Gov't hands Ksh.6.2B payroll fraud findings to DCI for probe
Public Service CS Geoffrey Ruku presents the payroll audit reports to DCI Mohamed Amin on July 8, 2026. PHOTO | COURTESY
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The government has intensified its fight against payroll fraud
after handing over the findings of a comprehensive public service payroll audit
to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI), paving the way for
investigations into suspected cases of salary fraud and manipulation of
government payroll systems.
Public Service Cabinet Secretary Geoffrey Ruku on Wednesday
presented the payroll audit reports, forensic findings and supporting documents
to the DCI, saying the move signals the beginning of a tougher phase in efforts
to protect public resources and eliminate irregularities in government
payrolls.
The handover follows a Cabinet directive issued after its June
30 meeting, which ordered that all cases emerging from the payroll audit with
possible criminal implications be referred to investigative agencies for
action.
"The integrity of the government payroll is central to
fiscal discipline, effective governance and public confidence in Government
institutions," Ruku said.
According to the CS, an independent payroll audit and a
forensic review undertaken by a multi-agency team uncovered significant
weaknesses in the management of the public service payroll suspected to have cost the government Ksh.6.2 billion, prompting the decision
to pursue criminal investigations where wrongdoing is suspected.
Ruku warned that the government would not shield anyone found
to have manipulated payroll systems or facilitated fraudulent salary payments,
saying public institutions must fully cooperate with investigators.
He directed Ministries, Departments and Agencies,
Constitutional Commissions, Independent Offices, County Governments and State
Corporations to provide all information required by investigators, warning
against any attempts to obstruct the probe.
While assuring honest public servants that they have nothing
to fear, the Cabinet Secretary maintained that those implicated in payroll
fraud would face legal consequences.
The ministry also announced a raft of reforms aimed at
preventing future payroll abuse, including full optimisation of the Human
Resource Information System (HRIS-Ke), integration of payroll systems with
government financial management platforms, establishment of Payroll Audit Units
across public institutions, continuous payroll verification and strengthened
internal controls.
Director of Criminal Investigations (DCI) Mohamed Amin assured
Kenyans that detectives would conduct independent and professional
investigations into the cases.
"We will leave no stone unturned in uncovering any
wrongdoing. Anyone found culpable will be held accountable in accordance with
the Constitution and the law," Amin said.
The government says the reforms are intended to strengthen
accountability in public service, curb payroll fraud, reduce wastage of public
funds and restore confidence in the management of government resources.

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