Today marks twenty years since schoolgirls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman vanished on their way to buy sweets.
The girls had left a family BBQ in the sleepy town of Soham, Cambridgeshire, and their bodies were discovered almost two weeks later in woodland.
Holly and Jessica, both aged 10, were murdered by evil school caretaker Ian Huntley who received a false alibi from his partner Maxine Carr, now 45.
Carr, who worked as a teaching assistant at the little girls' school, was jailed for 42 months and released from Foston Hall prison in Derbyshire in May 2004 after serving half her sentence.
But the strength of public hatred meant she had to be given a new identity by the courts and given round-the-clock protection, the Mirror reports.
She was moved to more than 10 different safe houses in two years, and in 2011 it was reported that she had given birth to her first child - a son - in a secret safe house.
In 2012 she was believed to have started a serious relationship with a man who is aware of her past.
As of 2014, she was said to have been living in a seaside town, where she worked 10 hours a week in a shop.
The town cannot be named because of the lifetime anonymity order granted to Maxine Carr by the High Court ten years ago.
She is just one of four ex-UK prisoners protected by lifelong anonymity – along with James Bulger's murderers Robert Thompson and Jon Venables and child killer Mary Bell.
And that same year she apparently got married to a man in a £2,000 wedding with all the trimmings.
According to the Daily Mail, the pair tied the knot at a secret hotel, with the bride wearing a £2,000 ivory dress.
Her husband-to-be walked her down the aisle, sources said, adding that they feasted on a three-course wedding breakfast and drank £10 bottles of sparkling wine before honeymooning at a family-friendly resort.
Insiders claimed her husband was fully aware of who she is and was 'absolutely besotted' with her.
However, the news is said to have been a bitter pill for the heartbroken mothers of Holly and Jessica, who never got to see their daughters grow up and build a life of their own.
"The families of Holly and Jessica will never get to see their daughters marry," a source told the newspaper.
"They will never get to enjoy their big day.
"They have nothing to look forward. Why should she?"
The search for Holly and Jessica was one of the biggest the country has ever seen. Hundreds of local people volunteered along with US Air Force staff from a nearby base to trawl the countryside.
Every registered sex offender in Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire was interviewed but there seemed to be no trace of the primary school pupils.
A massive media appeal kept Holly and Jessica on the front pages of every paper and in every news bulletin and for 13 days no stone was left unturned.
Chillingly, Huntley himself was interviewed by reporters and even helped in the search for Holly and Jessica.
Carr was also keen to speak to the press and in one interview she bragged about how much she had clearly meant to little Holly especially.
She showed reporters a card Holly had made for her on the last day of term to thank her for being such a good teaching assistant.
Speaking to a TV reporter, Carr said: "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.
"It's what Holly gave me on the last day of term and there's a poem written inside saying 'to a special teaching assistant' and that we will miss her and we will see her in the future.
"That was the kind of girl she was, she was just really lovely."
Her chilling slip was spotted almost instantly - she had referred to Holly in the past tense.
Only those who knew what had really happened to the best friends would know that they had been killed.
Suspicion was now starting to fall on the pair, who were taken in for questioning 12 days after Holly and Jessica disappeared.
The following day a gamekeeper made harrowing discovery - Holly and Jessica were found lying side by side in a ditch close to an RAF base in Suffolk, 10 miles from Soham.
On August 20 Huntley was charged with two counts of murder and Carr was charged with attempting to perverse the course of justice.
She was later charged with two counts of assisting an offender.
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