James Bulger's brothers speak out for first time and reveal what life was like growing up after tragic murder

JAMES Bulger's brothers have spoken out for the first time and revealed what life was like growing up after his tragic murder.

In a new documentary, James' family open up about the impact the two-year-old's death has had on their lives.

James was tortured and killed by two schoolboys in 1993 in a crime that rocked Britain.

The tot was snatched from the Strand Shopping Centre in Bootle, Merseyside, on February 12, by Robert Thompson and Jon Venables.

Lost Boy: The Killing of James Bulger will see James' brother Michael, 27, and half-brothers Thomas, 22, and Leon, 21, open up for the first time about the impact his murder had on their lives.

Leon says: "Still now I can't fathom exactly what happened – I don't really want to know all the details about it."

Michael, born nine months after James' disappearance, says: "Being James' brother is not a weird thing.

"We have always grown up knowing he was there, what he was like, his character. In the household, we talk about James a lot.

"My mum will give us little stories and insights about what he was like.

"He has always been a character we wanted to know more about, wishing he was there, rather than someone who was in the background all the time."

He says that the family is closer because of what happened and they "do spend more time together than some other families".

Although he tells that their mother, Denise Fergus, would always walk behind them in shops so she had a constant eye on them.

Michael recalls: "Going through school I wasn't allowed on school trips or to go to the shops with my mates.

"The only place I was allowed was either in the front garden or literally outside the gate with my mates, but I would have to be in view of the window, so if I went out of sight, Mum would be straight out."

Denise split from husband Ralph in 1993, shortly after having Michael.

She later married Stuart Fergus and had two children, Thomas and Leon.

On 12 February 1993, Little James was led away by two boys while his mother was in a butcher's shop at the busy shopping centre.

A picture taken from CCTV footage shows the tot being taken by the hand in what would become one of the defining images of the shocking case.

The killers walked James for two and half miles and were spotted by 38 people – some of whom challenged the pair.

Venables and Thompson told passers-by that the distressed toddler was their younger brother or that he was lost and they were taking him to a local police station.

The pair took James to a railway line and tortured, beat and sexually assaulted him.

They poured modelling paint into his eyes, stoned him and clubbed him with bricks, before leaving him on the railway line to be hit by a train.

After killing the tot they left his body near the tracks where it was discovered two days later.

After James' body was found at the railway line, it soon emerged that the toddler was covered in blue paint – a detail which eventually led cops to Venables and Thompson.

The identity of the killers was concealed from the public during their arrest and trial.

But because of the public outrage, the two 10-year-olds were tried in an adult court where they were convicted of murder.

Judge Justice Morland then named the murderers and sentenced them to a secure youth accommodation facility with a recommendation that they serve at least eight years in prison.

Lost Boy: The Killing of James Bulger will air at 9pm on Channel 5 on March 10 and 11.

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