EPISODE · Apr 17, 2026 · 9 MIN
Posh Pete - Tales of an Ecuador Prison: 'His Brain Went EVERYWHERE'
from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold
👉 Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for uncensored, first-hand stories that reveal what really happens inside the world’s most extreme institutions: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos What happens when order collapses completely — and you’re trapped in the middle of it? In this episode of Heretics, Andrew Gold sits down with Pieter Tritton, better known as Posh Pete, to explore one of the most chilling moments from his time inside Ecuador’s prison system. This isn’t crime fiction or second-hand storytelling. It’s a lived experience from someone who survived nearly a decade in some of the most volatile prisons on earth. Tritton recounts how prison life in Ecuador often operated without meaningful control. Guards were distant, authority was fragmented, and power belonged to whoever could enforce it in the moment. In this clip, he describes being caught in the middle of a sudden outbreak of gang violence — an eruption so fast and chaotic that there was no warning, no escape route, and no clear sides to take. What makes this story unsettling isn’t shock value, but unpredictability. Tritton explains how violence inside these prisons wasn’t always planned or strategic. Sometimes it was impulsive, driven by reputation, fear, or perceived disrespect. One moment you were blending into the background — the next, you were forced to react instantly just to stay alive. Andrew probes how the psychology of survival works under those conditions. How do you keep your head when panic spreads faster than information? How do you read a room when the rules change in seconds? Tritton describes learning to observe micro-signals: who moves first, who freezes, who suddenly disappears. In places like this, hesitation could be fatal. The conversation also exposes how normal human instincts break down in extreme environments. Tritton talks about how repeated exposure to sudden violence reshapes perception — compressing time, sharpening awareness, and eroding any illusion of safety. Even after release, those moments linger, resurfacing unexpectedly long after the danger has passed. Rather than glorifying chaos, Tritton is clear: this is not a world anyone should romanticise. He reflects on how easily ordinary people can find themselves in extraordinary danger once institutions fail, and how thin the line really is between stability and collapse. This episode offers a rare window into what happens when survival becomes a full-time mental calculation — and why the most dangerous moments are often the ones nobody sees coming. 🎧 Watch the full podcast here: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1xGIXuvgQA1FftHCeBRe0r?si=b902fa92d6694186 #PoshPete #PieterTritton #PrisonStories #TrueCrimePodcast #SurvivalPsychology #HereticsPodcast #TheDailyHeretic Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What this episode covers
👉 Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for uncensored, first-hand stories that reveal what really happens inside the world’s most extreme institutions: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos What happens when order collapses completely — and you’re trapped in the middle of it? In this episode of Heretics, Andrew Gold sits down with Pieter Tritton, better known as Posh Pete, to explore one of the most chilling moments from his time inside Ecuador’s prison system. This isn’t crime fiction or second-hand storytelling. It’s a lived experience from someone who survived nearly a decade in some of the most volatile prisons on earth. Tritton recounts how prison life in Ecuador often operated without meaningful control. Guards were distant, authority was fragmented, and power belonged to whoever could enforce it in the moment. In this clip, he describes being caught in the middle of a sudden outbreak of gang violence — an eruption so fast and chaotic that there was no warning, no escape route, and no clear sides to take. What makes this story unsettling isn’t shock value, but unpredictability. Tritton explains how violence inside these prisons wasn’t always planned or strategic. Sometimes it was impulsive, driven by reputation, fear, or perceived disrespect. One moment you were blending into the background — the next, you were forced to react instantly just to stay alive. Andrew probes how the psychology of survival works under those conditions. How do you keep your head when panic spreads faster than information? How do you read a room when the rules change in seconds? Tritton describes learning to observe micro-signals: who moves first, who freezes, who suddenly disappears. In places like this, hesitation could be fatal. The conversation also exposes how normal human instincts break down in extreme environments. Tritton talks about how repeated exposure to sudden violence reshapes perception — compressing time, sharpening awareness, and eroding any illusion of safety. Even after release, those moments linger, resurfacing unexpectedly long after the danger has passed. Rather than glorifying chaos, Tritton is clear: this is not a world anyone should romanticise. He reflects on how easily ordinary people can find themselves in extraordinary danger once institutions fail, and how thin the line really is between stability and collapse. This episode offers a rare window into what happens when survival becomes a full-time mental calculation — and why the most dangerous moments are often the ones nobody sees coming. 🎧 Watch the full podcast here: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1xGIXuvgQA1FftHCeBRe0r?si=b902fa92d6694186 #PoshPete #PieterTritton #PrisonStories #TrueCrimePodcast #SurvivalPsychology #HereticsPodcast #TheDailyHeretic Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Posh Pete - Tales of an Ecuador Prison: 'His Brain Went EVERYWHERE'
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