Post by The HangMan on Apr 12, 2006 19:57:00 GMT -5
This is sick i remember it being on the news if you do not know about this it will brake your hart
James Bulger (March 16, 1990 – February 12, 1993) was a toddler who was abducted and murdered by two ten-year-old boys born in 1982, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson, on Merseyside, in the United Kingdom. The murder of a child by two other children caused an immense public outpouring of shock, outrage, and grief, particularly in Liverpool and surrounding towns. The trial judge ordered that the two boys should be detained for "very, very many years to come". Shortly after the trial, Lord Taylor of Gosforth, the Lord Chief Justice, ordered that the two boys should serve a minimum of 10 years behind bars—which would have made them eligible for release in 2003. But the popular press and certain sections of the public felt that the sentence was too lenient, and the editors of The Sun handed a petition bearing 300,000 signatures to Home Secretary Michael Howard in a bid to increase the time spent in custody. In 1995, the two boys' minimum period to be served was increased to 15 years, a ruling which meant they would not be considered for release until 2008, by which time they would both be 26 years old.
In 1997, however, the Court of Appeal ruled that Michael Howard's decision to set a 15-year tariff was unlawful, and the Home Secretary lost his power to set minimum terms for life sentence prisoners under the age of 18 years (in 2002 the position of Home Secretary lost its power to set minimum terms for life sentences entirely).
Thompson and Venables were released on a life licence in June 2001 after serving eight years of their life sentence (reduced for good behaviour), when a parole hearing concluded that public safety would not be threatened by their rehabilitation into society. An injunction was imposed shortly after the trial preventing the publication of details about the boys for fear of reprisals by members of the public. The injunction remained in force following their release so that details of their new identities and locations could not be published.
Bulger's mother, Denise Bulger, was given £7,500 criminal compensation from the government. The trauma of Bulger's death led to the collapse of his parents' marriage. Ralph and Denise Bulger have both since re-married to other respective spouses.
The murder
Jon Venables and Robert Thompson had skipped school on February 12, 1993. That day, in Bootle Strand Shopping Centre, they attempted to walk off with a young child. They had succeeded in luring a two-year-old boy away from his mother, and were in the process of taking him out of the shopping centre when she noticed him missing, ran outside and called him back. For this they were later charged with attempted abduction; however, the charge was dropped when the jury failed to reach a verdict.
Bulger being led away by Venables and Thompson, recorded on shopping centre CCTVThat same afternoon, James Bulger (often called Jamie Bulger in press reports) from nearby Kirkby went on a shopping trip with his mother, Denise. Whilst distracted in a butcher's shop, Mrs Bulger (now Denise Fergus) allowed Bulger to stand outside in the main concourse of the shopping centre. Within a few minutes, the two boys had taken Bulger by the hand and led him out of the precinct. This moment was captured on a CCTV camera at 15:39.
The boys took Bulger on a 2½ mile (4 km) walk. At one point they led him to a canal, where Bulger sustained some injuries to his head and face after apparently being dropped to the ground. Later on in their journey, a witness reported seeing Bulger being kicked in the ribs by one of the boys to encourage him along.
During the entire walk, the two boys and Bulger were seen by 38 people, some of whom noticed an injury to the child's head and later recalled that he seemed distressed. Others reported that Bulger appeared happy and was seen laughing, the boys seemingly alternating between hurting and distracting him. A few members of the public challenged the two older boys, but they claimed they were looking after their younger brother, or that he was lost and that they were taking him to the police station, and were allowed to continue on their way. They eventually led Bulger to a section of railway line near Walton.
From the facts disclosed at trial, at this location one of the boys threw blue modelling paint on Bulger's face. They kicked him and hit him with bricks, stones and a 22 lb (10 kg) iron bar. It was reported that the boys molested Bulger's penis (the exact details are somewhat vague,but they denied this action) and placed batteries in his rectum. Before they left him, the boys laid Bulger across the train tracks and weighed his head down with rubble, in hopes that a passing train would hit Bulger and make his death appear to be an accident involving a careless boy and a train. Two days later, on Sunday of the same week, Bulger's body was discovered, having been cut into two pieces by a goods train. A pathologist later testified that Bulger had died before his body was run over by the train.
