The silence is deafening. The avoidance is deliberate. And the rule of law in the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court just delivered another crushing blow to one of the most powerful, untouchable networks in global media and law.

On February 2, 2026, I filed a re-issued letter directly to the Honourable Mr Justice René Williams in Case No. ANUHCV2025/0149 — Alkiviades David v. David Boies & Others. This is no ordinary procedural note. It is a formal declaration of inevitability: jurisdiction in Antigua & Barbuda is not merely seized — it is now impossible to avoid.

The core truth is simple and devastating for the defendants: The original pleadings name fourteen defendants, including domestically resident political actors and party executives in Antigua & Barbuda. Their presence anchors territorial jurisdiction firmly in this sovereign nation. No clever motion, no forum non conveniens argument, no high-powered U.S. or U.K. firm can rewrite geography or procedure. Avoidance is impossible in fact and untenable in law.

... This is not gamesmanship. As a litigant in person with a recognized disability affecting sequencing and processing of complex information, I explain the timing transparently: where the procedural picture was incomplete, realization came later. But the law does not bend for delay. Acceptance of this Court’s jurisdiction was unavoidable. Any non-engagement thereafter is a deliberate choice — one that courts view dimly when defaults pile up and accountability looms.

... The hammer has fallen — and it will not lift until justice is served.