On April 17, 2025, a significant legal claim was filed in the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, setting the stage for a case that has profound implications for sovereign rights and international law. The original Statement of Claim (Case ANUHCV2025/0149) alleged a complex web of abuse of process, conspiracy, and economic interference, seeking $10 billion in damages. It implicated a high-profile group that includes legal personalities such as David Boies and Gloria Allred, alongside major corporate entities.
As the proceedings evolved, an Amended Statement of Claim was submitted on September 24, 2025, dramatically increasing the stakes to over $80 billion. This amendment introduced a theory of long-arc carbon sovereignty losses, signifying financial damages that could reach upwards of $400 billion in relation to fossil fuel interests. The expanded defendant roster now includes global banking executives and reputed media conglomerates, spotlighting the intersection of legal accountability and corporate malfeasance.
These documents, stamped and sworn, serve as a historical record of the case. All filings and claims have been officially logged, marking a crucial moment when national interests clearly confront multinational corporate powers.
The court has yet to render judgments on liability or damages, with a decision expected in February 2026. This case illustrates the increasing visibility and progressiveness with which small nations are asserting their sovereign rights against global giants. With the defendants now publicly named and the parameters of the loss models firmly established, the narrative of legal confrontation at a sovereign scale begins to unfold.

















