Winston Silcott

Winston Silcott (born 1959) is a British citizen of African-Caribbean (Montserrat) descent, who, as one of the "Tottenham Three", was convicted in March 1987 for the murder of PC Keith Blakelock on the night of 6 October 1985 during the Broadwater Farm riot in north London. All three convictions were quashed on 25 November 1991 after scientific tests suggested the men's confessions had been fabricated.

Silcott received compensation of £17,000 for his wrongful conviction. Two of the investigating police officers were prosecuted for fabricating evidence but were acquitted in 1994. Silcott received a further £50,000 in compensation from the Metropolitan Police in an out-of-court settlement which ended a civil action against the force for malicious prosecution.

Silcott's other convictions include murder, burglary and malicious wounding.

In 1989, the London School of Economics Students' Union elected Silcott as Honorary President, allegedly as a protest against miscarriages of justice.

Silcott served 18 years imprisonment for the murder of boxer and reputed gangster Tony Smith, for which he was on bail when Blakelock was killed. Silcott claimed that he killed Smith in self defence . He was released from Blantyre House Prison in October 2003. Silcott had also spent 6 months in prison for assault in a nightclub prior to his conviction for the murder of Smith.

In March 2007, he was found guilty of theft from shops for a second time since his release from prison. After his initial arrest he was held in police cells for two days for failing to reveal his real address.