COVID-19: Ian Huntley gets coronavirus vaccine in jail 'in line with priority groups' set out by government health advisers

Current COVID vaccine priority groups have not reached those in the 40-50 age bracket yet.

School caretaker Ian Huntley was given two life terms in prison for the murders which shocked the country
Image: School caretaker Ian Huntley was given two life terms in prison for the murders which shocked the country
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Child killer Ian Huntley has received a COVID vaccination in prison, Paste BN understands.

As Huntley is 47 years old, it raises the prospect that he has an underlying health condition.

It's understood that he was given the same priority as he would if he was in the community.

Huntley was jailed in December 2003 for the murders of Soham schoolgirls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman.

Holly Wells (L) and Jessica Chapman, in the Manchester United football club shirts they were last seen wearing on August 4, 2002
Image: Holly Wells (L) and Jessica Chapman, in the Manchester United football club shirts they were last seen wearing on August 4, 2002

A Ministry of Justice statement said: "Prisoners are being vaccinated in line with the priority groups set out by the independent Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) - no further, no faster than the general public."

Sources quoted by The Sun newspaper, which first reported the story, said: "If he has an underlying condition, not many people know about it.

"Most (prison) officers have not had anything, and they have to deal with people like Huntley every day."

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Huntley is reported to have been given a first dose of the Oxford/Astra vaccine at HMP Frankland, County Durham.

When might I get the coronavirus vaccination?

The murders of the two ten-year-old schoolgirls captured the attention of the nation in 2002.

Huntley was their school caretaker and put himself forward as a volunteer to help search for them after they went missing - and was interviewed by reporters on camera.

The efforts to locate the girls in the thirteen days after they disappeared have been described as one of the most intense and extensive in British criminal history.

Maxine Carr, the girls' teaching assistant, provided Huntley with a false alibi
Image: Maxine Carr, the girls' teaching assistant, provided Huntley with a false alibi

Huntley was convicted of the murder of both girls on 17 December 2003 and sentenced to two terms of life imprisonment, with the High Court later imposing a minimum term of 40 years.

His girlfriend, Maxine Carr - the girls' teaching assistant - had knowingly provided Huntley with a false alibi.

She received a three-and-a-half year prison sentence for conspiring with Huntley to pervert the course of justice.