As the circumstances surrounding the death became clear, tabloid newspapers compared the killers with Myra Hindley and Saddam Hussein. They denounced the people who had seen Bulger but not realised the trouble he was in as the "Liverpool 38" (see: Kitty Genovese, Bystander effect). Within days, the Liverpool Echo had published 1,086 death notices for Bulger. The railside embankment upon which Bulger's body had been discovered was flooded with hundreds of bunches of flowers: One of these floral tributes was laid by Thompson. Within days, he and Venables were arrested after an investigation led by one of Merseyside Police's most senior detectives, Detective Superintendent Albert Kirby.
Forensics tests confirmed that both boys had the same blue paint on their clothing as was found on Bulger's body. Both had blood on their shoes; blood on Venables' shoe was matched to Bulger's through DNA tests.
The trial
Venables and Thompson at the time of their arrestIn the initial aftermath of their arrest, the boys were referred to simply as "Child A" (Thompson) and "Child B" (Venables). However, the widely publicised nature of the murder, and public reaction to it, together with the difficulty of controlling information distributed on the Internet, meant that their names became known. Public shock at the murder was compounded by the release of mug shots taken during initial questioning by police. The pictures showed a pair of frightened children, and many found it hard to believe such a crime had been perpetrated by two people so young.
Five hundred angry protesters gathered at South Sefton Magistrates Court during the boys' initial court appearances. The accused's parents were moved to different parts of the country and had to assume new identities following a series of death threats.
The full trial took place at Preston Crown Court. The trial was conducted as an adult trial would have been, with the accused sitting in the dock away from their parents and with the judge and court officials dressed in full legal regalia. Each boy sat in full view of the court on raised chairs (so they could see out of the dock designed for adults) accompanied by two social workers. Although they were separated from their parents, they were within touching distance of them on days that their families attended the trial. News stories frequently reported on the demeanour of the defendants, since they were in full view of reporters. (These aspects of the trial were later criticised by the European Court of Human Rights who ruled that they had not received a fair trial.)
The boys, who offered no evidence in their defence, were found guilty and were sentenced to imprisonment at a young offenders institution at "Her Majesty's Pleasure"—a British legal term meaning an indefinite period, reviewed by the Government from time to time that is particularly used as a substitute for life sentencing for minors. The trial judge Justice Morland set their minimum period of incarceration to eight years. This was increased on appeal by the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Taylor of Gosforth, to ten years and later by the Home Secretary, Michael Howard, to fifteen years on the grounds that he was "acting in the public interest". This decision was overturned in 1997 by the Law Lords. In October 2000, Lord Chief Justice Harry Woolf reduced their minimum sentence by two years for their behaviour in detention, effectively restoring the original trial judge's eight-year term.
Proposed causes
Social and family background?
In court, details of Thompson's and Venables' backgrounds were not admitted. Thompson was one of the youngest of seven boys. His mother, a lone parent, was an alcoholic. His father, who left home when Thompson was five, was also a heavy drinker who beat and sexually abused his wife and children. Despite his quiet and friendly manner, Thompson came from a home in which it was normal practice for the older children to violently attack the younger ones, and Thompson was invariably on the receiving end.
Venables' parents were also separated. His brother and sister had educational problems and attended special needs schools, whilst his mother suffered psychiatric problems. Following his parents' separation, Venables became isolated and attention-seeking. At school he would regularly bang his head on walls or slash himself with scissors. No effort was made to find the cause of his obvious distress.
Other media commentators blamed the behaviour of Venables and Thompson on their families, or on their social situation, living in one of the most deprived areas of the UK. The Liverpool Echo described the city at the time of the murder as "a wounded city... The region's economy was on its knees, and unemployment was soaring". A 2001 OFSTED report on Liverpool's schools said that "the city of Liverpool has the highest degree of deprivation in the country".
Following the murder, the boys' mothers— Susan Venables and Ann Thompson—were repeatedly attacked in the street and vilified in the press.
