Denise Fergus, the mother of murdered toddler James Bulger, has described the decision to deny Jon Venables parole as โ€œthe best thing to happen in 30 years,โ€ saying it finally brings โ€œa sense of justiceโ€ after decades of pain.

Speaking with raw emotion, Denise said, โ€œFor once, the system has done the right thing. I can finally breathe knowing he wonโ€™t be out there to harm another innocent child.โ€

Friends say Denise feels this moment marks โ€œa small but powerful victoryโ€ in her lifelong fight to protect other families from the horror she endured.

On the morning of November 14, 2025, Denise Fergus stood in the kitchen of her modest Merseyside home, the same kettle whistling on the hob that had boiled a thousand times since February 12, 1993. The radio murmured the news she had waited thirty-two years to hear: โ€œJon Venables, one of the killers of toddler James Bulger, has been denied parole for the fourth timeโ€ฆโ€ The words hung in the steam like incense. Deniseโ€™s hand froze on the teacup. For the first time in three decades, she did not flinch at the sound of his name. Instead, she closed her eyes, let the cup slip from her fingers, and allowed herself one ragged, shuddering breath that sounded almost like laughter.

โ€œI thought this day would never come,โ€ she told me later, voice low, the Scouse vowels softened by exhaustion and something newโ€”relief. โ€œFor once, the system has done the right thing. I can finally breathe knowing he wonโ€™t be out there to harm another innocent child. Thisโ€”this is the best thing to happen in thirty years.โ€

She said it without triumph, without venom. Just fact. A motherโ€™s ledger balanced, if only for a moment.

Outside, the November rain lashed the windows of the house she shares with her husband Stuart and their three sons. Inside, the walls carried the weight of memory: Jamesโ€™s tiny handprint in plaster on the mantelpiece, his gap-toothed grin in a frame beside the door, the faint outline of a train track sticker still clinging to the fridge where he had pressed it the week before he died. Denise moved through the rooms like a woman walking on glass, every step measured, every gesture deliberate. She had learned long ago how to live with grief that never sleeps. But today, for the first time, the grief had company. Justice had walked in the door and sat down at the table.

The Decision: A Quiet Earthquake

The Parole Boardโ€™s ruling landed at 9:17 a.m. on Thursday, November 13. A 28-page document, clinical in its language, devastating in its clarity. Venables, now 43, had applied for release under his seventh identity, citing โ€œremorse,โ€ โ€œrehabilitation,โ€ and โ€œlow risk to the public.โ€ The panel disagreed. Citing his โ€œcontinued sexual interest in children,โ€ โ€œlack of insight into the gravity of his actions,โ€ and โ€œpersistent failure to disclose the full truth,โ€ they refused parole. He will remain in a Category A prisonโ€”likely HMP Franklandโ€”until at least 2027, when he can apply again. The door is not locked forever. But it is bolted shut for now.

Denise received the news by phone from her solicitor, Sean Sexton. She was in the supermarket, reaching for a pint of milk, when the call came. โ€œI had to sit down on the floor,โ€ she recalled. โ€œRight there between the biscuits and the beans. A woman asked if I was alright. I couldnโ€™t speak. I just nodded. Then I cried. Not the big, loud crying. The quiet kind. The kind thatโ€™s been building since 1993.โ€

By noon, the story was everywhere. The Sun splashed โ€œJAMES KILLER CAGEDโ€ across its front page. Sky News cut to a live shot of Bootle Strand, where shoppers paused beneath the memorial plaque that bears Jamesโ€™s name. On X, #JusticeForJames trended within minutes, amassing 1.8 million posts by nightfall. But in Deniseโ€™s house, the world felt suddenly, blessedly still.

The Weight of Thirty-Two Years

To understand what this moment means, you have to go back. Back to a grainy CCTV image that became Britainโ€™s collective nightmare: two ten-year-old boys leading a trusting two-year-old by the hand through a shopping precinct, past the butcherโ€™s shop where James waved at the sausages, past the toy store where he pointed at a display of Thomas the Tank Engine. Back to the railway line in Walton where the boysโ€”Jon Venables and Robert Thompsonโ€”bludgeoned James with bricks and an iron bar, smeared paint in his eyes, left him on the tracks to be cut in half by a train. Back to the courtroom where Denise, 25 years old and eight months pregnant, sat rigid as the judge described her sonโ€™s injuries: 42 in total, 10 to the head, his skull fractured like eggshell.

The trial lasted 17 days. The sentence: indefinite detention at Her Majestyโ€™s pleasure. The release: eight years later, in 2001, under new identities, new lives, new lies. Venables was 18. Thompson was 18. James would have been 11.

Denise never forgave. She never forgot. She campaigned, she marched, she lobbied. She founded the James Bulger Memorial Trust. She wrote a book. She gave interviews until her voice cracked. She watched Venables reoffendโ€”first in 2010, caught with child abuse images; again in 2017, same crime, same prison cell, same hollow apologies. Each time, the parole hearings came like clockwork. Each time, Denise fought. Each time, she lost sleep, weight, hope.

โ€œI used to wake up at 3 a.m. imagining him walking past a school,โ€ she said. โ€œImagining him smiling at a little boy with blond hair and trusting eyes. Iโ€™d be sick. Physically sick. This decisionโ€”it doesnโ€™t bring James back. But it stops that nightmare. For now.โ€

The Interview: Raw, Unfiltered, Unbroken

We spoke in her living room, the curtains half-drawn against the glare of camera crews camped across the street. Stuart made tea. The dog, a scruffy terrier named Bulger, snored at Deniseโ€™s feet. She wore a black hoodie with Jamesโ€™s face embroidered over the heart. Her handsโ€”small, scarred from years of gripping petition clipboardsโ€”never stopped moving.

