CourtLocal News EXCLUSIVE: Govt lawyer accuses Brent Thomas of delaying court case over 2022 arrest by Emmanuel Joseph 28/02/2026 written by Emmanuel Joseph Updated by Barbados Today 28/02/2026 4 min read A+A- Reset Government lawyer Roger Forde SC. (FP) Share FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 1.5K Lawyers for the Barbados government have blamed Trinidadian businessman Brent Thomas and his legal team for dragging out a long-running High Court claim in which Thomas is seeking substantial damages for what the State has already admitted was his unlawful detention and removal from Barbados in 2022. But the Trinidadโlicensed gun dealer has countered that the case could be sooner settled out of court. Thomas, who lodged the lawsuit before the High Court here, had previously expressed concern about the speed at which it was progressing, following Barbadosโ admission of liability and its concession that officers of The Barbados Police Service acted unlawfully in his controversial arrest in Bridgetown and subsequent return to Port of Spain in October 2022. But senior legal counsel for the government, Roger Forde, said it is Thomas and his lawyers who are to blame for the claim not being expedited in a timely manner to a final outcome. Forde told Barbados TODAY exclusively: โThey filed a claim and they havenโt followed through on it. The ball is in their court. They have not even submitted a qualified claim. So, all they have done is filed a claim in the High Court and done nothing else. You Might Be Interested In Crystal Beckles-Holder, 2nd runner up in regional competition GUYANA: Body of child found after gold mine collapses Barbadians asked to help with return tickets for Haitians โIt is their claim. They are to progress the action. We have invited them some time ago to file documents andsubmit a claim; they have not done that.โ But, in another exclusive telephone interview, Thomas said from his home in Port of Spain that while the progress of the case is in his lawyersโ hands, he believes an easier route would be an outโofโcourt settlement, rather than wasting time in court. โI think that we have to come back to Barbados and be dragged through the courts to waste time for the settlement, rather than just simply have a discussion and come to some sort of settlement.โ Asked how soon he expects the matter to be resolved, Thomas replied: โI donโt know. We are waiting to find out from the courts; but what Barbados should be doing is trying to wash this away, so that they stop putting them in the middle of something so ugly. It is called an outโofโcourt settlement โฆ because they are putting themselves in the middle of something that is ugly.โ He continued: โBarbados needs to wash their hands of itโฆ. They were misdirected, and they were forced into doing actions that, afterwards, they realised they had made a mistake. Well, let justice prevail, just give me the information that is required and move on; and let this stigma with Barbados in the middle go away. Barbados doesnโt need this. This is a Trinidad problem.โ Thomas then listed the key pieces of information he requires from the Barbadian authorities. He said he needs to know who called the Barbadian authorities, who took the call, who authorised the police and the plane that took him back to Trinidad, and whether the Barbadian state representative who facilitated his arrest was not apprised of the relevant laws โto just let a visitor to their country be just snatched and taken away like thatโ. Late last year, the Trinidad and Tobago state dropped all charges against Thomas for which the Trinidad police had issued arrest warrants and had come to Barbados to take him. He was passing through Barbados on his way to medical treatment abroad when he was detained. The contentious arrest of the licensed gun dealer from his hotel room by an armed squad from The Barbados Police Service on October 5, 2022 was resurrected by Trinidad and Tobagoโs Prime Minister, Kamla PersadโBissessar, at the CARICOM Summit in St Kitts. She reopened old wounds by describing the businessmanโs arrest as a kidnapping. Prime Minister Mia Mottley swiftly rejected PersadโBissessarโs description as a โscurrilous lieโ, saying that arrest warrants had been presented by Trinidad police to their Barbadian counterparts. โTo describe it as a kidnapping or to suggest that any member of Cabinet โฆ the permanent secretary or the Government of Barbados is involved in kidnapping is scurrilous and defamatory in the extreme,โ Mottley told the stateโowned Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). emmanueljoseph@barbadostoday.bb Emmanuel Joseph You may also like Ishmael outlines vision for a healthier nation, declares NCD war 18/03/2026 Combermere, Christ Church Foundation split zone titles 18/03/2026 President hails teachersโ dedication during school visit 18/03/2026