Businessman Adolf Tetteh Adjei, widely known in La and Tseado for projecting himself as the “King of Tseado,” is said to be battling a severe emotional breakdown after the Supreme Court delivered a unanimous 5–0 ruling that stripped him of more than 33 acres of contested land and upheld the interest of investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas.
Reports from inside his household indicate that the gravity of the judgment hit Adolf so hard that he had to be rushed to hospital shortly after leaving the courtroom. A close worker told Amnewsworld that the tears he shed during the ruling were only the beginning of what became a frightening collapse in his mental and physical state.
According to the source, Adolf locked himself indoors upon returning home, refusing food, refusing sleep, and repeatedly lamenting that he had been abandoned. His blood pressure reportedly spiked to dangerous levels as he kept muttering, “Over 33 acres… all gone. How will I face them now?” The situation escalated when land buyers who had acquired plots from him began calling and visiting his home, demanding immediate refunds.
“He cannot face them,” the worker said. “Some are angry, some are confused, and others feel cheated. The pressure is too much for him.”
Adolf, however, denied any health crisis when contacted by The New Crusading Guide, insisting that he was “perfectly fine.” But the worker maintained he was only trying to save face, given the magnitude of the public fallout.
A Courtroom Moment That Shattered His Confidence
Witnesses in the Supreme Court described Adolf as arriving with full confidence, dressed in all-white kaftan and accompanied by media personnel he had invited to record his expected victory. But minutes into the judgment, the atmosphere changed.
The Supreme Court ruled that the foundation of Adolf’s claim was illegal and defective, while Anas’s 2005 customary land grant issued by families still in lawful possession remained valid. Adolf’s 2015 land certificate was declared void, along with the entire chain of conveyances linked to it.
Observers in the courtroom said Adolf’s lawyer, Bright Atoko, appeared stunned as the ruling dismantled their arguments. Lawyers for Anas, led by David Ametefe and Odei Krow, left quietly after the verdict.
Adolf, unable to control his emotions, bolted out of the courtroom in tears at the moment the Court affirmed Anas’s superior interest. In the corridor, he was heard crying, “This is not fair… Lord, why have you forsaken me?”
Collapse of a Public Narrative
For years, Adolf projected himself across La and Tseado as the legitimate land authority, using media platforms particularly Net 2 TV to brand Anas as a fraud and land grabber. His claims featured prominently in Kennedy Agyapong’s U.S. court filings and even influenced Justice Baah’s controversial High Court ruling that labeled Anas an “investigative terrorist.”
The Supreme Court’s decision demolishes that narrative entirely.
The Justices confirmed that:
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the families who granted land to Anas had never lost possession,
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the Hillsview transaction anchoring Adolf’s claim was illegal,
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and subsequent transfers carried the “badge of fraud.”
With the ruling, Adolf’s land empire — more than 33 acres tied to his name — effectively collapses.
A Man Under Immense Pressure
As the ruling spread, buyers who purchased land through Adolf reportedly stormed his residence, demanding compensation. His worker described him as a man in “deep trauma,” overwhelmed both financially and emotionally.
“He keeps saying his entire world is gone,” the source added. “He doesn’t want to see anyone.”
Anas Vindicated
After years of media battles, political smears, and public accusations, the Supreme Court has issued a definitive ruling:
Anas’s rights stand unchallenged.
Adolf’s claims collapse.
And the self-styled “King of Tseado” now faces a crisis that extends far beyond the courtroom.