Thompson's father had abandoned his wife and children five years previously, one week before the family home was burned down in a fire. Ann Thompson was a heavy drinker, who found it difficult to control her seven children. Notes (obtained by author Blake Morrison) from an NSPCC case conference on the family described it as "appalling". The children "bit, hammered, battered, tortured each other". Incidents in the report include Philip (the third child) threatening his older brother Ian with a knife. Ian asked to be taken into foster care, and when he was returned to his family, he attempted suicide with an overdose of painkillers. Both Ann and Philip had also attempted suicide in the past.
Venables' family was less chaotic; although his parents were also separated, they lived near to each other, and he lived at his father's house two days a week. Both his older brother and his younger sister had learning disabilities which were severe enough to make it necessary that they attend special schools (for children too disabled to be taught in the mainstream system). Venables himself was hyperactive and had attempted to throttle another boy in a fight at school. The police had been called to Susan Venables's house in 1987, when she left her children (then aged 3, 5 and 7) alone in the house for 3 hours. Case notes from that incident describe Susan's "severe depressive problem" and suicidal tendencies.
Video violence?
One of the aspects of the case that gained much media attention was whether Venables and Thompson had been watching violent films in the days and months prior to the murder, and whether or not those movies had contributed to making the pair act in the way they did. The judge mentioned that one of their fathers possessed a large collection of violent videos, and that they probably had access to them whilst playing truant from school. As Bulger's death was similar to the death in the film, and the father of one of the boys had been known to hire this film the week before the murder, The Sun newspaper explicitly named Child's Play 3 as a movie they had seen and printed a full front-page picture of the menacing Chucky, the child-killing doll of that horror series. However, no evidence that the boys had watched such movies was formally presented to the jury, but the case gave rise to a national debate about the acceptability of violent media. Although no films were subsequently banned by the British Board of Film Classification, several video rental chains voluntarily stopped stocking Child's Play 3 and other titles listed by The Sun.
In early 1994, Liberal Democrat David Alton MP, a long-time campaigner against violent movies, commissioned Professor Elizabeth Newson to report on Video Violence and the Protection of Children, as part of his case for an amendment to the forthcoming Criminal Justice Bill. Her report, which consisted primarily of a review of similar studies from around the world, stated that there was a strong link between video violence and real world violence, and that although correlation does not necessarily imply causation, she believed there was causation in this case. [1] The report's method came under fierce criticism from those opposed to Alton's amendment (eg J McGuigan, Culture and the Public Sphere and David Gauntlett).
Professor Henry Jenkins of MIT has responded to similar political scapegoating in several interviews and articles, eg When politicians ... target video game violence, perhaps it is to distract attention from the material conditions which give rise to a culture of domestic violence, the economic policies which make it harder for most of us to own our homes, and the development practices which pave over the old grasslands and forests. [2]
Multiple causes?
Another report on children and video violence was published in 1998; it was commissioned by the Home Office in 1995 in response to fears raised by Bulger's murder. The authors, Dr Kevin Browne and Amanda Pennell of the University of Birmingham, emphasised the link between a violent home background and offending:
Our research cannot prove whether video violence causes crime. But it does highlight the importance of family background and the offender's own personality and thoughts in determining the effects of film violence.
The research points to a pathway from having a violent home background, to being an offender, to be being more likely to prefer violent films and violent actors. Distorted perceptions about violent behaviour, poor empathy for others and low moral development all enhance the adoption of violent behaviour and violent film preferences. [3]
Of course, it is doubtful if the real reason will ever really be found. A combination of effects combined with children's sometimes less developed understanding of the consequences of actions can all be pointed to, but none ever proven.
Appeal and release
In 1999, lawyers acting for Venables and Thompson appealed to the European Court of Human Rights on the grounds that the boys' trial had not been impartial, since they were too young to be able to follow the proceedings and understand the workings of an adult court. They also claimed that Howard's intervention led to a "charged atmosphere", making a fair trial impossible. The Court found in the boys' favour.
The European Court case led to the new Lord Chief Justice, Lord Justice Woolf, reviewing the minimum sentence imposed. In October 2000, he recommended the tariff be reduced from ten to eight years, adding that young offenders' institutions were a "corrosive atmosphere" for the juveniles.
