused to create the impression that cooperative societies from the two counties were backing multiple court actions. The suspected group is accused of demanding payment from the bank in exchange for withdrawing or stopping the cases.
For instance there is a Court case no E010 / 2026 Lodged all the way at Nyamira High Court and the parties are to appear before Lady Justice T. Cherere for directions on 14th May, 2026 . The biggest concern now is the risk posed to millions of farmers and ordinary shareholders who are expecting dividends from the bank.
If the court cases succeed in delaying the restructuring or shareholder approval process, the Sh14 billion payout could be disrupted, leaving genuine investors suffering the consequences of a fight they neither authorized or even understand.
Co-op Bank has a large shareholder base tied to the cooperative movement, meaning any attempt to block payments or weaponise court processes has consequences far beyond boardroom politics. For many farmers, Sacco members, and small shareholders, dividend are not abstract corporate figures – it is real money expected to support households, businesses, school fees, and rural livelihoods.
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