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Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James Bulger

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Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James Bulger
Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James Bulger

It was a crime that rocked Liverpool to its core, leaving parents petrified for the safety of their children - then baying for the blood of two 10-year-old boys.

James Bulger was murdered more than 20 years ago, led away from his mother by Jon Venables and Robert Thompson who beat and tortured him before dumping his tiny body. His killers, both children themselves, were branded evil by a public who could not understand what had made two young boys kill a two-year-old.

They were locked up and released eight years later - with new identities to protect them from being hunted by people who could not get over their murderous crime. As well as the devastation the two boys caused, the horrific killing rocked Liverpool and the country because many parents could imagine themselves in the same position as James' stricken mother Denise, whose son was led away in the seconds she let go of his hand to reach for her purse.

Many also had young children themselves the same age as the child killers, and no one could understand why Venables and Thompson, two relatively "unremarkable" boys who often played truant, had turned to murder. Experts believe, as well as the devastation wreaked on James' family, the lives of his killers will also never be the same.

James' 42 horrific injuries

Laurence Lee, a solicitor who represented Venables, said: "I don't think the public could get their heads around the fact that two 10-year-olds had murdered possibly a baby, which is what he was. It was the fact that that maybe there was a guilt complex in the public that kids that were possibly the same age as their kids could do something like this."

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Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James Bulger (PA)

James was with his mother Denise in the Strand shopping centre in Bootle, Liverpool, as she shopped in a butchers on February 12, 1993. When she turned round, her two-year-old son was missing. It was three days before James' body was found by boys trespassing on a disused railway line, near a bridge next to the police station.

Venables and Thompson had thrown stones and bricks, kicked and stamped on James before finally dropping a heavy iron bar on to the defenceless tot. They hid his body under bricks so that the first train to come along cut his body in two, but he was already dead before this happened. A pathologist later said that there were so many injuries - 42 in total - that not one could be isolated as causing the little boy's fatal wound.

How CCTV closed the net on the two child-killers

The net started to close on the pair when CCTV footage of the shopping centre emerged. Grainy images showed two figures - which appeared to be teenage boys - leading him away from his mother. As a manhunt for the two ensued, many believed the boys had to be acting on behalf of an adult to lead the young James away to be tortured and killed. But it was three days after James' body was found that two solicitors would find themselves at a police station, representing two 10-year-olds who would later turn out to be one of the country's most high profile murderers.

Laurence was called to see Venables sat in Lower Lane police station with his mum for questioning. He said he thought the child before him was about eight, and initially felt guilty at being paid to represent a child who he felt was "not capable" of anything like this. The solicitor said: "His mum had said I want him to answer every question. I don't want any to be no comment. She was respectable. He had to cooperate, his mum insisted, and if there was evidence, she said he had to be tried."

"He was calm as a cucumber," added Laurence. "He was loving it. They had given him toys and coke. He didn't show any signs of cracking at all. He denied he had even been at the Strand." But the boys had been captured on CCTV leading James away. And with image enhancement, which was restricted at the time due to the lack of technology in the early nineties, one of the boy's jackets was revealed as mustard coloured.

"I hardly slept that night, I couldn't wait to get back to the police station," added Laurence. "The first thing I said to him [Venables] when I walked into the interview room was what colour's your coat, and he said 'mustard'. It was like the dambusters, a bomb, it hit the wall." When police told Venables that Thompson had said he was at the shopping centre, his story began to unravel.

"He then said we were at the Strand, but we never grabbed a kid," added Laurence. And he was crying and wailing and he jumped out of his seat and hugged his mum. That was the moment I knew that I was in for the long haul."

Venables and Thompson blame each other as they are charged

The boys were charged with murder, both telling different stories about what happened that night and blaming each other for inflicting such violence and torture on James. The pair, who were known to play truant from school were described as "unremarkable." Laurence said of Venables: "He just did things 10 year olds would do, he was a mischievous little boy, he would hang upside down from cloakroom pegs, but there was nothing that worried me about him."

Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James BulgerJames Bulger’s mother has shared that she is ‘in touching distance’ of bringing one of her son’s killers to justice. (ITV)

He added: "He had been put in charge of the school gerbil for half term and he bumped into Thompson who said forget the gerbil, let's go robbing. I think if he hadn't bumped into Thompson he would have picked up his gerbils and gone home. He wouldn't have gone to the Strand. I believe that Jon Venables, if he had been born in a different environment, would never have done this. It was just all the fates conspiring. I don't believe that he was born evil but I do believe he acted in the most evil of manners."