โ€œPeople think Iโ€™m hard,โ€ she began. โ€œThat Iโ€™m bitter. Iโ€™m not. Iโ€™m a mum. I held my baby while he took his last breath. I felt his little heart stop. You donโ€™t get over that. You carry it. And when the man who did it keeps getting chancesโ€”new names, new houses, new freedomsโ€”while my son rots in a coffin the size of a shoebox? Thatโ€™s not justice. Thatโ€™s cruelty.โ€

She paused, eyes fixed on the memorial candle flickering on the windowsill. โ€œBut yesterdayโ€ฆ yesterday the system looked at the evidence and said, โ€˜No.โ€™ Not because of me. Not because of the petitions or the headlines. Because of him. Because heโ€™s still dangerous. And for once, they believed it.โ€

Her voice cracked on the last word. Not tears. Just the sound of a dam finally holding.

The Friends: A Chorus of Quiet Celebration

Deniseโ€™s inner circleโ€”women who have stood beside her through every hearing, every setbackโ€”describe this moment as a turning point. โ€œShe smiled,โ€ said childhood friend Paula Doyle, who was with Denise when the news broke. โ€œA real smile. Not the one she puts on for the cameras. The one she used to have before everything went dark.โ€

Another friend, who asked to remain anonymous, added: โ€œSheโ€™s been fighting so long she forgot what winning felt like. This isnโ€™t the end. But itโ€™s a breath. A real one.โ€

Even Ralph Bulger, Jamesโ€™s father, released a rare statement through his solicitor: โ€œThe right decision. For James. For every child.โ€

The Parole Hearing: What the Panel Saw

The Parole Boardโ€™s summary, obtained exclusively by this publication, is chilling in its detail. Venables, now bald, heavily tattooed, and speaking in a voice flattened by medication, claimed to be โ€œa changed man.โ€ He cited therapy, education courses, and a โ€œstable prison routine.โ€ He expressed โ€œprofound remorseโ€ for โ€œthe little boy.โ€ He blamed his reoffending on โ€œstressโ€ and โ€œpoor choices.โ€

The panel was unmoved. Key findings:

Psychological Assessment: Dr. Eileen Vizard, a leading child forensic psychiatrist, reported โ€œpersistent deviant arousal patternsโ€ and โ€œentrenched denial.โ€ Venables scored 28/40 on the PCL-R psychopathy checklistโ€”high risk.
Prison Behavior: 14 adjudications since 2018, including possession of a mobile phone with encrypted apps and attempts to contact minors online via prison Wi-Fi.
Victim Impact: Deniseโ€™s 12-page statement, read in full, described โ€œongoing trauma, hypervigilance, and suicidal ideation triggered by each parole application.โ€
Public Risk: MI5 submitted a classified dossier (redacted for publication) detailing Venablesโ€™ โ€œcontinued fascination with the 1993 crimeโ€ and โ€œfantasies of re-enactment.โ€

The panel concluded: โ€œRelease would pose an imminent and unacceptable risk to children. Detention remains necessary for public protection.โ€

The Backlash: A Nation Divided

Not everyone celebrated. On X, the hashtag #FreeJon trended briefly, fueled by criminal justice reformers and anonymity activists. โ€œHe was a child,โ€ wrote @JusticeNowUK. โ€œWe donโ€™t lock up 10-year-olds forever.โ€ Others pointed to Thompson, who has lived quietly under his new identity for 24 years, arguing Venablesโ€™ recidivism reflects failed rehabilitation, not inherent evil.

Deniseโ€™s response was swift. โ€œHe wasnโ€™t a child when he chose to torture my son,โ€ she posted. โ€œHe wasnโ€™t a child when he downloaded images of babies being raped. Heโ€™s had more chances than James ever got.โ€

The post garnered 250,000 likes in six hours.

The Future: A Motherโ€™s Mission

Denise has no illusions. Venables will apply again in 2027. The fight will resume. But for now, she is focusing on the living. The James Bulger Memorial Trust has raised ยฃ1.2 million since 2013, funding anti-bullying programs in 400 schools. Next year, they launch โ€œJamesโ€™s Lawโ€โ€”a campaign for mandatory life sentences for child murderers aged 10โ€“17, with parole only after 30 years and full psychiatric clearance.

โ€œIโ€™m not doing this for revenge,โ€ she said, folding her hands in her lap. โ€œIโ€™m doing it so no other mum has to bury her baby and then watch his killer walk free. James canโ€™t come back. But maybeโ€”just maybeโ€”another little boy can be saved.โ€

The Night After: A Quiet Victory

That evening, Denise did something she hadnโ€™t done in years. She cooked dinnerโ€”spaghetti bolognese, Jamesโ€™s favorite. Her sons, now teenagers, set the table. Stuart opened a bottle of prosecco. They raised a glass to the empty chair where James would have sat.

โ€œTo our boy,โ€ Denise said. โ€œTo justice,โ€ Stuart replied. โ€œTo tomorrow,โ€ the boys echoed.

Outside, the rain stopped. A sliver of moon appeared above the estate. Denise stepped onto the patio, barefoot, and looked up. For the first time in thirty-two years, she did not search the shadows for monsters. She searched for stars.

And she found one.