Kenyan Court Detains Man 7 Days Over $440,000 Crypto App Fraud Probe
Key Takeaways
- Detaining Dickson Nyakango over a $440K scam exposes retail risks; court resumes this month.
- After Kestrel flagged a 7% scam, DCI will next trace GSIWEA to curb market fraud.
- Following this $440K crime, Kenya will next gazette the 2025 VASP Act to oversee exchanges.
Suspicious App Triggered Investigation
A Kenyan court ordered the weeklong detention of the alleged operator of a fraudulent cryptocurrency-themed investment platform, as detectives investigate a multilayered scheme that collected about $440,000 from unsuspecting investors.
The order was granted in favor of the Capital Markets Fraud Investigation Unit of the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI). The unit argued the fraud case involves complex digital trails, multiple victims, and possible accomplices still at large.
According to a local report citing court filings, the probe began after Kestrel Capital alerted authorities to a suspicious mobile app listed on Google Play and the Apple App Store. The app allegedly marketed itself as an artificial intelligence-powered investment fund linked to Kestrel Capital and a second entity, Nathaniel Capital Partners Ltd.
Investigators told the court that Kestrel Capital denied any association with either the platform or the purported partner, raising immediate concerns of impersonation and fraudulent misrepresentation. Detectives said the platform promised daily returns of up to 7%, recruited users through WhatsApp groups, and instructed them to deposit funds via bank accounts, Paybill numbers, and mobile money channels.
One bank account linked to the suspect reportedly received approximately $260,200 between April 8 and April 29 alone. The suspect, Dickson Ndege Nyakango, was arrested May 4 at an I&M Bank branch on Kenyatta Avenue, where detectives allege he attempted to withdraw funds from one of the accounts under investigation.
In arguing their case, prosecutors insisted that releasing Nyakango could jeopardize the probe, noting that investigators are still tracing additional accounts and digital platforms, including another app identified as GSIWEA. The court agreed, ordering Nyakango detained at Kilimani Police Station for seven days. The matter will return to court later this month for an update.
The case lands at a pivotal moment for Kenya’s digital-asset landscape. After years of warnings about unlicensed crypto schemes, Parliament passed the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act in October 2025. The law places oversight of crypto-based payment services under the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), introducing licensing, anti-money laundering requirements, and consumer-protection rules for exchanges, custodians, and other virtual asset service providers. Subordinate regulations, drafted by the National Treasury earlier this year, are still awaiting gazettement.
Despite the emerging framework, enforcement gaps remain. Regulators have repeatedly cautioned that unlicensed platforms continue to target retail investors with promises of high returns—often using social media, WhatsApp groups, and impersonation of legitimate financial institutions.