In June 2001, after a six-month review of the case, the Parole Board ruled the boys were no longer a threat to public safety and were thus eligible for release now that the minimum tariff had expired. The Home Secretary, David Blunkett, approved the decision, and they were both released that summer. They will live out their lives on a "life licence", which allows for their immediate re-incarceration if they break the terms of their release, that is if they are seen to be a danger to the public.
An estimated total of £4 million was spent in helping Thompson and Venables rebuild their lives on release from custody.
The Manchester Evening News provoked controversy by naming the secure institutions in which the pair were housed, in possible breach of the injunction against press publicity which had been renewed early in 2001. In December of that year, the paper was found guilty of contempt of court and fined £30,000 and ordered to pay costs of £120,000.
The injunction against the press reporting on the boys' whereabouts applies only in England and Wales, and newspapers in Scotland or other countries can legally publish such information. With easy cross-border communications due to the internet, many expected their identities and whereabouts to quickly become public knowledge. Indeed, in June 2001, Venables' mother was quoted by the News of the World as saying that she expected her son to be "dead within four weeks" of release. Her lawyers lodged a formal complaint with the Press Complaints Commission saying that Mrs Venables had said no such thing. By that time, however, the phrase had been widely re-reported. As of 2004, no publication of vigilante action has come to pass. Despite this, Bulger's mother, Denise, told how in 2004 she received an anonymous tip-off that helped her locate Thompson. She said she saw him but was "paralysed with hatred", and did not communicate with him in any way.
In March 2006 it was reported that Robert Thompson has begun living with a male lover. He had to tell his boyfriend of his past as a condition of his 'life licence'.
JAMIE BULGER:
Tragic 2-year-old.
June 19, 2001 THESE killers never had it so good, and their fortunes seem poised to take a turn for the better.
They talk on cellular phones and have Internet access. They enjoy family outings and shopping sprees. If one of them wants to attend a sold-out sports event, no problem!
Eight years ago, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson seemed destined for lives as street thugs in their native England. Now, they're likely to be set free to live under assumed names issued by their government. Don't be surprised if one of them turns up as your neighbor.
Not that you'd recognize him.
This week, England's parole board is expected to free Venables and Thompson, who were 10 when they kidnapped, tortured and murdered a terrified 2-year-old boy.
Now, at the strapping age of 18, the pair would be entitled to sell their life stories for major bucks upon release. But - bloody insanity! - anyone who tried to stop them by revealing their identities or whereabouts could face jail.
Huh?
In 1993, in a case that disgusted the world, Thompson and Venables snatched little Jamie Bulger at a shopping mall.
In England, a nation whose citizens have joined the chorus of outrage at our execution of Timothy McVeigh, committing a murder is more than a crime. It's a sure-fire method for your youthful slacker to boost a tired resume.
Just ask killer nanny Louise Woodward.
In pictures that circled the globe, Venables and Thompson were seen on security videotape, luring their little victim from his mom. They were 10.
The pair took the baby on a 3-mile death march, stopping every so often to beat him over the head with a 22-pound iron bar and pour paint into his eyes and wounds.
The child used his dying breath to cry for his mommy.
The killers' final act erased any doubt over whether they knew they'd done wrong. They tied Jamie's broken frame to a railroad track, hoping a train would crush the small body and hide their sin.
From the moment they were caught, good fortune smiled on the pair. At trial, the boys played with Game Boys.
Even less serious was the "jail" to which they were sentenced, a facility run by Britain's social services, where they are regularly freed to enjoy day trips with their families or go to the mall.
Venables, who had attempted murder once before the Bulger case, was reported to have received tickets to a popular Manchester United soccer match.
The sentiment from England's current liberal-minded government is that they've suffered enough. Even some journalists agree.
"We have one of the lowest ages of criminal responsibility in Europe," said Stephen Scott, who produced "Unforgiven: The Boys Who Murdered James Bulger" for Britain's Channel 4.
"If we can't turn children around at age 10, we might as well give up," Scott said.
This idea runs contrary to sense.
"A study on released inmates in New York showed teens had the highest rate of recidivism, higher than people in their 20s, 30s and, especially, 40s," said Peter Reinharz, New York City's chief family court prosecutor.
"You really have to question the wisdom of a system that takes offenders who've committed the most depraved types of violence, and tells the community, ‘You have to trust us to keep you safe,'" Reinharz added.
