Two users of social media who breached an injunction banning the revelation of the new identities of James Bulger's killers have received suspended jail sentences.

The nine-month terms, which were suspended for 15 months, followed action by Attorney General Dominic Grieve against Dean Liddle and Neil Harkins, who put photos on Twitter and Facebook respectively in February this year, two days after the 20th anniversary of the toddler's murder, which purported to depict Jon Venables and Robert Thompson as adults.

Sir John Thomas, President of the Queen's Bench Division, and Mr Justice Tugendhat said Liddle, 28, of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, and Harkins, 35, of Bridlington, East Yorkshire, knew they were doing wrong.

The pair admitted breaching a January 2001 injunction which prohibits publication of any information purporting to identify Venables and Thompson.