Principled Resistance: Clar Hope Says It Won’t Legitimize Gov’t Abuse

The Clar Hope Foundation, the philanthropic organization founded by former First Lady Clar Marie Weah, has initiated a forceful legal counteroffensive against the Government of Liberia’s Asset Recovery Team.

In a legal filing today, the Foundation submitted a Motion to Quash a process issued against it by Criminal Court ‘A’, declaring the state’s action an unlawful “fishing expedition” that violates constitutional due process. The Foundation’s legal representatives, in a strongly-worded public statement accompanying the motion, assert that the government’s demand lacks any “properly established prima facie basis” and is “untethered to lawful procedure.” The move positions the Foundation not as an entity evading scrutiny, but as a guardian of procedural integrity, arguing that “the law is the law and must be followed by all—government included.”

“No government, no matter how well-intentioned, can lawfully demand that citizens or institutions prove wrongdoing where none has been alleged with specificity or supported by evidence,” the statement reads. It frames the legal challenge as a necessary defense against a “dangerous and irreversible precedent” that could empower state actors to issue sweeping investigative demands without jurisdictional foundation or judicial oversight.

Legal analysts suggest the motion hinges on arguments of overbreadth and lack of particularity, core due process protections designed to prevent precisely the kind of open-ended inquiry the Foundation alleges. The Foundation’s stance implies the Asset Recovery Team has failed to allege a specific violation or link its demand to identified evidence of wrongdoing.

The statement strikes a cautionary tone about the broader implications for civil society, warning that allowing such processes to stand “could be used tomorrow against any private citizens, nonprofit organizations, or institutions.” It emphasizes that “Liberia is a country governed by laws, not by conjecture, political maneuvers, or intimidation.”

While expressing regret at being forced into litigation, the Foundation declared that “today’s silence becomes tomorrow’s erosion of rights,” and that “upholding the rule of law sometimes requires principled resistance, even when compliance would be easier.” The Foundation sought to reassure its stakeholders, stating its mission to uplift vulnerable communities remains uninterrupted. It concluded by affirming its conditional willingness to cooperate, stating it is “ready and willing to comply with any lawful, properly grounded, and constitutionally sound process,” but will not “legitimize actions that undermine due process.”

The motion now places the matter before Criminal Court ‘A’, requiring a judicial determination on the validity of the state’s process and setting the stage for a potentially landmark ruling on the limits of investigative powers in asset recovery proceedings.

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