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By Aurax Radio | July 2, 2026 | 2 min read
The Trinidad and Tobago government has retained two United Kingdom King's Counsel to represent the State in legal proceedings involving businessman Dominic Hadeed and his wife, Genevieve Hadeed. The move comes as the High Court considers challenges arising from the couple's detention during an ongoing criminal investigation.
The Attorney General's legal team is being supported by two UK King's Counsel in the High Court proceedings involving Dominic and Genevieve Hadeed.
The Trinidad and Tobago government has engaged two senior barristers from the United Kingdom to represent the State in High Court proceedings involving businessman Dominic Hadeed and his wife, Genevieve Hadeed. The attorneys, both holding the rank of King's Counsel, have been retained to assist the Attorney General's legal team as the court hears matters related to the couple's detention following their arrest in connection with an alleged murder conspiracy investigation. The legal challenge focuses on whether the detention was lawful and whether the constitutional rights of the Hadeeds were infringed during the process.
During the latest court proceedings, attorneys representing the Hadeeds questioned the State's decision to retain overseas counsel, while government lawyers argued that the case raises significant constitutional and public law issues warranting specialist representation. The matter remains before the High Court, where the parties are addressing issues including the legality of the arrests, detention procedures and applications for constitutional relief. No determination has yet been made on the merits of the case, and the criminal investigation that prompted the arrests remains ongoing.
The case has attracted widespread public and political attention because it involves one of Trinidad and Tobago's best-known business figures and has unfolded during the country's current State of Emergency, under which security forces have expanded powers of detention in certain circumstances. The proceedings are expected to clarify the extent of those powers and the constitutional safeguards available to individuals detained during major criminal investigations. The outcome could have broader implications for the interpretation of emergency powers and the balance between national security measures and individual rights under Trinidad and Tobago law.