The next time we hear from these two remorseless killers, it may be too late for someone else's child.
James Bulger (March 16, 1990 – February 12, 1993) was a toddler who was abducted and murdered by two ten-year-old boys born in 1982, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson, on Merseyside, in the United Kingdom. The murder of a child by two other children caused an immense public outpouring of shock, outrage, and grief, particularly in Liverpool and surrounding towns. The trial judge ordered that the two boys should be detained for "very, very many years to come". Shortly after the trial, Lord Taylor of Gosforth, the Lord Chief Justice, ordered that the two boys should serve a minimum of 10 years behind bars—which would have made them eligible for release in 2003. But the popular press and certain sections of the public felt that the sentence was too lenient, and the editors of The Sun handed a petition bearing 300,000 signatures to Home Secretary Michael Howard in a bid to increase the time spent in custody. In 1995, the two boys' minimum period to be served was increased to 15 years, a ruling which meant they would not be considered for release until 2008, by which time they would both be 26 years old.
In 1997, however, the Court of Appeal ruled that Michael Howard's decision to set a 15-year tariff was unlawful, and the Home Secretary lost his power to set minimum terms for life sentence prisoners under the age of 18 years (in 2002 the position of Home Secretary lost its power to set minimum terms for life sentences entirely).
Thompson and Venables were released on a life licence in June 2001 after serving eight years of their life sentence (reduced for good behaviour), when a parole hearing concluded that public safety would not be threatened by their rehabilitation into society. An injunction was imposed shortly after the trial preventing the publication of details about the boys for fear of reprisals by members of the public. The injunction remained in force following their release so that details of their new identities and locations could not be published.
Bulger's mother, Denise Bulger, was given £7,500 criminal compensation from the government. The trauma of Bulger's death led to the collapse of his parents' marriage. Ralph and Denise Bulger have both since re-married to other respective spouses.
The murder
Jon Venables and Robert Thompson had skipped school on February 12, 1993. That day, in Bootle Strand Shopping Centre, they attempted to walk off with a young child. They had succeeded in luring a two-year-old boy away from his mother, and were in the process of taking him out of the shopping centre when she noticed him missing, ran outside and called him back. For this they were later charged with attempted abduction; however, the charge was dropped when the jury failed to reach a verdict.
Bulger being led away by Venables and Thompson, recorded on shopping centre CCTVThat same afternoon, James Bulger (often called Jamie Bulger in press reports) from nearby Kirkby went on a shopping trip with his mother, Denise. Whilst distracted in a butcher's shop, Mrs Bulger (now Denise Fergus) allowed Bulger to stand outside in the main concourse of the shopping centre. Within a few minutes, the two boys had taken Bulger by the hand and led him out of the precinct. This moment was captured on a CCTV camera at 15:39.
The boys took Bulger on a 2½ mile (4 km) walk. At one point they led him to a canal, where Bulger sustained some injuries to his head and face after apparently being dropped to the ground. Later on in their journey, a witness reported seeing Bulger being kicked in the ribs by one of the boys to encourage him along.
During the entire walk, the two boys and Bulger were seen by 38 people, some of whom noticed an injury to the child's head and later recalled that he seemed distressed. Others reported that Bulger appeared happy and was seen laughing, the boys seemingly alternating between hurting and distracting him. A few members of the public challenged the two older boys, but they claimed they were looking after their younger brother, or that he was lost and that they were taking him to the police station, and were allowed to continue on their way. They eventually led Bulger to a section of railway line near Walton.
From the facts disclosed at trial, at this location one of the boys threw blue modelling paint on Bulger's face. They kicked him and hit him with bricks, stones and a 22 lb (10 kg) iron bar. It was reported that the boys molested Bulger's penis (the exact details are somewhat vague,but they denied this action) and placed batteries in his rectum. Before they left him, the boys laid Bulger across the train tracks and weighed his head down with rubble, in hopes that a passing train would hit Bulger and make his death appear to be an accident involving a careless boy and a train. Two days later, on Sunday of the same week, Bulger's body was discovered, having been cut into two pieces by a goods train. A pathologist later testified that Bulger had died before his body was run over by the train.
