Guernsey Press

Investigation launched after new identity of Jon Venables ‘revealed online’

Identifying the killers of James Bulger anywhere in the world breaches an anonymity order put in place in 2001.

Published

The Attorney General is investigating a possible legal breach amid claims the new identity of child killer Jon Venables was revealed on social media.

Venables and Robert Thompson were both 10 when they abducted, tortured and killed two-year old James Bulger in 1993.

Identifying the killers anywhere in the world breaches an anonymity order put in place before their release from prison in 2001.

Venables and Robert Thompson were freed in 2001 (PA)
Venables and Robert Thompson were freed in 2001 (PA)

A spokesman for the Attorney General’s office said: “We have received a complaint that the anonymity order has been breached and we are investigating.”

In 2013 two men who posted images they claimed to be of Venables and Thompson were given nine-month sentences, suspended for 15 months. Breaking the injunction carries a punishment of up to two years in prison.

Venables has been sent back to prison twice since his release in 2001.

He was sent back in 2010 and again earlier this month, in both cases for possessing indecent images of children.

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