Jean-Xavier de Lestrade (born 1 July 1963) is a French writer, director and producer of films and television series. He is especially known for his documentaries that have explored criminal cases in the United States.
His miniseries Staircase (2004) was notable.
Lestrade was born in Mirande, Gers, in southwestern France. He studied law and journalism in Paris. He has drawn from these to inform making film documentaries that scrutinize the mechanisms of society, particularly justice systems.
After college, Lestrade started working in journalism.
In 1992 Lestrade started making documentaries. He won an Oscar for Best Documentary Feature for his ninth film, Murder on a Sunday Morning (2001). It was about the Brenton Butler case in Jacksonville, Florida in which a 15-year-old African-American youth was wrongfully arrested and tried for murder of a woman tourist. He was acquitted.
Several months later, another suspect was investigated and prosecuted law enforcement. A jury convicted him for murder of Mary Stephens. Evidence included his fingerprint on her handbag, which had been recovered.
Lestrade is also known for his limited series The Staircase (2004), about the murder trial of author Michael Peterson of Durham, North Carolina. He was charged with killing his wife Kathleen.
Lestrade is an executive producer for the TV series Sin City Law (2007), which has been shown on the Sundance Channel in the US.
His dramatic miniseries Laetitia (2020), based on the murder case of Laetitia Perrais of Nantes, France, was first aired on French TV in 2020. It aired on HBO and HBO Max in late August 2021.
While most of his documentaries were in English, in 2023, he directed the six-part true crime series Sambre - Anatomy of a Crime, which was produced in French.