A source reveals that inmates at high security HMP Frankland have been vying to be the one to ‘do in Ian Huntley’ for a long time after the child killer suffered serious injuries in an attack on Thursday.
Soham murderer Ian Huntley was left in a pool of blood after an attack by a fellow inmate at the prison. The now 52-year-old is in a serious condition in hospital police have said.
One insider said that many prisoners inside the so-called ‘Monster Mansion’ would love to earn themselves the reputation as the one who hurt Huntley.
A man, who spoke to the Chronicle under the agreement he wouldn’t be named said he came across Huntley at HMP Frankland and ‘despised’ the way staff treated him. He said: “He’s up there with one of the most hated prisoners. It could have been anyone.
“The majority would attack him for the reputation, not because of what he has done. They will want to be the one that done in Ian Huntley.
“It’s not the first time it’s happened. It’s always going to happen. If he survives it’s always going to happen every few years. If he has annoyed someone really bad or someone wants to be able to say they have killed him.
“He’s probably one of the most famous prisoners in the country.”
Huntley was jailed for life for murdering Holly and Jessica, both 10, in a crime that sent shockwaves across the country. The then caretaker enticed the friends into his Cambridgeshire home and and killed them. Their bodies were found dumped in a ditch 12 miles away.
It is understood Huntley was held on an ‘enhanced’ wing at HMP Frankland. Inmates on this wing do not mix with other prisoners, the source explained.
He said: “He is sort of protected in prison but so are the likes of Levi Belfield and Wayne Couzens. They all get moved around together. You could never put him in normal prison population.”
Huntley and other prisoners on his wing attend a recycling workshop, the source said, adding that Huntley had recently started going to the gym inside.
“He would have been easier to get to him in the workshop he goes to. Only his wing’s prisoners go to that workshop, it could be someone on his wing,” he said.
“The only workshop they do is recycling. They think they are big and clever, but they are going through other people’s rubbish.
“But he has been going to the gym so it could have happened there. I came across him a lot.
“He’s a self-righteous p***k. He thinks he’s above everybody else. He used to get on really well with the staff in his wing. They used to do crosswords with him, which I despised. But they were just feeding his ego. He was always polite, but I couldn’t stand him.”
Today’s attack was not the first time the child killer was attacked by fellow inmates. In September 2005 Huntley was scalded with boiling water while being held at HMP Wakefield, in Yorkshire.
In 2010 he was taken to the University Hospital of North Durham after being slashed across the throat with a makeshift weapon. Damien Fowkes, 36, admitted attempting to murder Huntley and killing another inmate, paedophile and child murderer Colin Hatch – at Full Sutton Prison, near York.
Fowkes inflicted a seven-inch wound on Huntley’s neck with a razor melted on to a piece of plastic cutlery. It’s reported that Fowkes asked a prison officer: “Is he dead? I hope so.”
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