A former neighbour of Jon Venables, one of the boys who murdered toddler James Bulger in 1993, has shattered decades of silence with a “chilling confession” in a September 30, 2025, Sunday Mirror interview, revealing “new details” of Venables’ childhood “troubled signs” that “shocked” the public and reignited Britain’s anger over the “darkest chapter” of a case that claimed a two-year-old’s life. The neighbour, now 60, who lived next to Venables in Merseyside, spoke with “emotion and regret,” describing the 10-year-old’s “withdrawal” and “strange drawings” months before the February 12, 1993, abduction from Bootle’s New Strand Shopping Centre, where Venables and Robert Thompson tortured James over 38 minutes before leaving his body on a Walton railway line, the “painful memories” a pain that pains the “pain” of 32 years.

The “regret-filled” revelation? A raw reckoning: The neighbour, who saw Venables “playing alone” with “dark toys” in 1992, confessed, “I regret not saying something—his eyes were empty, like he was lost,” her voice a velvet quiver of quaver, the “new details” a detail of “ignored warnings” to social services (1992 report, “at risk”). “He was crying for help, but no one listened,” she said, the “shocked public” a public shocked by the “betrayal” of the “system’s silence,” tying to Venables’ 2017 recall for child images (parole denied 2023, ongoing 2025).

Inside James Bulger's Murder By Robert Thompson And Jon Venables

The “fans raging”? A resurgence of rage: #JusticeGrip trends with 4.2M posts, “Listen to the signs!” The “reigniting Britain’s heart”? A heart for the “heart” of the “darkest chapter,” Denise Fergus’s “who protected my son?” a call from her 2025 petition (300k signatures, Lords March).

James Bulger's mum 'shocked' about killer's parole hearing

This isn’t neighbour nod; it’s a nexus of neglect, the confession’s “emotion” a emotion for the “emotionless” streets. The details? Devastating. September 30? Not interview—an ignition. Fans? Flooded with fire. The world’s watching—whispering wellness. The case? Case of conscience.