Jon Venables has reoffended twice after being convicted in 1993 of kidnapping and killing James Bulger.
The Assassins of James Bulger:
Jon Venables and Robert Thompson were both convicted for the kidnapping and murder of two-year-old James in 1993 when they were both just ten years old. Venables, now 40, has reoffended twice after being freed in 2001 under a new name. He was returned to jail in 2010 and 2017 after being detected having photographs of child sex abuse on his computer.
According to The Sun, he now has a “good chance” of being released after making “positive” improvements while in jail, according to the Mirror. Before determining whether to grant the murderer an oral hearing, the Parole Board will analyse a lengthy dossier on him that includes inputs from Venables, prison staff, and psychiatrists. Due to his high profile, it is believed that he would be given an oral hearing, which he will be able to attend personally. Any release in early 2023 would come despite efforts from members of James Bulger’s family to keep Venables imprisoned. His father, Ralph, asked Justice Secretary Dominic Raab yesterday night to honour his commitment to “clamp down” on the country’s most violent criminals.
Who Exactly is Jon Venables?
On August 13, 1982, Jon Venables was born. He was eleven when he and his buddy Robert Thompson kidnapped two-year-old James Bulger from a retail centre in Bootle, Merseyside. They tortured and killed James, whose corpse was discovered beside a railway line. On November 24, 1993, Venables and Thompson were convicted guilty of Bulger’s kidnapping and murder, making them the youngest individuals imprisoned for murder in 250 years.
After the Murder, was Jon Venables Given a New Identity?
Venables and Thompson, both 18, were released on licence from a young offenders’ facility in June 2001. The two were given new identities after undergoing thorough rehabilitation. Venables’ new name was altered twice when he revealed to friends that he was a convicted killer. His new identity was threatened in February 2018 when James Bulger’s father, Ralph, filed High Court proceedings to challenge the injunction that permits him to live anonymously.
Ralph and his brother, Jimmy’s counsel, told a court on May 2 that the previous injunction issued to Venables was based on the fact that he was rehabilitated and did not re-offend. Denise Fergus, James’ mother, opposes the proceedings and believes her son’s murderer should remain anonymous to avert vigilante punishment.
Venables’ anonymity will be maintained after a court concluded that it would protect him from “severe harm,” according to an announcement made on March 4, 2019. Lawyers representing Ralph and Jimmy Bulger stated that some aspects about the murderer and his life are “common knowledge” and freely available online in their attempt to reveal Venables’ name. But the President of the Family Division, Sir Andrew McFarlane, rejected the application, stating it was in place to safeguard Venables from being “put to death”. “My choice has nothing to do with the applicants themselves, for whom I have the deepest compassion,” he stated. “The truth is that no argument has been presented for altering the injunction.”
What Exactly is Lifelong Anonymity?
Aside from rare circumstances, minor suspects are automatically allowed anonymity in youth courts and are usually afforded the same if they appear in crown court under existing rules. However, their name may be reported. Courts seldom grant lifelong anonymity and tragic crimes. Fearing a vigilante assault, adult criminals have also been given new identities.
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