To make sure you never miss out on your favourite NEW stories, we're happy to send you some reminders

Click 'OK' then 'Allow' to enable notifications

New True Crime Documentary Investigates Britain's Youngest Serial Killer

New True Crime Documentary Investigates Britain's Youngest Serial Killer

The teen was arrested while planning his third murder

Dominic Smithers

Dominic Smithers

It feels like almost every week a new show hits our screens documenting the tale of a series of grisly murders.

But the latest in a long line of true crime series, Britain's Deadliest Kids, investigates some of the nation's youngest murder convicts.

And episode three of the series tells the story of Britain's youngest serial killer, James Fairweather, who committed two murders in 2014 when he was just 15 years old.

His first known victim was 33-year-old James Attfield, who had a brain injury after a car accident, and was brutally stabbed to death by Fairweather in Colchester, Essex.

Just three months later, Fairweather killed Nahid Almanea, a 31-year-old Saudi student, who he targeted for wearing an Islamic veil.

The new series tells the story of Britain's youngest serial killer, James Fairweather.
Essex Police

The teenager was apprehended in May 2015, when he was planning his third murder, and pleaded guilty to the murders in April 2016.

In the episode, which will be aired on Quest Red, filmmakers interview James Attfield's sister Jo Spraggan, who claims her brother's murder could have been prevented had Fairweather been given a harsher sentence for holding up a local shop at knifepoint, a crime he committed just three days before carrying out the killing.

As a first-time offender, Fairweather was not sentenced for the crime and instead given a sentence of 12 months of youth supervision.

Ms Spraggan says: "I was quite angry when I heard that he had already caused upset by holding up a shop at knifepoint. And to find out that he only got a slap on the wrist and was then allowed to walk free, and just a few months later to then go on and kill.

"It's despicable, really. I think Jim's death could have been prevented. Because if James Fairweather had been given a harsher sentence for carrying a weapon in the first place, then he may not have been out there to commit the crimes that he committed."

Dr Keri Nixon analyses James' police tapes in the documentary.
Discovery

The documentary also exposes new details of his crimes, including the enormous police operation it took to catch Fairweather, costing upwards of £2.6 million, and the scrapbook Fairweather kept of the newspaper clippings covering his murders.

Speaking in the documentary, Forensic Psychology Dr Keri Nixon says that Fairweather would have killed again if he hadn't been caught.

Analysis footage of Fairweather's police interview, she says: "He's describing what he did with no emotion. There's nothing there. There's almost a complete detachment from what he's saying, almost like he's revelling in it."

She adds: "What that says to me is that he's dangerous. If he wasn't arrested, he would have absolutely gone on to kill again."

Britain's Deadliest Kids starts tonight on Quest Red.

Featured Image Credit: Essex Police

Topics: UK News, True Crime, Interesting, UK Entertainment, UK News, True Crime, Interesting, UK Entertainment