
the Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Bill, 2024—that aims to expunge minor criminal records once individuals have served their sentences or paid their fines. His intent is to give reformed Kenyans a fair chance at reintegration and employment, instead of being perpetually penalized by old records on police clearance certificates.
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Key Features of the Proposed Amendment
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Scope of Expungement: Applies to minor offences; once the sentence is served or fines paid, the record would be cleared.
- Excluded Offences: The proposal explicitly excludes serious crimes such as rape, defilement, sodomy, incest, murder, treason, robbery with violence, and potentially terrorism and serious financial crimes—subject to committee adjustments.
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- Judicial Precedent: The initiative follows a 2020 High Court decision in Ibrahim Ngohi v DCI, where the court observed the absence of a legal framework for record expungement and recommended parliamentary action.
- Policy Rationale: Babu Owino stated: “Once a person has served their sentence or paid their fine, they should be clean. They have already paid their debt to society.
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onsiderations & Concerns Raised:
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Refinement Needed: There’s openness to refining which offences are excluded and possibly introducing a monitoring period post-release. Automatic clearance for juvenile offences upon adulthood is also proposed.
- Oversight: MPs raised concerns about the need to prove rehabilitation before expungement, and questioned whether serious offences like terrorism or financial crimes should ever qualify.
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