Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick past

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Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick past
Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick past

Robert Thompson will always be remembered for carrying out one of the most 'barbaric' crimes the country has seen. At the age of 10, the schoolboy along with friend Jon Venables, also 10, abducted two-year-old James Bulger from a shopping centre in Bootle, Merseyside, in February 1993.

The two boys brutally tortured and murdered the tot, before leaving his mutilated body to rot by a railway line. They were convicted for the killing, with the judge describing the horrifying act as "unparalleled evil and barbarity", and were put behind bars in a young offenders institute.

Upon their release in 2001, the two teens were given new identities under the protection of a worldwide injunction. And now, over the next two days, a parole hearing will take place for the release of Jon Venables, who has been in and out of prison since the murder for sickeningly possessing indecent images of children.

He was denied freedom at the last hearing in 2020, and now James Bulger's mother, Denise, has pleaded with parole chiefs to keep the killer in jail. Venables was recalled to prison in February 2010 after indecent images of children were found on his computer.

After being released in August 2013, he was then called back in November 2017 for the same offence. Denise, 54, told the Mirror: "I have to have hope. I believe parole bosses will see what this man is capable of, what he could inflict on society. If his parole is rejected, we will rejoice. It's been such a long journey. James deserves that justice." But what happened to Thompson on the other hand? Here, we take a look at how he seems to have vanished...

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Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick pastThompson (left) and Jon Venables were convicted of James' murder (Enterprise News and Pictures)

Thompson, born on August 23, 1982, was one of seven children. His mother, Ann, fell into depression and turned to drinking when his father abandoned their family five years before James' murder.

Following her son's conviction, she said she was "effectively in hiding" and feared "revenge attacks." Ann frequently changed her name and moved house but stayed close to where her son was held in the unit.

During the trial in November 1993, Thompson was painted out to be the ringleader and it was claimed that he had been leading Venables. Talking in ITV's 2018 documentary James Bulger: A Mother's Story, Detective Phil Roberts reflected on the time he interviewed the 10-year-olds.

He previously said: "As far as I'm concerned that day - 20 years ago - I stared evil in the face. I think Thompson was in charge, but they both attacked James. They were a match made in hell. A freak of nature. They went out that day to kill - I truly believe that. And if they hadn't been caught I fear they would have struck again."

Thompson, now 41, was released on licence in June 2001 when he was 18 years old - following intense rehabilitation and a six-month review, where he and Venables were deemed as no longer a threat to public safety. Unlike Venables, Thompson is not known to have reoffended since.

Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick pastVenables and Thompson in a court drawing (ITV)

According to the Echo, their new identities reportedly cost £1.5million, in order to protect them from fatal attacks, while they were also barred from entering Liverpool. He reportedly passed five GCSEs, had taken A-Levels and had shown a growing interest in art when he was released.

Back in 2006, it was reported that Thompson was settled down and in a long-term relationship with a man - and it is believed that his partner knows his true identity. In 2018, Thompson's statement to the parole board for his 2001 release was revealed for the first time in a Channel 5 documentary, James Bulger: The New Revelations.

At the time, Thompson claimed he was a "better person" as a result of his eight years in detention for the horrific crime. He apologised for murdering two-year-old James as he tried to win his freedom.

In his statement, he said: "At that time of my life, I was completely out of control and spending time with a group of friends whose main occupation was committing crime and causing trouble. I was out of control because my life on the streets was better for me than my life at home – there was nothing for me at home."

He continued: "I do feel aware that I am now a better person and have had a better life and a better education than if I had not committed the murder. There is obviously an irony to this, but it is part of my remorseful feelings as well. I, personally, wish Mr and Mrs Bulger and their families to know that I am desperately sorry for what I did, and aware of the enormity of what I did.

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Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick pastRobert Thompson murdered James Bulger when he was just 10 years old (Enterprise News and Pictures)
Bulger killer Robert Thompson now - art lover with boyfriend who knows sick pastJames was two when he was brutally murdered (ENTERPRISE NEWS AND PICTURES)

"Mr and Mrs Bulger have made statements in the press indicating that they would view any statement of remorse by me as a cynical manoeuvre to secure my release. It is difficult, given that, to see how I could ever communicate my remorse in an effective way."

Thompson also told the parole board: "I am deeply ashamed of what I did, and of having played a part in this horrible murder." However, James' dad Ralph said these were “false words”, adding: "I’ll never accept that either of these two is sorry for what they done."

Thompson previously said when he and Venables left the Strand shopping centre, he "became aware Jon Venables had a little boy with him". Of CCTV images showing James being led off, Thompson said: "I very much regret that I did nothing to stop it at this time and the sight of those photographs fills me with shame and revulsion."

He denied they sexually assaulted James before killing him. He added: "Jon Venables and I did not speak to each other at all, as I remember, during the attack. And we didn’t speak about it after we left James Bulger on the railway line."

Thompson admitted that he did not own up to the crime at the time as he was scared of reprisals. Writing of when he and Venables first appeared in court, he said: "I could hear people shouting and chanting, ‘Hang the bastards’ and screaming at the policemen to ‘Hand them over’."

Saffron Otter

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