Even as High Court stopped criminal proceedings about her, Deputy Chief Justice Philomena Mwilu has now directly linked her woes to State House.
In yet a case that could take a political angle, President Uhuru Kenyatta has however insisted that no one is immune in the fight against graft.
"Nobody will be spared, not even my family. Detectives have a blessing to arrest all those implicated," he said in an interview.
So far, Mwilu, PS Richard Lesiyampe and Lilian Mbogo are high profile people embroiled in the fight against graft cycle.
And in an affidavit sworn at the court, Mwilu insists that her woes have everything to do with Presidential election petition in which Uhuru lost.
"Immediately following the determination of the SCOK on September 1 last year, the President made public statements issuing both explicit and implicit threats against the majority judges who decided the outcome of the presidential petition. That is why I believe the impugned charges are not coincidental and appear to be part of a larger scheme to embarrass me, to expose me to ridicule and harassment," the DCJ says.
She added: "Taken in their totality together with the frivolity of the charges now levelled against me, it is clear the impugned criminal proceedings have been commenced with an ulterior motive and are malicious."
Last year, Uhuru threatened to 'revisit' the landmark ruling that saw his victory nullified adding that he would 'fix' the judiciary.
In an intensive rally at Burma market, Uhuru also labelled Supreme Court Judges 'wakora'.
Mwilu's case could ignite a simmering tensions between the executive and the judicial arm of the government.