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Sunday, June 29, 2025

3 men freed of 2003 murder

by

Derek Achong
150 days ago
20250130
McDonald Bailey and Keyon Anthony celebrate with their lawyers Chelsea John, left, and Larry Williams , right, outside the Hall of Justice, after they were freed of murder yesterday.

McDonald Bailey and Keyon Anthony celebrate with their lawyers Chelsea John, left, and Larry Williams , right, outside the Hall of Justice, after they were freed of murder yesterday.

KERWIN PIERRE

Three men have been freed of mur­der­ing a 22-year-old Diego Mar­tin res­i­dent over two decades ago, with one of them crit­i­cis­ing the DPP’s of­fice for not dis­con­tin­u­ing the case. 

Mc­Don­ald Bai­ley, 52, Key­on “Rat­ti” An­tho­ny, 49, and 43-year-old Gareth “Red­do” Wise­man were freed yes­ter­day, af­ter High Court Judge Maria Bus­by-Ear­le-Cad­dle up­held a no-case sub­mis­sion over there be­ing in­suf­fi­cient ev­i­dence link­ing them to the crime. 

The le­gal vic­to­ry was bit­ter­sweet for Wise­man, as un­like his for­mer co-ac­cused, he was not able to walk out of the Hall of Jus­tice in Port-of-Spain to be re­unit­ed with rel­a­tives, as he is among a group of men await­ing tri­al for mur­der­ing for­mer in­de­pen­dent sen­a­tor Dana See­ta­hal, SC. 

The trio was ac­cused of mur­der­ing Me­shach Samuel on De­cem­ber 10, 2003. 

Samuel was on his way to a par­lour in Riv­er Es­tate, Diego Mar­tin, when he was am­bushed by three gun­men who shot him sev­er­al times be­fore run­ning away. 

A res­i­dent took him to the Port-of-Spain Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal but he died while be­ing treat­ed. The trio first went on tri­al be­fore cur­rent Ap­pel­late Judge Mark Mo­hammed in 2008 but a re­tri­al was or­dered as the ju­ry could not de­cide on a unan­i­mous ver­dict for them. 

In 2022, An­tho­ny was among the first to be grant­ed bail for mur­der based on a land­mark Privy Coun­cil rul­ing on the abil­i­ty of judges to con­sid­er such.  

In up­hold­ing the no-case sub­mis­sion, Jus­tice Bus­by-Ear­le-Cad­dle ruled that there was no ev­i­dence pre­sent­ed in the tri­al link­ing them to the crime. Jus­tice Bus­by-Ear­le-Cad­dle not­ed that al­though Samuel’s sis­ter Janelle Samuel ini­tial­ly claimed that she saw the men, who she iden­ti­fied by their alias­es, near where her broth­er was shot and run­ning from the scene af­ter the shoot­ing, she (Samuel) claimed that she did not see her broth­er’s at­tack­ers in court when she tes­ti­fied in the tri­al. 

She al­so not­ed that the res­i­dent who took Samuel to the hos­pi­tal misiden­ti­fied Wise­man as Bai­ley dur­ing the tri­al. She said that al­though both wit­ness­es iden­ti­fied the men dur­ing a con­fronta­tion ex­er­cise with the po­lice and dur­ing the pre­lim­i­nary in­quiry of the case, they were re­quired to con­firm their iden­ti­fi­ca­tion at tri­al. 

She said that misiden­ti­fi­ca­tion was tan­ta­mount to there be­ing no valid iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of the men. 

She re­ferred to the Code for Pros­e­cu­tors, which she said re­quired pros­e­cu­tors to drop cas­es if there is no re­al­is­tic prospect of se­cur­ing a con­vic­tion due to a lack of iden­ti­fi­ca­tion ev­i­dence. 

In a brief in­ter­view af­ter he and An­tho­ny were re­leased, Bai­ley thanked his lawyer Lar­ry Williams, who rep­re­sent­ed him and Wise­man since their first tri­al. 

Bai­ley crit­i­cised the Of­fice of the Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tions (DPP) for not dis­con­tin­u­ing the case soon­er due to the lack of ev­i­dence. 

“The State at­tor­ney is a fail­ure. Sev­en­teen years she hold­ing the mat­ter with­out a wit­ness. We just in jail in­no­cent for 21 years. In­no­cent. We nev­er kill Me­shach Samuel,” Bai­ley said. He al­so called for im­prove­ments in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem to re­duce the wait time for a tri­al. 

“They have to do bet­ter. A man should on­ly be stay­ing in jail for two years. Two years not 21 years. It have plen­ty more in jail still wait­ing,” he said. 

Bai­ley and Wise­man were al­so rep­re­sent­ed by Chelsea John, and Adam Roberts. An­tho­ny was rep­re­sent­ed by Rus­sell Warn­er, and Toni Roberts. 


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