Adolf Tetteh Adjei falls sick, rushed to hospital after monumental 5–0 Supreme Court defeat


The fallout from the Supreme Court’s unanimous 5–0 ruling in favour of investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas and Holy Quaye has taken a dramatic and deeply personal turn for businessman Adolf Tetteh Adjei, the man who for years presented himself as the undisputed “King of Tseado.”

According to a close worker, the ruling shattered him so completely that he was rushed to the hospital after suffering severe emotional and physical distress shortly after leaving the courtroom.

The source, who has worked closely with Adolf for years, revealed that the tears he shed in court were only the beginning. As the reality of the judgment sank in, Adolf reportedly locked himself in his room, refusing to eat, refusing to sleep, and muttering that he had been “abandoned by everyone.” His blood pressure rose dangerously high, prompting his household to rush him for medical attention.

“He just kept saying over and over, ‘Over 33 acres… all gone. What will I do now? How can I face all these people?’” the worker recounted. “He is not himself. His whole body is shaking. We had to force him into the car. We should pray for him.”

The worker added that buyers who had acquired land from Adolf some paying huge sums—began trooping to his home and calling incessantly, demanding refunds the moment the judgment went public. The pressure, he said, has been unbearable.

“He cannot face them. They are angry. Some are confused. Others feel cheated. It is too much for one person,” the worker explained.

Interestingly, when The New Crusading Guide contacted Adolf for confirmation of the reports about his deteriorating health, he flatly denied being sick, insisting he was “perfectly fine.” But his worker maintained that the businessman was “only trying to save face because he knows how big this has become.”

THE COURTROOM MOMENT THAT BROKE HIM

Those who were present in the courtroom say Adolf walked in with the confidence of a man expecting victory. He wore a flowing all-white kaftan, trailed by his usual cluster of media men he had personally invited to witness what he believed would be his moment of triumph.

But minutes into the reading of the judgment, everything changed.

The Supreme Court methodically dismantled the entire foundation of his claim, describing the root of his title as illegal, defective, and executed in violation of Ghanaian law. The Justices concluded that Anas’s 2005 customary land grant—given by families who remained in lawful possession—was superior, valid, and unbroken. They declared Adolf’s 2015 certificate void and struck down the conveyances and registrations that supported it.

Those in the gallery said Adolf’s lawyer, Bright Atoko, sat frozen, flipping through documents with growing confusion. Meanwhile, the lawyers for Anas—David Ametefe and Odei Krow—quietly gathered their files and walked out without celebration, knowing the law had spoken in the clearest possible terms.

Adolf, however, could not hold himself together. His face drained of colour, his hands trembled uncontrollably, and at the moment the Court delivered its decisive line that Anas’s interest prevailed over his purported registration, he abruptly stood up and bolted from the courtroom. Witnesses in the corridor saw him break down completely, crying out:

“This is not fair… Lord, why have you forsaken me? Is this my end?”

The media men he had brought with him—expecting victory footage—quietly melted away, leaving him alone in his distress.

THE COLLAPSE OF AN EMPIRE

For years, Adolf projected himself across La and Tseado as the dominant land authority, using media platforms—most notably Net 2 TV—to brand Anas as a thief, a land grabber, and a fraud. He teamed up publicly with NPP Presidential Aspirant Kennedy Agyapong in a coordinated campaign to discredit Anas while the case was still pending.

He boasted of demolitions that never occurred and gave interviews asserting that Anas had no right to the land.

His narrative even found its way into a U.S. court when Kennedy Agyapong attempted to use the land dispute in his defamation defence—an argument that was thrown out instantly. Justice Baah, in his controversial High Court decision where he referred to Anas as an “investigative terrorist,” also cited this same land dispute and labeled Anas a thief and a land grabber, despite the matter being unresolved.

Today, the Supreme Court has overturned that entire narrative.

The Court’s findings confirmed that:

                •             the families who granted land to Anas had always remained in possession,

                •             the Hillsview transaction on which Adolf’s claim depended was illegal at its root,

                •             and the transfers made during litigation bore the unmistakable “badge of fraud.”

With this judgement, more than 33 acres tied to Adolf’s name collapse instantly. Every title flowing from the flawed Hillsview chain is effectively erased.

A MAN IN FREEFALL

As news of the ruling spread, those who had bought land through him began demanding immediate refunds. According to his worker, this has been the most crushing blow.

“He feels like his whole world has fallen apart,” the worker said softly. “He keeps saying he cannot survive this. He insists he wants to be left alone. Even we, his workers, cannot talk to him.”

Though Adolf denied being sick when contacted by The New Crusading Guide, the reality painted by those closest to him suggests a man in deep trauma—both emotional and financial—after the collapse of his land empire.

ANAS VINDICATED

After years  of accusations, media campaigns, political attacks, and strategic misinformation, the Supreme Court has brought finality:

Anas’s rights stand.

The respondent’s claims collapse.

And the so-called “King of Tseado” faces the greatest personal and legal reckoning of his life.

Source: The New Crusading Guide



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