The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

'Conviction is justice'

- By Stephen Briggs stephen.briggs@jpress.co.uk Twitter:@PTstephenB

The conviction of a man for the murder Rikki Neave ‘brings justice’ for the sixyear-old who was killed nearly 30 years ago.

James Watson was 13 when he brutally strangled Rikki Neave in a wood in Peterborou­gh on 28 November 1994. Watson, now 41, most likely used Rikki’s zipped up coat as a ligature, in the unprovoked attack. He used so much force that marks from the zip’s metal teeth were imprinted on Rikki Neave’s skin.

The case attracted national coverage in 1994, particular­ly as it happened 18 months after the murder of two-year-old James Bulger. Ruth Neave was tried and found unanimousl­y not guilty of her son’s murder in October 1996. In James Watson’s trial she gave evidence for the prosecutio­n.

Clare Forsdike, a senior crown prosecutor at the CPS, said: “The conviction of James Watson for killing Rikki Neave concludes an appalling unsolved crime almost 30 years after it happened. It brings justice for Rikki.

“It has been like a jigsaw puzzle with each piece of evidence not enough by itself but when put together creating a clear and compelling picture of why James Watson had to be the killer.

“Ultimately a combinatio­n of evidence from DNA, postmortem, soil samples, eyewitness testimony, and his changing accounts proved overwhelmi­ng.

“Only James Watson knows why he did it. He remained silent for two decades and then put Rikki’s family through the agony of a trial.

“I hope the verdict gives some consolatio­n to all those who love and miss Rikki Neave.”

The murder remained unsolved until police reopened it as part of a cold case review and Watson became a suspect. He left the UK after he was interviewe­d as a suspect in 2016 and had to be extradited back from Portugal by the CPS who later charged him with murder.

A key piece of evidence against Watson was the DNA he left on Rikki Neave’s clothes. Samples from the clothes were taken in 1994 but the technology was not sufficient­ly advanced to provide a DNA match until 2015.

Watson explained away the DNA by saying he had picked up Rikki Neave so he could see over a wooden fence at some diggers on a constructi­on site. He had never mentioned that to police when he gave statements in 1994 and 2015. He only did so after finding out the police had new informatio­n and guessing it might be DNA. Images from 1994 revealed there was no fence at the location although one was built years later.

On Friday 25 November, three days before Rikki Neave was murdered, Watson told his mother he had heard a radio news report about a twoyear-old boy in the area being abducted, strangled, and left naked in the place where Rikki’s body was to be found. No such incident was recorded by the authoritie­s.

Ruth Neave reported her son missing when he failed to return home from school. It would later emerge that neither he nor James Watson went to their respective schools that day.

Rikki Neave’s naked body was found in a wood next to the A15 on 29 November.

During the first police investigat­ion Watson was treated as a witness. He told police he briefly spoke to Rikki the morning he went missing but then they walked off in separate directions. An eyewitness who knew Watson, testified that she saw them walking off together towards the wood.

 ?? ?? Rikki Neave murder enquiry re-launch at Hinchingbr­ooke Police HQ with Detective Supt Paul Fullwood
Rikki Neave murder enquiry re-launch at Hinchingbr­ooke Police HQ with Detective Supt Paul Fullwood

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom