A Trinidad attorney raised alarms after a simple conversation sparked a national question: what if innocent people are behind bars? Brent Winter began his career as a prison officer, spent a decade prosecuting cases, and now defends the accused. In 2020, after a friend in Jamaica asked him about Netflix’s The Innocence Files, he wrote to the Trinidad and Tobago Newsday warning that “police can kill a man in more ways than by placing a knee on his neck.”
Winter’s experience revealed a troubling truth: wrongful convictions are almost invisible in the Caribbean. Existing legal avenues are narrow, reliant on recanted eyewitness testimony, and rarely successful. Without independent bodies like the UK’s Criminal Cases Review Commission, the system leaves innocent people with no real chance at justice—even as the death penalty remains on the books.
Host Andrew Wildes examines how public indifference, political will, and systemic failures collide in Trinidad and the wider Caribbean, why wrongful convictions undermine true crime prevention, and why the debate on capital punishment cannot be separated from the risk of executing the innocent.
Content note: References to wrongful conviction, imprisonment, police misconduct, prosecutorial misconduct, and the death penalty.
Key Themes
➤ Why wrongful convictions in the Caribbean remain invisible
➤ The dangers of eyewitness testimony and recanted evidence
➤ The political and cultural barriers to reform in Trinidad and beyond
➤ How wrongful convictions undermine crime prevention
➤ The death penalty debate when innocence is not guaranteed
Chapters
00:00 — Letter That Sparked a Debate
03:00 — From Prison Guard to Prosecutor
05:00 — Public Pushback on Innocence
08:00 — Why Appeals Rarely Succeed
11:30 — Lessons from the UK Model
13:30 — Crime, Politics, and Injustice
16:00 — Death Penalty and Wrongful Convictions
19:30 — Police Pressure and False IDs
22:00 — Need for Independent Review
24:30 — Disclosure Failures and Bias
28:00 — Plea Deals and Long Remand Times
30:00 — Call to Action for Reform
Brought to you by The Wave on The Frequency Network.
Connect with Brent Winter
Brent David Winter | LL.B, LEC, LLM
Brent D. Winter - Attorney-at-Law in Private Practice
More About Andrew Wildes
Explore the work of Andrew Wildes—Jamaican lawyer, journalist, and host of Stuck: Wrongful Convictions in Jamaica. His mission is to expose systemic injustice, amplify the voices of the wrongfully imprisoned, and drive meaningful legal reform through storytelling and advocacy.
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For updates, insights, and behind-the-scenes content, follow Andrew across platforms and join the conversation on justice in Jamaica.
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