As the circumstances surrounding the death became clear, tabloid newspapers compared the killers with Myra Hindley and Saddam Hussein. They denounced the people who had seen Bulger but not realised the trouble he was in as the "Liverpool 38" (see: Kitty Genovese, Bystander effect). Within days, the Liverpool Echo had published 1,086 death notices for Bulger. The railside embankment upon which Bulger's body had been discovered was flooded with hundreds of bunches of flowers: One of these floral tributes was laid by Thompson. Within days, he and Venables were arrested after an investigation led by one of Merseyside Police's most senior detectives, Detective Superintendent Albert Kirby.
Forensics tests confirmed that both boys had the same blue paint on their clothing as was found on Bulger's body. Both had blood on their shoes; blood on Venables' shoe was matched to Bulger's through DNA tests.
The trial
Venables and Thompson at the time of their arrestIn the initial aftermath of their arrest, the boys were referred to simply as "Child A" (Thompson) and "Child B" (Venables). However, the widely publicised nature of the murder, and public reaction to it, together with the difficulty of controlling information distributed on the Internet, meant that their names became known. Public shock at the murder was compounded by the release of mug shots taken during initial questioning by police. The pictures showed a pair of frightened children, and many found it hard to believe such a crime had been perpetrated by two people so young.
Five hundred angry protesters gathered at South Sefton Magistrates Court during the boys' initial court appearances. The accused's parents were moved to different parts of the country and had to assume new identities following a series of death threats.
The full trial took place at Preston Crown Court. The trial was conducted as an adult trial would have been, with the accused sitting in the dock away from their parents and with the judge and court officials dressed in full legal regalia. Each boy sat in full view of the court on raised chairs (so they could see out of the dock designed for adults) accompanied by two social workers. Although they were separated from their parents, they were within touching distance of them on days that their families attended the trial. News stories frequently reported on the demeanour of the defendants, since they were in full view of reporters. (These aspects of the trial were later criticised by the European Court of Human Rights who ruled that they had not received a fair trial.)
The boys, who offered no evidence in their defence, were found guilty and were sentenced to imprisonment at a young offenders institution at "Her Majesty's Pleasure"—a British legal term meaning an indefinite period, reviewed by the Government from time to time that is particularly used as a substitute for life sentencing for minors. The trial judge Justice Morland set their minimum period of incarceration to eight years. This was increased on appeal by the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Taylor of Gosforth, to ten years and later by the Home Secretary, Michael Howard, to fifteen years on the grounds that he was "acting in the public interest". This decision was overturned in 1997 by the Law Lords. In October 2000, Lord Chief Justice Harry Woolf reduced their minimum sentence by two years for their behaviour in detention, effectively restoring the original trial judge's eight-year term.
Proposed causes
Social and family background?
In court, details of Thompson's and Venables' backgrounds were not admitted. Thompson was one of the youngest of seven boys. His mother, a lone parent, was an alcoholic. His father, who left home when Thompson was five, was also a heavy drinker who beat and sexually abused his wife and children. Despite his quiet and friendly manner, Thompson came from a home in which it was normal practice for the older children to violently attack the younger ones, and Thompson was invariably on the receiving end.
Venables' parents were also separated. His brother and sister had educational problems and attended special needs schools, whilst his mother suffered psychiatric problems. Following his parents' separation, Venables became isolated and attention-seeking. At school he would regularly bang his head on walls or slash himself with scissors. No effort was made to find the cause of his obvious distress.
Other media commentators blamed the behaviour of Venables and Thompson on their families, or on their social situation, living in one of the most deprived areas of the UK. The Liverpool Echo described the city at the time of the murder as "a wounded city... The region's economy was on its knees, and unemployment was soaring". A 2001 OFSTED report on Liverpool's schools said that "the city of Liverpool has the highest degree of deprivation in the country".
Following the murder, the boys' mothers— Susan Venables and Ann Thompson—were repeatedly attacked in the street and vilified in the press.
Thompson's father had abandoned his wife and children five years previously, one week before the family home was burned down in a fire. Ann Thompson was a heavy drinker, who found it difficult to control her seven children. Notes (obtained by author Blake Morrison) from an NSPCC case conference on the family described it as "appalling". The children "bit, hammered, battered, tortured each other". Incidents in the report include Philip (the third child) threatening his older brother Ian with a knife. Ian asked to be taken into foster care, and when he was returned to his family, he attempted suicide with an overdose of painkillers. Both Ann and Philip had also attempted suicide in the past.
