Senior Reporter
The High Court challenge over the detention of businessman Dominic Hadeed, his wife Genevieve and relative Star Sabga is shining a spotlight on one of the most extraordinary powers available to police during a State of Emergency—the ability to detain people without charge.
While the court will ultimately determine the legality of the applicants’ continued detention today when the matter goes before Justice Frank Seepersad, the case has raised broader questions about the legal framework governing emergency detention, the constitutional safeguards that remain in place and the circumstances under which the State may lawfully restrict a person’s liberty.
The Hadeeds were arrested on June 24 after the execution of search warrants linked to an allegation of conspiracy to murder at their Westmoorings home and Trincity business and have remained in custody without charge. Their legal team has challenged the basis of their continued detention, contending that emergency powers were only later invoked to extend custody.
Justice Seepersad has ordered Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro to clarify during a sitting today whether a Preventive Detention Order (PDO) is being relied upon.
Several senior attorneys and business leaders contacted by Guardian Media yesterday declined to comment, taking a cautious approach because the matter is before the courts. The Law Association was also sent questions but had not responded up to press time.
However, Southern Assembly of Lawyers president Saira Lakhan said the legal threshold for detention depends on the power being exercised.
“Under the ordinary criminal law, the police must have reasonable suspicion that the person has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a criminal offence. Continued detention without charge is subject to statutory time limits and constitutional protections,” she said.
However, she explained that police are granted broader powers under the Emergency Powers Regulations during a state of emergency.
“During a state of emergency, Regulation 13 (or Regulation 14 in earlier Regulations, depending on the applicable Legal Notice) expands those powers. A police officer may arrest without a warrant where the officer reasonably suspects that a person has acted, is acting, or is about to act in a manner prejudicial to public safety or public order, or has committed or is about to commit an offence under the Emergency Powers Regulations.”
She continued: “Although the threshold remains one of reasonable suspicion, it is directed towards protecting public safety rather than investigating completed criminal offences.”
Lakhan said it was also important to distinguish among ordinary criminal detention, detention under Regulation 13 and a Preventive Detention Order (PDO), noting that they are “legally distinct forms of detention.”
“In simple terms, ordinary detention is about investigating a suspected crime. Regulation 13 detention is about allowing the police to act quickly to prevent an immediate threat to public safety during a state of emergency. A Preventive Detention Order is an exceptional executive measure used to prevent future threats where continued detention is considered necessary,” Lakhan said.
She said ordinary criminal detention is investigative and “usually culminates in the suspect either being charged or released.”
By contrast, Regulation 13 detention “exists because Parliament has temporarily authorised broader executive powers during the emergency.”
On PDOs, Lakhan said: “A PDO is not based on investigating a completed offence. Instead, the minister forms the opinion that detention is necessary to prevent conduct prejudicial to public safety. Unlike police detention, it is an executive decision rather than an investigative one. The Constitution specifically recognises this exceptional power during a valid state of emergency, but also creates review mechanisms because of its extraordinary nature.”
Despite the expanded executive powers available during a state of emergency, Lakhan said constitutional safeguards continue to apply.
“Although emergency powers significantly expand executive authority, they do not eliminate the rule of law.”
She said the safeguards include “objective reasonable suspicion, rather than unfettered discretion,” constitutional review, parliamentary oversight, review tribunals for persons detained under preventive detention, access to legal representation and the requirement that emergency powers be exercised only for the purposes authorised by the regulations.
“Accordingly, while rights are curtailed during an emergency, executive action remains reviewable,” she said.
Lakhan explained that a habeas corpus is the classic remedy where a person is detained in excess of 72 hours without being charged. Its purpose is to require the detaining authority to justify the legality of the detention before the High Court.
She noted that while the Emergency Powers Regulations restrict the availability of a habeas corpus for persons lawfully detained under the SoE regime, the remedy “may still be appropriate where:
The detention falls outside the regulations, the statutory preconditions have not been met, the wrong legal power has been invoked, detention continues after the legal authority has expired, or there is uncertainty as to whether the detention is under a PDO or merely police detention.”
On the balance between emergency powers and constitutional rights, Lakhan said the Constitution provides the framework. Fundamental rights under sections 4 and 5 are not abolished during a SoEE. Rather, sections 7–12 permit temporary derogations that are reasonably justifiable for addressing the emergency.
She said emergency powers at present satisfy the principles of:
Legality — exercised only under lawful authority.
Necessity — used only where genuinely required to address the emergency.
Proportionality — restrictions should go no further than necessary.
Accountability — subject to parliamentary and judicial oversight.
Lakhan said courts generally recognise “that governments require greater flexibility during genuine emergencies involving national security or widespread violence.”