Monday 11th May 2026 – Turks and Caicos Islands
Madam Justice Alice Yorke-Soo Hon, President of the Court of Appeal, Madam Justice Jacqueline Cornelius-Thorne and Madam Justice Indra Charles have ordered a retrial in the murder case against Brian Francis after previously quashing his conviction for the fatal shooting of 22-year-old Justin Cox-Beckles.



The Court ordered that the matter be sent back to the Supreme Court for a second trial following further hearings held after the conviction was overturned earlier this year.
Francis had originally been convicted in December 2024 for the July 2022 shooting death of Cox-Beckles during a violent altercation at Rock Plaza ((809) in Blue Hills, Providenciales. He was later sentenced to life imprisonment with eligibility for release after serving 29 years and six months.
However, in a detailed appellate ruling delivered in March 2026, the Court found that serious deficiencies in the handling of identification evidence rendered the conviction unsafe.
Central to the appeal was the prosecution’s reliance on CCTV footage and the identification evidence of a police officer who claimed to recognize Francis from the recordings based on prior familiarity and certain physical characteristics.
While the Court upheld the trial judge’s decision to allow the matter to proceed to the jury, it concluded that the jury had not been properly directed on the weaknesses in the identification evidence.
The Court found that the trial judge failed to sufficiently explain critical concerns surrounding the CCTV evidence, including the lack of clear facial features, the distance of the suspect from the camera and the amount of time that had passed since the witness had last seen Francis before making the identification.
The appellate judges also expressed concern that jurors were invited to compare Francis with CCTV images themselves without adequate warnings about the dangers of relying on unclear visual material.
According to the ruling, these shortcomings undermined the fairness of the trial and materially affected the safety of the verdict.
As a result, the conviction and life sentence were quashed, with the Court later determining that the interests of justice required the matter to be retried before a new judge and jury in the Supreme Court.