Venables' family was less chaotic; although his parents were also separated, they lived near to each other, and he lived at his father's house two days a week. Both his older brother and his younger sister had learning disabilities which were severe enough to make it necessary that they attend special schools (for children too disabled to be taught in the mainstream system). Venables himself was hyperactive and had attempted to throttle another boy in a fight at school. The police had been called to Susan Venables's house in 1987, when she left her children (then aged 3, 5 and 7) alone in the house for 3 hours. Case notes from that incident describe Susan's "severe depressive problem" and suicidal tendencies.
Video violence?
One of the aspects of the case that gained much media attention was whether Venables and Thompson had been watching violent films in the days and months prior to the murder, and whether or not those movies had contributed to making the pair act in the way they did. The judge mentioned that one of their fathers possessed a large collection of violent videos, and that they probably had access to them whilst playing truant from school. As Bulger's death was similar to the death in the film, and the father of one of the boys had been known to hire this film the week before the murder, The Sun newspaper explicitly named Child's Play 3 as a movie they had seen and printed a full front-page picture of the menacing Chucky, the child-killing doll of that horror series. However, no evidence that the boys had watched such movies was formally presented to the jury, but the case gave rise to a national debate about the acceptability of violent media. Although no films were subsequently banned by the British Board of Film Classification, several video rental chains voluntarily stopped stocking Child's Play 3 and other titles listed by The Sun.
In early 1994, Liberal Democrat David Alton MP, a long-time campaigner against violent movies, commissioned Professor Elizabeth Newson to report on Video Violence and the Protection of Children, as part of his case for an amendment to the forthcoming Criminal Justice Bill. Her report, which consisted primarily of a review of similar studies from around the world, stated that there was a strong link between video violence and real world violence, and that although correlation does not necessarily imply causation, she believed there was causation in this case. [1] The report's method came under fierce criticism from those opposed to Alton's amendment (eg J McGuigan, Culture and the Public Sphere and David Gauntlett).
Professor Henry Jenkins of MIT has responded to similar political scapegoating in several interviews and articles, eg When politicians ... target video game violence, perhaps it is to distract attention from the material conditions which give rise to a culture of domestic violence, the economic policies which make it harder for most of us to own our homes, and the development practices which pave over the old grasslands and forests. [2]
Multiple causes?
Another report on children and video violence was published in 1998; it was commissioned by the Home Office in 1995 in response to fears raised by Bulger's murder. The authors, Dr Kevin Browne and Amanda Pennell of the University of Birmingham, emphasised the link between a violent home background and offending:
Our research cannot prove whether video violence causes crime. But it does highlight the importance of family background and the offender's own personality and thoughts in determining the effects of film violence.
The research points to a pathway from having a violent home background, to being an offender, to be being more likely to prefer violent films and violent actors. Distorted perceptions about violent behaviour, poor empathy for others and low moral development all enhance the adoption of violent behaviour and violent film preferences. [3]
Of course, it is doubtful if the real reason will ever really be found. A combination of effects combined with children's sometimes less developed understanding of the consequences of actions can all be pointed to, but none ever proven.
Appeal and release
In 1999, lawyers acting for Venables and Thompson appealed to the European Court of Human Rights on the grounds that the boys' trial had not been impartial, since they were too young to be able to follow the proceedings and understand the workings of an adult court. They also claimed that Howard's intervention led to a "charged atmosphere", making a fair trial impossible. The Court found in the boys' favour.
The European Court case led to the new Lord Chief Justice, Lord Justice Woolf, reviewing the minimum sentence imposed. In October 2000, he recommended the tariff be reduced from ten to eight years, adding that young offenders' institutions were a "corrosive atmosphere" for the juveniles.
In June 2001, after a six-month review of the case, the Parole Board ruled the boys were no longer a threat to public safety and were thus eligible for release now that the minimum tariff had expired. The Home Secretary, David Blunkett, approved the decision, and they were both released that summer. They will live out their lives on a "life licence", which allows for their immediate re-incarceration if they break the terms of their release, that is if they are seen to be a danger to the public.
