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Thursday, June 18, 2026

Liberia: Final Arguments End in Tweah and Others’ Trial as Jurors Begin Deliberations; CDC Partisan Jailed for Courtroom Altercation

Monrovia-Final legal arguments have officially concluded in the high-profile economic sabotage case involving former Finance Minister Samuel D. Tweah Jr. and four other former officials of the George Weah administration, with all eyes now fixed on jurors who have retired into deliberations to determine the fate of the accused.


By: Willie N. Tokpah


But before proceedings formally commenced Friday at Criminal Court “C” at the Temple of Justice, drama erupted inside the courtroom when a member of the opposition Congress for Democratic Change, Gaiyeizohn Aba Davis, was remanded to the Monrovia Central Prison for one month by presiding Judge Ousman Feika.

Judge Feika’s decision followed an altercation involving Davis and a court sheriff assigned at the Temple of Justice during the heavily attended court session.

The confrontation, which caused tension in the courtroom area as supporters and observers gathered ahead of the anticipated closing arguments in the politically sensitive case, began when Davis attempted to prevent Court Officers from maintaining order in the courtroom.

Despite the disturbance, proceedings later resumed, with both prosecution lawyers and defense attorneys presenting their final arguments before the court and the jury.

Following the conclusion of arguments, the 15-member jury panel retired to its deliberation room to begin reviewing months of testimonies, documentary evidence, legal submissions, and courtroom arguments presented throughout the trial.

Under Liberia’s jury system, 12 jurors are expected to directly participate in rendering the final verdict, while three alternate jurors remain on standby in case replacements become necessary during deliberations.

The case, regarded as one of the most politically charged and closely watched criminal prosecutions in recent Liberian history, centers around allegations of economic sabotage, money laundering, criminal conspiracy, theft of property, misuse of public money, and fraud linked to government security-related expenditures.

Alongside Tweah, the other defendants include, Nyanti Tuan, Stanley S. Ford, D. Moses P. Cooper and
Jefferson Karmoh.

Throughout the trial, prosecutors argued that the defendants unlawfully authorized and managed the transfer of millions of dollars in public funds through accounts associated with the Financial Intelligence Agency, allegedly bypassing legally established financial procedures.

Defense lawyers, however, strongly rejected the allegations, insisting that the transactions were legitimate national security expenditures carried out within the authority of government operations during the former administration.

The defense further maintained that prosecutors failed to produce evidence showing that any of the defendants personally stole public money or illegally benefited from the transactions.

Friday’s final arguments reportedly brought intense exchanges inside the packed courtroom as lawyers from both sides aggressively defended their positions before the jury retired to deliberate.

Legal analysts say the jury’s eventual verdict could carry political and legal implications for Liberia’s anti-corruption efforts and future prosecutions involving former senior government officials.

Meanwhile, heightened security remained visible around the Temple of Justice on Friday, May 8, evening as supporters, lawyers, family members, and political observers anxiously awaited the jury’s final decision in the landmark case.

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