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Where is Maxine Carr now? The true story about the Soham murders

where is maxine carr now
The Soham murders: Where is Maxine Carr now?Cambridgeshire Police - Getty Images



Schoolgirls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman were only 10 years old when they were tragically murdered in their home town of Soham, Cambridgeshire, in 2002. Their murderer was school caretaker Ian Huntley, who went to extreme lengths to cover his tracks with the help of his girlfriend, Maxine Carr.

Two decades on, the case remains one of the saddest that Britain has ever seen, and has been revisited several times through documentaries. Last year, Channel Five's true crime drama, Maxine, told the story again – this time, from Carr's perspective.

IMDb’s official synopsis reads: "Examine the investigation into school assistant Maxine Carr and her fiancé Ian Huntley, who was imprisoned for the killings of school girls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman."

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Now, Netflix has acquired the rights to the programme and will re-release it on the streaming platform on Thursday 5 October.

But, who is Maxine Carr? What was Maxine Carr's involvement in the death of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman? And where is Maxine Carr now?

Who is Maxine Carr?

Maxine Carr was born 'Maxine Ann Capp' on 16 February 1977 in Grimsby, Lincolnshire – she later changed her surname to Carr in an attempt distance herself from her absent father.

Growing up, it's reported that Carr struggled with food and her weight, and suffered from disordered eating, as well as low confidence and shyness. She received poor grades at school. However, according to interviews that former care work colleagues gave to press, she remained hopeful about one day becoming a teacher.

Despite being shy when sober, it's also said that Carr often visited Grimsby nightclubs in the hopes of meeting men, and it was on one of her nights out that, in 1999 at the age of 22, she met the then 25-year-old Huntley.

The pair entered a relationship and just four weeks after meeting, moved in together. Two years on, when Huntley managed to secure a job as a caretaker at Soham Village College, along with a home on the grounds, Carr moved in too. It's noted that he was emotionally abusive.

One year later, in 2002, Carr took up a support assistant job at St Andrew's Primary School (after lying about her qualifications) – and it was here that she met Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman.

What happened in the Soham murders case?

On 4 August 2002, Wells and Chapman decided to go for a wander after having a barbecue at Wells' house. The 10-year-old best friends hadn't told anyone where they were going, but Wells' mum grew concerned when she realised they had left and not returned.

On their walk, the pair came into contact with Huntley who lured them into his cottage, later going on to kill them both. But their bodies were not immediately recovered and police launched an intensive search, involving over 400 officers as well as members of the public and the staff from a nearby US Air Force base.

It was two weeks before Wells and Chapman's bodies were found, lying side by side in a ditch 10 miles away from home.

soham, england november 10 police stand outside soham school november 10, 2003 in soham, england out of court visit in the trial of former school caretaker ian huntley, 29, charged with the abduction and murder of 10 year olds holly wells and jessica chapman, and his girlfriend maxine carr, a 26 year old former classroom assistant, charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice and assisting an offender photo by graeme robertsongetty images
Graeme Robertson - Getty Images

What led to Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr's arrest?

During the search for Wells and Chapman, Huntley alleged that he had encountered the girls on their walk, claiming that the pair had stopped on his doorstep to ask questions about Carr's recent application for a full-time position at their school. As one of the last people to see the girls alive, Huntley gave numerous interviews to the press – but police were suspicious of his story.

During a later search of Huntley's property and the surrounding grounds, police discovered burnt items of clothing (in a bin hidden in a storage hangar) that matched the Manchester United tops that Wells and Chapman had both been wearing when they disappeared, prompting Huntley and Carr's arrest.

What was Maxine Carr’s involvement in the Soham case?

When Wells and Chapman disappeared, Carr lied during the investigation by telling police that she was at home with Huntley at the time the girls vanished – although she later admitted during a police interview that she said this to fake an alibi for her boyfriend.

Cracks began to appear in her cover story when she gave a TV interview in which she spoke fondly of Wells and Chapman, but referred to the girls in past tense (something she later claimed in court was due to having worked with the children in the past). In her interview with BBC Look East, Carr showed reporters a card that Wells had made for her at school. "No one believes they would ever run away. They were very close to their families. This is something that I will keep for the rest of my life," Carr said.

Eventually, after the girls' burnt clothes were unearthed, Carr confessed to police about her and Huntley's involvement in Wells and Chapman's murders – although he refused to answer any questions.

Admitting that she had lied about her whereabouts on the day of the girls' disappearance, Carr also revealed that Huntley had told her that Wells and Chapman had come into the cottage they shared after one of the girls experienced a nose bleed, but claims she did not know he had harmed them.

lakenheath, united kingdom two teddy bears and a note with a photograph are seen 21 august 2002 in a floral tribute to slain school girls jessica chapman and holly wells, near the crime scene in lakenheath some 100 miles 160 kms north of london ian huntley and his partner maxine carr have been charged in connection with the murder of the two soham schoolgirls, both 10 years old afp photo odd andersen photo credit should read odd andersenafp via getty images
ODD ANDERSEN - Getty Images

Did Maxine Carr go to prison?

On 20 August 2002, Huntley was charged with two counts of murder and later, after a two month stint in a psychiatric unit and time in high security prisons, his high-profile trial commenced at the Old Bailey on 5 November 2003. Over a month later, on 17 December 2003, Huntley was found guilty by the jury and sentenced to two life terms imprisonment.

Carr was also charged – with two counts of assisting an offender, after being accused of giving a false alibi, and one count of perverting the course of justice – and took to the stand during the same trial.

She is said to have told her counsel, "If, for a minute, I [had known] or believed he'd murdered either of those girls I would have been horrified."

Carr pleaded guilty to the charge of perverting the course of justice, but not guilty to the charge of assisting an offender. At the trial, the jury accepted her insistence that she had only lied to the police in order to protect Huntley because, prior to their arrest, she had believed his claims of innocence. Although she was found not guilty of assisting an offender, Carr was still sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison for perverting the course of justice.

In total, Carr served 21 months of her initial 42-month sentence and was released on probation from Foston Hall prison in Derbyshire on 14 May 2004.

Where is Maxine Carr now?

After her release from prison, Carr moved into a safe house and was granted lifelong anonymity as well as being given a new identity. At court, her defence had argued that there was an "overwhelming case" for this move, and she is one of only four former prisoners in the UK to be protected by lifelong anonymity. The other three are Mary Bell, Robert Thompson and Jon Venables.

According to reports, Carr welcomed a son in 2011. She went on to get married in 2014, and lives in a seaside town with her partner and son. Reports say that her husband is fully aware of her past.

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