Tweeter of Jon Venables images gets suspended jail term

Man close to family of late toddler James Bulger admits sharing pictures of his killer

Jon Venables, then aged 10,  poses for a mugshot for British authorities in February  1993, shortly after the killing of James Bulger.  Photograph: BWP Media/Getty Images
Jon Venables, then aged 10, poses for a mugshot for British authorities in February 1993, shortly after the killing of James Bulger. Photograph: BWP Media/Getty Images

A man who tweeted images purporting to be of toddler James Bulger's killer Jon Venables as an adult has received a 14-month suspended jail sentence for contempt of court at the London High Court.

The term, suspended for 15 months, was handed down to security guard James Baines (27). Baines, who is from Liverpool and close to the Bulger family, will also have to pay £3,000 in costs.

He admitted disobeying a January 2001 injunction binding on the whole world which prohibits the publication of any information purporting to identify the appearance, whereabouts, movements or new identities of Venables or Robert Thompson, who were convicted of the two-year-old's murder 20 years ago, in November 1993.

Acute risk

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The injunction was made on the basis that the pair would face an acute risk of serious physical harm or death upon their release.

The case was referred by UK attorney general Dominic Grieve after Baines put images purporting to identify Venables as an adult on his Twitter profile on February 14th this year - the 20th anniversary of the crime.

One image showed Venables in a school photograph as a child while below and alongside were different images of an adult male.

They were accompanied by the tweet: “Its on bbc news about the jon venables pic on twitter saying its been removed eerrm no it hasn’t.”

The attorney general said in a statement: “It gives me no pleasure to bring a third case for breaching this injunction and I do so purely in the wider public interest.

“The order has been in place for many years and applies to both media organisations and individuals. It is meant not only to protect Venables and Thompson but also those members of the public who have been incorrectly identified as being either of them.”

Press Association