James Bulger killer Jon Venables has skipped his parole hearing held in private to prevent ‘disproportionate emotional stress’ after the victim’s family urged the board to keep their son’s killer locked up.
Venables ‘took the easy option’ by not coming to the parole hearing, which heard the victim impact statement of James Bulger’s parents, according to a source who spoke to the Sun.
Two-year-old James was tortured and killed by Venables and Robert Thompson, both aged 10, after they snatched him from a shopping centre in Bootle, Merseyside in 1993.
The now 41-year-old killer was granted a private hearing after the Parole Board ruled that a public one would cause ‘disproportionate emotional stress’ to Venables, but he still didn’t show up.
The source told the Sun: ‘It makes a mockery of it all. He’s been a coward to the end. He probably didn’t want to hear the impact statements so took the easy option.’
This comes after Denise Fergus, 54, James’s mother, said she endured ‘three decades of hell’ after Venables killed her son and urged the board to ‘keep people safe from this monster’ by denying his parole.
Venables (pictured here in 1993) allegedly ‘took the easy option’ by not coming to the parole hearing, which heard the victim impact statement of James Bulger’s parents, according to a source who spoke to the Sun
Two-year-old James (pictured) was tortured and killed by Venables and Robert Thompson , both aged 10, after they snatched him from a shopping centre in Bootle, Merseyside in 1993
Denise Fergus said she endured ‘three decades of hell’ after Venables killed her son and urged the board to ‘keep people safe from this monster’ by denying his parole
She told The Mirror: ‘If he goes on to commit more crimes after you release him, it will be on your shoulders. So, I’m just asking you to do the right thing.’
The heartbroken mother argued that Venables ‘seems to have the upper hand’ because of the protections he has been afforded, such as a private hearing and new identity if his release is granted.
‘Sometimes it feels like we are the criminals, not him, which is ridiculous,’ she added.
Ms Fergus said earlier this month that she was ‘anxious’ ahead of the hearing because ‘fate is in the hands of parole board bosses’.
She wants the parole board to ‘keep my son’s killer behind bars’, alleging that doing so is the ‘right decision’ for everyone.
She further argued that Venables has already been given ‘many chances’ at redemption and has ‘blown them all’. She believes he ‘doesn’t care about anybody’ and fears he will harm more people if he is released.
Ms Fergus reiterated that although she is ‘worried’ about the hearing, she has ‘confidence’ in the parole board and hopes the ‘bosses will see what this man is capable of, what he could inflict on society’.
Venables and Thompson kidnapped, tortured and killed James before leaving his mutilated body by a railway line in Liverpool in February 1993. Both were jailed for the toddler’s murder in November that year.
Venables was released on strict licence in July 2001, and recalled to prison in February 2010 after indecent images of children were found on his computer.
He was again released in August 2013, and then called back in November 2017 for the same offence. His most recent parole review was in September 2020 at which his application for parole was rejected.
Venables and Thompson kidnapped, tortured and killed James before leaving his mutilated body by a railway line in Liverpool in February 1993. Pictured: James Bulger
If he is released, Venables will be protected by a life-long anonymity order and will live under a new identity.
Due to the ban on publicly identifying Venables, the private parole hearing also barred James’s relatives from attending.
The source said that is was unclear whether it was Venables’ decision to not attend the hearing or whether he was advised against coming.
If he had attended, Venables could have faced a cross-examination by Justice Secretary Alex Chalk, who – like James’s parents – opposed the killer’s release.
A decision on Venables’ potential parole is expected within a week, although experts have warned that a decision could take several weeks, alleging one is normally given around two weeks after the oral hearing has finished, bar any delays.