[4] In June 2011, when Kedi was Minister of Transport and Communications, he was charged with ten counts of criminal acts relating to misappropriation of funds, making it the first time a Marshall Islands minister was charged with criminal acts.
[5][6] When the case went to court the next month seven of the charges were dropped, and Kedi pleaded no contest to the remaining three.
[8] In October 2019, the Supreme Court of the Marshall Islands struck down the country's voting law as unconstitutional relating to an issue for offshore postal ballots.
Kedi subsequently argued that previous election law which did allow for offshore postal ballots to take effect again.
[10][11] In February 2023, The Washington Post reported that Kedi is under investigation by the Marshall Islands' attorney general.