More than two decades after the murders of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman shocked the United Kingdom, the daughter of convicted killer Ian Huntley has broken her silence in a raw and unflinching interview, declaring that she can never forgive her father and believes he deserves eternal punishment.

In a conversation published by The Sun on March 1, 2026, Samantha Bryan—Huntley’s eldest daughter from his first marriage—described the enduring pain of being linked to one of Britain’s most notorious child killers. “There’s a special place in hell for my father,” she said. “No matter how many years pass, I cannot forgive him. What he did was unforgivable. He destroyed two innocent families and left a scar on this country that will never fade.”

The statement comes amid renewed public attention following Huntley’s near-fatal assault inside HMP Frankland on February 26, 2026. The 52-year-old Soham murderer was beaten so severely in a prison workshop that he suffered skull fractures, a broken jaw, and massive brain swelling, requiring emergency airlift to Newcastle’s Royal Victoria Infirmary. He was placed in an induced coma and remains in critical condition, with some sources reporting a survival chance as low as 5%. Prison staff initially believed he was dead at the scene before medics intervened.

The attacker is widely reported to be Anthony Russell, a 43-year-old triple murderer serving a whole-life term at the Category A prison. Witnesses say Russell struck Huntley repeatedly from behind with a metal pole or improvised weapon while Huntley bent over to tie string on a crate. After the assault, Russell allegedly shouted, “I’ve done it, I’ve done it,” in apparent triumph. Six inmates reportedly applauded the attack, highlighting the deep loathing reserved for child killers inside Britain’s high-security facilities.

Samantha Bryan, now in her early 30s, was just a toddler when her father’s crimes came to light. Huntley, then a school caretaker in Soham, Cambridgeshire, murdered 10-year-old Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman on August 4, 2002. He lured the girls into his home, killed them, and burned their bodies in a remote field. His lies during the initial police investigation and subsequent trial horrified the nation. In December 2003, he was convicted of double murder and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 40 years, making him ineligible for parole before 2042.

Bryan has lived most of her life under the shadow of her father’s name. In the Sun interview, she described the constant stigma, the whispered comments, and the fear of being recognized. “People look at me and see him,” she said. “I’ve spent my entire adult life trying to prove I’m nothing like him. I’ve never hurt anyone. I never will. But his shadow never leaves.”

She recalled the moment she learned the full truth as a child. “I didn’t understand at first why people hated us,” she said. “Then I saw the pictures of Holly and Jessica, and I understood. They were the same age as my friends. They could have been me. That’s when it became real.”

Why I want to meet my dad, Ian Huntley: It was the horrific crime that left  Britain reeling - two 10-year-old friends Holly and Jessica abducted and  murdered by their school caretaker...

Bryan has had no contact with Huntley since she was a young teenager. She said she has no desire to see him again, even if he survives the current attack. “He’s not my dad anymore,” she stated. “He stopped being my dad the day he took those girls. I have built my own life, my own family. I won’t let him drag me back into his darkness.”

Her words reflect a broader sentiment among many Britons. Social media reactions to the prison assault have been polarized: some expressed little sympathy for Huntley, with comments celebrating the attack as “karma” or “long overdue justice,” while others condemned prison violence regardless of the victim’s crimes, insisting justice belongs to the courts, not vigilantes.

Huntley has been a frequent target during his incarceration. In 2005, fellow inmate Mark Hobson threw boiling water over him. In 2010, Damien Fowkes attempted to murder him with a makeshift weapon. He has spent much of his sentence in isolation or under special protection due to the risk posed by other prisoners. HMP Frankland, nicknamed “Monster Mansion,” houses many of Britain’s most dangerous offenders, including Levi Bellfield, Wayne Couzens, and other notorious figures. Attacks on child killers and sex offenders remain a persistent problem in high-security prisons.

The latest assault has once again thrust the Soham murders back into the public eye. Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman were best friends who disappeared after attending a family barbecue on August 4, 2002. Their disappearance triggered one of the largest manhunts in British history. Huntley, who had previously been investigated for sexual offenses against underage girls but never convicted, was arrested ten days later. His girlfriend, Maxine Carr, initially provided a false alibi but later testified against him. She was convicted of perverting the course of justice and served 21 months.

The case led to sweeping changes in UK law, including the creation of the Independent Safeguarding Authority (now part of the Disclosure and Barring Service) and tighter vetting for people working with children. The Soham murders remain one of the most traumatic crimes in modern British history, symbolizing innocence lost and the devastating impact of predatory behavior.

Bryan’s interview offers a rare glimpse into the ripple effects on the killer’s own family. She spoke of the guilt she carries despite having no involvement in the crime. “I feel guilty for existing sometimes,” she admitted. “I know that’s not logical, but it’s how it feels. I wish I could take away the pain Holly and Jessica’s families feel. I can’t. All I can do is live a life that doesn’t add to the hurt.”

She has no plans to visit her father in hospital, even if he survives. “He made his choices,” she said. “He lives with the consequences. I choose to live differently.”

As Huntley remains in critical condition, the nation once again confronts the legacy of a crime that changed British society. Samantha Bryan’s words—raw, resolute, and unforgiving—serve as a powerful reminder that some acts are beyond redemption, and some wounds never heal.