The haunting memory of James Bulger’s murder continues to ripple through Britain more than 30 years later — and now, one of the men at the very center of the case has made a confession that has left audiences stunned.

In the documentary James Bulger: A Mother’s Story, defence lawyer Laurence Lee — who represented one of the two child killers during the trial — revealed the lasting trauma he has carried for decades. With raw honesty, he admitted: “I had awful nightmares for ages.”

Lee described how the horrors of the case did not end when the trial was over. Haunted by visions of the railway tracks where James’s body was discovered, he recalled experiencing what he likened to PTSD. “I would wake in the night, seeing those scenes again and again. It never really leaves you,” he confessed.

His words have reignited fierce public debate about the ripple effects of Britain’s most infamous child murder trial. For years, the national focus has rightly been on James’s grieving family, especially his mother Denise Fergus, who has become a powerful advocate for justice. Yet Lee’s testimony highlights how the tragedy deeply scarred not only the families involved but also those who worked on the case — lawyers, investigators, and jurors who were forced to relive unthinkable details day after day.

Many viewers took to social media to express shock that even a defence lawyer, someone professionally tasked with protecting one of the killers, would suffer such long-term trauma. Others argued that his comments shine a new light on the case: that the murder of James Bulger was not just a crime but a wound in Britain’s collective psyche, one that continues to reopen decades later.

Some critics, however, questioned whether Lee’s revelations risk shifting focus away from the true victims — James and his family. “It is important to remember who suffered most,” one commentator noted. “Denise Fergus wakes up every day without her son. That trauma will always be greater.”

Still, the programme has sparked an emotional response nationwide, with many saying they were struck by how deeply the crime reverberated beyond the courtroom. The idea that even those tasked with defending the killers remain haunted three decades later is, for many, proof of just how shattering the murder was — and why it remains seared into the nation’s memory.

As Britain reflects once again on James Bulger’s case, one truth has become clearer than ever: the trauma of that day in 1993 did not end with the sentencing. It has followed everyone touched by it — from lawyers to the public at large — and it continues to shape how the country thinks about justice, forgiveness, and grief.