In Thika, 38-year-old Esther Wanjiru got a message that promised guaranteed wealth in seven days. She was already at her lowest. Her small hair salon had almost no customers for months. Rent was months behind. School fees for her two children were due soon. Every unknown call made her anxious.
“I felt completely trapped,” Esther told me recently. “When someone says they can fix your money problems in just one week, part of you really wants to believe it.” The message came from a man on social media who called himself a powerful spiritual wealth specialist. His page showed stacks of cash, shiny cars, big houses, and screenshots of people thanking him for “life-changing miracles.” It looked convincing enough.
Esther contacted him. He told her her financial block came from jealous rivals and a curse on her destiny. He said a simple prosperity ritual would bring money fast. All she needed was faith and a “small commitment” fee to buy special items for the ceremony. She paid. Then more payments followed for extra “cleansing” steps. Weeks passed. No money arrived. Instead, her savings disappeared. The man stopped replying. His page vanished soon after.
Esther lost what little she had left. Her salon closed for good. She now warns others in Thika and nearby areas about these spiritual scams that target people already struggling. Police say reports of similar frauds have increased, but many victims stay silent out of shame. Read more https://drbokko.com/?p=37468