An estimated total of £4 million was spent in helping Thompson and Venables rebuild their lives on release from custody.
The Manchester Evening News provoked controversy by naming the secure institutions in which the pair were housed, in possible breach of the injunction against press publicity which had been renewed early in 2001. In December of that year, the paper was found guilty of contempt of court and fined £30,000 and ordered to pay costs of £120,000.
The injunction against the press reporting on the boys' whereabouts applies only in England and Wales, and newspapers in Scotland or other countries can legally publish such information. With easy cross-border communications due to the internet, many expected their identities and whereabouts to quickly become public knowledge. Indeed, in June 2001, Venables' mother was quoted by the News of the World as saying that she expected her son to be "dead within four weeks" of release. Her lawyers lodged a formal complaint with the Press Complaints Commission saying that Mrs Venables had said no such thing. By that time, however, the phrase had been widely re-reported. As of 2004, no publication of vigilante action has come to pass. Despite this, Bulger's mother, Denise, told how in 2004 she received an anonymous tip-off that helped her locate Thompson. She said she saw him but was "paralysed with hatred", and did not communicate with him in any way.
In March 2006 it was reported that Robert Thompson has begun living with a male lover. He had to tell his boyfriend of his past as a condition of his 'life licence'.
JAMIE BULGER:
Tragic 2-year-old.
June 19, 2001 THESE killers never had it so good, and their fortunes seem poised to take a turn for the better.
They talk on cellular phones and have Internet access. They enjoy family outings and shopping sprees. If one of them wants to attend a sold-out sports event, no problem!
Eight years ago, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson seemed destined for lives as street thugs in their native England. Now, they're likely to be set free to live under assumed names issued by their government. Don't be surprised if one of them turns up as your neighbor.
Not that you'd recognize him.
This week, England's parole board is expected to free Venables and Thompson, who were 10 when they kidnapped, tortured and murdered a terrified 2-year-old boy.
Now, at the strapping age of 18, the pair would be entitled to sell their life stories for major bucks upon release. But - bloody insanity! - anyone who tried to stop them by revealing their identities or whereabouts could face jail.
Huh?
In 1993, in a case that disgusted the world, Thompson and Venables snatched little Jamie Bulger at a shopping mall.
In England, a nation whose citizens have joined the chorus of outrage at our execution of Timothy McVeigh, committing a murder is more than a crime. It's a sure-fire method for your youthful slacker to boost a tired resume.
Just ask killer nanny Louise Woodward.
In pictures that circled the globe, Venables and Thompson were seen on security videotape, luring their little victim from his mom. They were 10.
The pair took the baby on a 3-mile death march, stopping every so often to beat him over the head with a 22-pound iron bar and pour paint into his eyes and wounds.
The child used his dying breath to cry for his mommy.
The killers' final act erased any doubt over whether they knew they'd done wrong. They tied Jamie's broken frame to a railroad track, hoping a train would crush the small body and hide their sin.
From the moment they were caught, good fortune smiled on the pair. At trial, the boys played with Game Boys.
Even less serious was the "jail" to which they were sentenced, a facility run by Britain's social services, where they are regularly freed to enjoy day trips with their families or go to the mall.
Venables, who had attempted murder once before the Bulger case, was reported to have received tickets to a popular Manchester United soccer match.
The sentiment from England's current liberal-minded government is that they've suffered enough. Even some journalists agree.
"We have one of the lowest ages of criminal responsibility in Europe," said Stephen Scott, who produced "Unforgiven: The Boys Who Murdered James Bulger" for Britain's Channel 4.
"If we can't turn children around at age 10, we might as well give up," Scott said.
This idea runs contrary to sense.
"A study on released inmates in New York showed teens had the highest rate of recidivism, higher than people in their 20s, 30s and, especially, 40s," said Peter Reinharz, New York City's chief family court prosecutor.
"You really have to question the wisdom of a system that takes offenders who've committed the most depraved types of violence, and tells the community, ‘You have to trust us to keep you safe,'" Reinharz added.
The next time we hear from these two remorseless killers, it may be too late for someone else's child.