The Soham Murders Trial
Piecing Together the Facts
Three weeks into the trial Huntley made a momentous admission. After vigorously denying he had any knowledge of the girls’ whereabouts or how they died, he finally confessed that he was responsible for the girls’ deaths, although he suggested they were accidental. His admission was a significant boost for the prosecution’s case, even though they believed his story to be riddled with inconsistencies.


Huntley claimed that Jessica began screaming and in an effort to quiet her he put his hand over her mouth and in the process “accidentally” suffocated her. He said that he then looked at Holly in the bathtub and realized that she was also dead. Huntley further admitted to putting the girls in his car and driving them to Lakenheath, cutting off their clothes, which he later took back to Soham and burning the bodies with petrol.


Nevertheless, even though Huntley confessed to killing the girls, he continued to claim that Jessica and Holly’s deaths were accidental. However, he did admit to one charge of conspiring to pervert the course of justice, the BBC News reported in their December 2003 article. Huntley’s admission of guilt ushered in the end of the prosecution’s case and the beginning of the defenses opening arguments. The defense team would have its work cut out trying to prove that the deaths were accidental, as Huntley purported. It was clear, if not to the jury then to everyone else that the likelihood of Huntley unintentionally killing the girls was doubtful. The reality of what occurred that day was in all probability much grimmer.
































