Windward Trading: Charging a shelf company with money laundering and returning confiscated funds to Kenyan citizens
Windward Trading: Charging a shelf company with money laundering and returning confiscated funds to Kenyan citizens
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Course name Windward Trading: Charging a shelf company with money laundering and returning confiscated funds to Kenyan citizens
In the Windward Trading case, Kenya and Jersey collaborated to recover and repatriate ...
In the Windward Trading case, Kenya and Jersey collaborated to recover and repatriate approximately USD 3.7 million in corruptly acquired funds held since 2011. The money was traced to Windward Trading Ltd, a shelf company used by Kenyan officials—including former Kenya Power CEO Samuel Gichuru and ex-Energy Minister Chrysanthus Okemo—to channel bribes through accounts at HSBC. Efforts to extradite the individuals involved stalled for years, delaying formal asset recovery. To overcome this, authorities charged Windward Trading directly with money laundering, resulting in a guilty plea and a court-ordered confiscation of the funds. A breakthrough came through informal cooperation and the mutual decision to return the assets to Kenya for health-related development, including medical equipment and pandemic relief.
This case marked Jersey’s first repatriation of confiscated assets to Kenya and inspired the creation of the Framework for the Return of Assets from Corruption and Crime in Kenya (FRACCK), which promotes transparency and development-focused use of recovered assets. The success of the initiative underscores the effectiveness of informal collaboration, non-conviction-based forfeiture mechanisms, and innovative legal approaches like charging corporate entities. It also emphasizes the importance of trust and accountability in international asset recovery, with Crown Agents and Amref Health Africa appointed to ensure transparent disbursement of funds for public benefit.