In a stunning twist to one of the most shocking assassinations in Nairobi’s legal circles, fresh revelations show that slain lawyer Mathew Kyalo Mbobu was deeply entangled in crippling debt, multiple lawsuits, and an increasingly desperate financial spiral that may have sealed his fate.
Mbobu, once celebrated as a senior advocate and land law expert, was blacklisted by major banks, hounded by shylocks, and fighting court battles linked to mismanaged client funds. The trail of debts, some of which had multiplied to astronomical figures, paints a chilling picture of a man who lived large but was drowning behind the scenes.
Shylocks and Spiraling Debts
According to sources close to the investigations, Mbobu’s financial troubles began to spiral in 2019, when he borrowed Ksh10 million from a shylock. The loan, structured under punitive terms, snowballed despite partial repayments.
Court and police records indicate that by 2021, Mbobu had already paid Ksh24 million, more than double the original debt. Yet, due to compounded interest, the outstanding figure ballooned to Ksh72 million by September 2025.
“The shylock loans were structured in a way that the more he paid, the more the balance grew. It was a trap,” a source familiar with the transactions told this publication.
The Karen Land Saga
In 2023, Mbobu’s troubles deepened when a powerful religious organisation hired him to oversee the sale of two prime Karen parcels worth Ksh250 million. While he released Ksh153 million to his clients, he withheld a staggering Ksh97 million.
Outraged, the organisation sued him at the Milimani Commercial Courts. Justice Francis Gikonyo later ruled that Mbobu must pay the Ksh97 million plus accrued interest, allowing him to keep only Ksh8.7 million as legal fees.
Legal observers say this ruling severely damaged his standing in the corridors of justice. “It cast a long shadow on his reputation. Even within the Law Society circles, whispers began about whether he could be trusted with client funds,” a Nairobi advocate told us.
A Web of Creditors
But that was not the end. Records show that a Somali businessman had extended Mbobu Ksh17 million for a ranch investment project. By 2025, the unpaid debt had ballooned to Ksh52 million, and pressure was mounting.
In August 2024, yet another client moved to court, accusing Mbobu of withholding Ksh40 million awarded through arbitration. The funds, transferred to his firm, were never released. That matter remained unresolved at the time of his death.
A Career on the Brink
Insiders at the Judiciary reveal that several creditors had registered caveats against Mbobu’s properties. With his name on the Credit Reference Bureau (CRB) blacklist, banks shut their doors to him. He turned to private lenders and shylocks, digging himself deeper into financial quicksand.
“He was living on borrowed time — legally, financially, and now, tragically, literally,” one senior lawyer remarked.
Brutal Assassination
On the night of Tuesday, September 9, 2025, Mbobu’s debts caught up with him in the most brutal way. Unknown assailants trailed him along Magadi Road and unleashed a hail of bullets as he drove home.
An autopsy conducted on Thursday, September 11, by Chief Government Pathologist Johansen Oduor, revealed Mbobu was shot eight times at close range, suggesting a calculated execution rather than a random attack.
Police sources told this publication that several of his creditors are now “persons of interest” in the homicide probe.
A Life of Contrast
The slain lawyer, once admired for his eloquence in court and high-profile clientele, now emerges as a man caught between prestige and peril. His assassination has laid bare the underbelly of Nairobi’s murky world of debt, power, and private lending — where money disputes are often settled not in boardrooms, but in blood.
As detectives tighten the noose, the question lingers: Was Kyalo Mbobu’s murder the final act of a financial war he could no longer afford to fight?








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