A staff member at Nairobi City Water and Sewerage Company (NCWSC) has been formally charged in Milimani Anti-Corruption Court after investigations showed she used a forged Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) to secure her job. Kenyans+2KDRTV+2
What the Charges Say
-
The accused—Teresia Chepkemoi Chepkwony—worked in various roles including Revenue Collection Assistant, Technician, and Marketing Assistant at Nairobi Water. Nairobi Wire+2KDRTV+2
-
She is alleged to have submitted a fake KCSE certificate indicating a mean grade of C+ from Boron Secondary School, which was purposed to be genuine from KNEC. KDRTV+2Nairobi Wire+2
-
The document was used to fill her personnel records and used in HR forms, effectively deceiving the employer (NCWSC). Kenyans+1
Scale of the Fraud
-
Because of the forged documents, she allegedly received salaries & benefits totalling about KSh 7,590,872 between March 1, 2013 to December 31, 2023. Kenyans+2KDRTV+2
-
The fraud is not just the forgery; it includes fraudulent acquisition of public property, deceiving a principal, uttering a false document, and forgery under relevant sections of Kenyan law. KDRTV+2Nairobi Wire+2
Legal Process & Bail
-
Chepkwony denied all the charges when arraigned. Kenyans+1
-
She was granted bail: bond of KSh 500,000 with one surety of the same, or alternatively cash bail of KSh 100,000. Also required to provide two contact persons. Kenyans+1
-
Mention date for further court directions was set for September 3, 2025. Kenyans+1
Why It Matters
-
This case underscores a growing concern over academic forgeries being used to gain employment in public institutions. It’s part of a wider crackdown. Nairobi Wire+1
-
The financial loss to the state is significant, since public funds pay the salaries and benefits based on false qualifications.
-
It raises questions about the verification processes in hiring at utility companies and other public bodies.
What to Watch
-
Outcome of the trial—whether she will be convicted, and what penalties will follow (fines, potential imprisonment).
-
How NCWSC corrects its hiring and verification systems to prevent similar fraud.
-
Whether this case will deter others tempted to use forged documents.
-
Public service reforms around credential verification and HR oversight.
Conclusion
The NCWSC employee charged with forging a KCSE certificate is a sharp reminder that integrity in public employment matters. Beyond the courtroom, this case holds lessons for employers, public institutions, and job seekers: honesty, verification, and accountability are non-negotiable.