Monday, December 8,
2025 - Following reported cases of coffee theft in Kimimini, detectives
have launched a crackdown that has led to the arrest of a prime suspect and the
seizure of a significant cache of stolen coffee.
The criminal spree reached its peak on the night of November
25th, 2025, when a mob of around 50 thugs, armed with pangas,
stormed the premises of Sowek Kenya Company Limited in Waitakuk.
Their bold approach involved slicing through the barbed wire
fence, binding two security guards with ropes, and mercilessly assaulting them
before vanishing into the night with the guards' phones and a bounty of nine
beds of drying coffee.
Just a day earlier, in a brazen heist at Kiungani Coffee
Growers Cooperative Society, a group of armed men executed a similarly shocking
theft.
They infiltrated the parchment drying section after digging
a hole through the brick wall, vanishing with approximately 25 bags each
weighing 50 kg of precious P1 coffee parchment.
Thanks to crucial forensic leads, detectives launched a
well-coordinated crackdown.
It wasn’t long before they apprehended a key suspect,
Gregory Kingasia Wekesa, who had been notorious for purchasing coffee from
dubious sources without any authorisation.
Detectives found Maingi in possession of 18 bags of coffee
beans totalling around 1,800 kg, five bags weighing about 500 kg stashed inside
his home, and an additional 13 bags weighing approximately 1,300 kg left
outside to dry in the sun.
The suspect is now in custody at Kimimini Police Station alongside the recovered coffee as authorities prepare for his arraignment.
The Kenyan DAILY POST





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