Cabinet Orders DCI Probe Into Suspected KSh6.2 Billion Government Payroll Fraud
The directive was issued during a Cabinet meeting chaired by President William Ruto at State House, Nairobi, on Tuesday, June 30, as the government intensified efforts to curb corruption, protect public funds and restore confidence in the management of the national wage bill.
Authorities believe the suspected fraud involves unauthorised alterations to payroll records, irregular salary payments, weak internal controls and failures in the management of statutory deductions, resulting in significant financial losses to taxpayers.

“Cabinet directed the Directorate of Criminal Investigations to investigate payroll fraud, verify personal numbers used in payroll processing, dismantle criminal networks manipulating Government payroll systems, recover lost public funds, and ensure the immediate arrest and prosecution of all persons found culpable,” the Cabinet dispatch stated.
The government says the investigation will focus on identifying individuals and organised networks allegedly exploiting weaknesses within public payroll systems for personal gain.
As part of the probe, detectives have been instructed to verify employee personal numbers used during payroll processing, trace irregular transactions, recover any funds obtained fraudulently and recommend criminal charges against anyone found responsible.
The Cabinet’s intervention follows a comprehensive payroll audit that revealed suspected financial irregularities in 12 out of Kenya’s 53 State Departments.
According to the audit findings, the sampled departments recorded suspected payroll anomalies amounting to approximately KSh6.2 billion, exposing significant weaknesses in payroll administration and oversight.
“A sample audit of 12 of the 53 State Departments revealed suspected payroll irregularities amounting to KSh6.2 billion, exposing unauthorised alterations to payroll records, irregular payments, weak controls over statutory deductions, fragmented payroll management and major oversight gaps,” the dispatch added.
Beyond criminal investigations, Cabinet has approved a series of reforms aimed at strengthening payroll management and preventing future losses.
Officials say the broader audit will help identify ghost workers, duplicate records, unauthorised salary adjustments and other fraudulent practices that may have escaped earlier reviews.

According to the Cabinet, the centralised digital platform is expected to standardise payroll management, improve transparency and strengthen oversight through automated monitoring and enhanced accountability mechanisms.
The reforms form part of the government’s wider public sector transformation agenda aimed at improving financial discipline while ensuring public resources are used efficiently.
Successive administrations have introduced payroll verification exercises and digitisation programmes in an effort to eliminate fraudulent payments, although concerns have persisted over gaps in implementation.

As the DCI begins its investigations, attention is expected to shift to the affected government departments and agencies, with the findings likely to shape further reforms aimed at protecting billions of shillings in public funds and restoring confidence in Kenya’s payroll management systems.
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Cabinet Orders DCI Probe Into Suspected KSh6.2 Billion Government Payroll Fraud

