Kenya’s justice system stands on a simple, powerful promise: that every citizen, regardless of status, will find fairness, protection, and recourse within the courts of law. Yet, beneath this ideal lies a troubling and increasingly blatant crisis, a culture of compromised integrity among a section of lawyers, court staff, and even judicial officers that undermines justice at its very core.
While the legal profession prides itself on codes of ethics, oaths of honesty, and the sacred duty to protect the interests of clients, reality reveals a darker practice: unscrupulous lawyers who double-cross their clients, “eat from both sides,” manipulate processes, collude with corrupt registrars, or deliberately delay cases for personal gain. The result is a justice system where cases drag for years, files mysteriously go missing, rulings are endlessly postponed, and victims are forced into frustration, financial strain, or abandonment of justice altogether.
This is not merely a professional failing; it is a betrayal of public trust.
When Lawyers Become Predators Instead of Protectors
The lawyer–client relationship is built on confidentiality, honesty, and loyalty. Yet growing reports show lawyers who knowingly sabotage their clients’ cases because they have been compromised by the opposing party. This “eating from both sides” phenomenon has become an open secret, one that thrives in an environment where oversight is weak and disciplinary action is rare.
Some lawyers intentionally fail to attend hearings to force adjournments, knowing that each delay increases fees. Others mislead clients about the status of their cases, forge signatures, or disappear after receiving retainer payments. For many ordinary Kenyans, families fighting land disputes, employees wrongfully terminated, widows seeking succession rights, their greatest adversary becomes not the opponent in court, but their own lawyer.
This behavior is not only unethical; it is profoundly destructive. It:
- Erodes the confidence clients have in the justice system
- Exposes vulnerable litigants to exploitation
- Increases the backlog of cases
- Undermines the very spirit of legal representation
A justice system can recover from technical delays. But recovering from moral decay is far more difficult.
Court Officials Who Sell Justice to the Highest Bidder
The problem extends beyond lawyers. Many Kenyans will tell you that “justice is found at the registry before it is found in the courtroom.” Files go missing mysteriously, only to reappear when money changes hands. Court clerks and registrars, entrusted with critical administrative roles, often wield enormous power over timelines, scheduling, and documentation.
A delayed file means a delayed ruling. A missing document means a frustrated litigant. A “lost” appeal means someone’s rights are quietly buried.
Corruption at these administrative levels distorts the entire judicial pipeline. Even the most honest judge cannot deliver justice on a file that never reaches their desk.
Justice Delayed Is Not Just Justice Denied, It Is Justice Destroyed
Every unnecessary delay has human consequences. It traps families in emotional turmoil, drains finances, prolongs suffering, and in some cases, destroys lives. Land disputes leave families locked out of their homes for decades. Commercial disputes cripple businesses. Criminal cases drag on while victims and accused persons languish without closure.
A system that is slow becomes a system that is selectively accessible. And selective justice is not justice at all.
The Way Forward:
Kenya’s legal community must confront this crisis with honesty and urgency.
- Stricter disciplinary action from the Law Society of Kenya is essential. Lawyers who double-cross clients must face real, predictable consequences.
- Digitization and automation of court processes can minimize opportunities for file tampering and bribery.
- Real-time case tracking for litigants would eliminate secrecy and empower clients with transparency.
- Mandatory ethics training and public reporting of misconduct cases would restore confidence and enforce accountability.
- Stronger whistleblower protections are needed for honest staff caught in corrupt environments.
Kenya’s justice system does not need more laws—it needs more integrity.
The legal profession is meant to be a noble calling, one that carries the weight of people’s hopes and fears. But when lawyers betray their clients, when clerks sell access, when cases are delayed for profit, the foundation of justice crumbles. If integrity does not return to the centre of Kenya’s legal ecosystem, then justice will remain a promise on paper—and a nightmare in reality. The country cannot afford that. And the people deserve better.
