Soham child killer Ian Huntley won’t get a funeral after his family refused to give him one

Ian Huntley in a photo outside.
The justice minister said he doesn’t deserve ‘anything more than the bare minimum’ (Picture: PA)

Soham killer Ian Huntley won’t be given the dignity of a funeral, his family said, out of respect for the families of his victims.

Huntley, 52, died after he was allegedly attacked with a metal bar in a workshop at a maximum security jail on February 26.

He’s set to be cremated and have his ashes scattered in secret by his family, according to The Sun.

The newspaper also reported that Huntley’s family declined to hold a government-funded service out of respect for the families of his victims.

It comes after justice minister Sarah Sackman previously denied that the state would be paying £3,000 towards the cost of the killer’s funeral, an amount she described as the ‘maximum in our policy’.

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Speaking to LBC earlier this month, she said: ‘This man, Ian Huntley, doesn’t deserve anything more than the absolute bare minimum.

‘We’re not spending £3,000. That’s the maximum in our policy that it affords.’

Ian Huntley standing outside in August 2002. (Photo: Geoff Robinson/Shutterstock)
Huntley had been serving a life sentence for killing Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman (Picture: Shutterstock)

Anthony Russell, 43, has been charged with murdering Huntley, who died on March 7 at the Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle, where he was taken after the alleged attack at HMP Frankland, near Durham.

Russell appeared at Teesside Crown Court earlier this month and will attend Newcastle Crown Court on April 24 for a pre-trial preparation hearing.

Huntley was serving a life sentence for the 2002 murders of 10-year-olds Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman.

The ex-school caretaker killed the best friends after they left a family barbecue to buy sweets in Soham, Cambridgeshire, on August 4, 2002. He dumped their bodies in a ditch 10 miles away.

EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY DECEMBER 29 Undated handout photo of Holly Wells (left) and her best friend, Jessica Chapman. Prime minister Tony Blair resisted calls for a public inquiry following the Soham murders of schoolgirls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, according to newly released official files. The killing of the two 10-year-olds in the summer of 2002 in a quiet Cambridgeshire village by school caretaker Ian Huntley shocked the country. Issue date: Friday December 29, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story RECORDS Soham. Photo credit should read: Handout/PA Wire
Holly Wells (left) and Jessica Chapman (right) were found after a 13-day search (Picture: PA)

They were not found for 13 days, despite a search involving hundreds of police officers.

At the time, Huntley lived with Maxine Carr, who was a teaching assistant at Holly and Jessica’s primary school.

He denied murdering the girls but was convicted after a trial at the Old Bailey in 2003. He was jailed for life with a recommended minimum term of 40 years.

Carr gave Huntley a false alibi and was jailed for 21 months for perverting the course of justice.

She is now living under a new identity.

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