A section of staff at the National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA) kept off office as police went on with their probe into the alleged illegal production of fake documents there.
Detectives visited the NTSA offices on Monday and Tuesday for investigations but did not find some staff.
The officers were targeting staff working at IT section and some managers to understand the process an applicant goes through in getting documents. 
The team was informed most of the staff were “out on duties” in an operation launched by the authority to ensure road safety in the festive season.
The detectives are focusing on among others, a new trend at the authority whereby forced transfer of documents happen prompting fraud.
This happens when a vehicle is taken from the owner over among others default of loan and sold to a new buyer.
But for this to happen, the owner must inform NTSA, provide an original logbook, copy of ID, an affidavit and a Kenya Revenue Authority PIN, the one of the new owner and a police tape lift report.
Police say the process among others have however been happening with the aid of insiders hence the new probe.
NTSA moved the registration process of vehicles online in 2017 in a move that was seen as part of a solution to many complaints that emerged over fraud in the sector.
The Transport Integrated Management System (Tims) enables applicants to register and transfer vehicles easily. 
It however seems to be prone to breakdowns which police believe gives room to infiltration and compromise.
Investigations show this has continued to give room for production of cloned number plates, illegally registering vehicles whose tax has not been paid and illegal transfer of vehicles and production of fake logbooks.
Banks have raised concern with the authorities over the said fraud, which prompted Directorate of Criminal Investigations to post detectives at NTSA.
The latest move came after over 450 genuine motor vehicle logbooks were recovered at a cyber cafe in Nairobi on December 17.
Police said some officials at NTSA are part of organized criminal gang that is behind the syndicate hence putting lives of many unsuspecting motorists at risk.
“Detectives acting on information busted two men busy at work in a cyber cafe in Ngara, along Desai road,” officials at the Directorate of Criminal Investigations said.
This is the latest incident to be unraveled and involving the agency officials.
In 2019, some top managers at the authority were arrested following investigations on how a car that had been used in a terror incident at the Dusit d2 complex had a registration of another car.
Last year, a number of complaints were lodged by motorists after they realized their vehicles had been transferred without their knowledge. Some were used in crimes.
This prompted some structural changes within the authority. The board was disbanded and a new one set up.
DCI said investigations show the syndicate was in cahoots with corrupt officials from NTSA, who transfer ownership of the cars illegally. 
Police said that at the cyber, an application of a logbook only takes a few hours before it is delivered by an NTSA official.
“The mastermind of the syndicate working in cahoots with officials at the country’s motor vehicle registration body, also illegally develops affidavits and commissions them, before they are sent to contacts at NTSA for forced transfer of motor vehicles,” DCI said.
Details of the logbook are then processed within a few minutes without the actual owner’s knowledge.
“Detectives established that the syndicate develops falsified importation documents from a renowned car dealer and Electronic Tax Register (ETR) receipts.”
NTSA Manager, Corporate Affairs and Communications Esther Kago declined to comment on the issue as it is under probe.
Police who staged a raid at the cyber cafe said it was reminiscent of a publishing house turned into a motor vehicle registration centre.
DCI boss George Kinoti said the transfer of a motor vehicle is finalized exposing the possibility of one’s vehicle being transferred without his knowledge.
Motor vehicle logbooks bearing the original seals and assorted motor vehicle registration documents were recovered.
Kinoti said there is a new crime that is gaining ground in the city.
He said unscrupulous businesses men working with employees in money lending institutions have devised a new way of defrauding unsuspecting Kenyans and financial institutions.
The gang who have turned into overnight millionaires, have built a shadowy network of hard-to-trace individuals, incorporating officials at NTSA, officials said.
For instance, Kinoti said a local bank had last year financed a motorist, to acquire a lorry after making a deposit of Sh1.2 million.
But the ownership of the lorry was later changed without the knowledge of the owners and auctioned.
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