Venables, who was taped confessing to killing James claimed it was Thompson's idea and that as they threw bricks at the two-year-old, he missed on purpose. He went to see the floral tributes laid in the wake of James' murder. Thompson denied having any part in James' killing. His solicitor said he found it "extremely difficult" to deal with the public attention, and the decision by a judge to name the pair added to this.

Husband and wife enjoy Xmas dinner days before she's charged with his murderHusband and wife enjoy Xmas dinner days before she's charged with his murder

The trio's two mile journey before James was killed

The pair walked young James more than two miles - a journey that would have taken hours because he was so little. They were seen on the way by 36 people, some who would presume they were dragging along a younger brother and others, who noticed he was distressed and bleeding, who were told by the pair he was lost and they were taking him to the police station.

One woman even wanted to take the trio to the station, but was with a dog who was jumping up and was scared the animal would bite the children. She directed them to Walton Lane police station instead. They three even all stopped at a tropical fish shop, seen tapping the glass to make the fish move.

Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James Bulger (Press Association)

Before Thompson and Venables could be tried at court they were taken to do a recce of the courtroom. As they were so small, the base of the dock floor had to be raised 18 inches so each boy could see over it. Laurence added: "We were in one car and Thompson was in the other. The road had been cleared. But we stopped at a set of traffic lights on red and I remember looking over to the other car and seeing Thompson smiling in a very Omen-like manner at us."

Dominic Lloyd, who was called to the police station to represent Thompson after he was first taken in for questioning, said he was struck when he saw the relatively diminutive 10-year-old. He described a boy who was the brighter of the pair, and known as 'a tearaway, mischievous, but nothing more that would indicate he would go on to carry out such a horrific crime. "He was baffled, disoriented, frightened, confused. I was profoundly struck with how small, how young, how high pitched, how wrong it seemed for him to be in that position," said Dominic.

How the mob were "baying for blood" of the child killers

Before the boys were brought to court for trial the prison trucks had to move past a crowd - screaming and rocking them as they showed their anger for the two boys who had killed a defenceless two-year-old. Unbeknown to the public, officers had actually done a dummy run in the trucks to save the pair from the mob, the crowd unaware the vans they were rocking were empty.

Serena Macksey, an author who writes under the pseudonymn Alex Marwood and was inspired to write her latest crime novel following the horrific killing, said: "There was no question they would have been torn limb from limb. The mob were just baying for blood."

Ahead of their trial at Preston Crown Court nine months later, the public had queued up from 5am to get one of the 44 public gallery seats inside the court room. The court appearances of the boys had been met with an outpouring of rage and anger by the public, but when the two first appeared before Mr Justice Morland, witnesses said an "eerie silence" fell.

Alex added: "My baseline belief is that absolutely anybody is capable of wickedness. But if you did something really horrendous as a child, would you ever recover from it as an adult? How would you ever live with yourself afterwards?" Alex said the murder shook the country as many people could imagine themselves in a similar situation.

Twisted killers Venables and Thompson tortured and then murdered James Bulger (VIDEO GRAB CHANNEL 4)

"It's any shopping centre, in any city in any part of the country," she added. "You can feel the escalating panic that this poor woman must have felt. She would have come out of the shop, and no James. That's one of the keys as to why this has become such a popular thing in this country. Anybody in this country could imagine themselves being in Denise Bulger's situation. Probably as she went into each doorway [of the shopping centre] and shouted for him, the panic would be mounting and mounting."

Security launched a search for James inside the centre and James' family searched for their son overnight. Three days later his body was found, and three days after that a tip-off came from a shopkeeper who had seen two boys playing truant on the day James went missing and gave police two names - Jon Venables and Robert Thompson.

Imprisoned and released after just eight years

The boys were charged on February 20 - eight days after committing the murder. They appeared at court for the first time on February 22. Both were found guilty, after trial, of the abduction and murder of James, and ordered to be detained at her majesty's pleasure, which meant there was no definite date - if ever - for their release. But after eight years, when both reached 18 in 2001, they were released on licence and given new identities. They were also banned from ever returning to Liverpool.

In March 2010, Venables was recalled to prison for breaching his licence conditions. He was jailed for two years before being granted parole again in July 2013. In 2015 it emerged Venables, who was given a new identity and enjoys lifelong anonymity, joined a dating website. Marwood used the story as inspiration for her book, The Wicked Girls, which asks if you would ever recover from doing something horrendous as a child when reaching adulthood. It follows the story of two girls who were convicted of murder and later released with new identities. She added: "These poor parents will have to to learn somehow to live with this, but they will never be alright with it. And neither will Thompson and Venables I suspect. No one escapes from something like this."

Claire Carter

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