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DPP secures extradition of Ivorian in US gun smuggling case

Bile Jean Philippe Assemian was indicted by a Grand Jury in the US District Court on May 28.

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by EMMANUEL WANJALA

News26 September 2025 - 13:10
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In Summary


  • According to court records, Assemian and his accomplices allegedly conspired in 2018 to purchase firearms in the US with the intention of illegally exporting them to Côte d’Ivoire. 
  • The US government subsequently issued an Interpol red notice, listing him as a fugitive wanted for prosecution.
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Ivorian Bile Jean Philippe Assemian is extradited to the US on Thursday, September 25, 2025. /ODPP



The Director of Public Prosecutions has successfully secured the extradition of an Ivorian national wanted in the United States for alleged conspiracy to smuggle firearms.

Bile Jean Philippe Assemian, who was indicted by a Grand Jury in the US District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Eastern Division, on May 28, 2025, was repatriated to the United States on Thursday, September 25, following extradition proceedings in Kenya.

According to court records, Assemian and his accomplices allegedly conspired between October and November 2018 to purchase firearms in the United States, mainly in Ohio and Maryland, with the intention of illegally exporting them to Côte d’Ivoire.

The US government subsequently issued an Interpol red notice, listing him as a fugitive wanted for prosecution.

On July 24, 2025, the DPP, through the Central Authority under the Office of the Attorney General and Department of Justice, received a formal request from the United States for Assemian’s arrest and extradition.

The proceedings began in Nairobi the following day.

On September 3, 2025, the Nairobi Chief Magistrate’s Court issued extradition orders, clearing the way for his handover to US authorities.

The case was prosecuted by Vincent Monda, Allen Mulama, Duncan Ondimu, Magdalene Nduati, and Fatma Shaban.

The extradition underscores Kenya’s commitment to honouring its international legal obligations and strengthening cooperation with global partners in the fight against transnational crime.

Kenya has an extradition treaty with the US which enables fugitives to be traced and returned through legal processes to face justice.

The treaty covers 26 crimes and offences committed in either country, including murder, forgery, fraud, manslaughter, kidnapping, abduction, rape, arson, and bribery.

Article 11 of the treaty stipulates: “If sufficient evidence for the extradition be not produced within two months from the date of the apprehension of the fugitive, or within such further time as the High Contracting Party applied to, or the proper tribunal of such High Contracting Party, shall direct, the fugitive shall be set at liberty.”

It further provides that a fugitive shall not be surrendered if the offence is political in nature, or if the person sought has already been tried and discharged or punished for the same crime.