The Jamie Bulger Murder: T v United Kingdom and V v United Kingdom
In 1993, James Bulger disappeared from the Liverpool shopping center when his mother turned her back for a split second. CCTV footage later showed the child being led away by two boys, (later identified as Thompson and Venables) and his mutilated body was found on a railway track . The boys were charged with the murder and the media vilified the boys with tabloid papers like the Daily Star running the story with the headline ‘How do you feel now you little bastards?” . Later analysis of this sensation has condemned the media representation of this issue as “undiluted, vitriolic editorializing” .
In 2010 Venables was send to prison for “extremely serious allegations” which later were claimed by The Sun to be charges for child pornography . Subsequent media reports questioned the handling of the defendants by both the government and media – questioning if both had contributed negatively to what had become of the boys . They questioned how fair it was to dismiss the possibility that rehabilitation could work – and whether the children could ever be released . The BBC explored this issue extensively in a documentary titled ‘Jon Venables: What Went Wrong?” and questioned the handling of the issues by not only the media, but the public and authorities as well.
This case served to show how easily the media can help in getting the public emotionally involved in a case – with assistance from the police. The CCTV footage of the victim being led away was widely portrayed, and after the defendants conviction their names were released – forcing the families to flee the area. It became taboo to show sympathy or even attempt to begin understanding what could have prompted two young children to perform such a horrific crime.