Family’s fury as murderer Jack Cramb, 24, posts topless selfies and sends flirty texts from prison
They claim they've been denied justice because the killer is 'laughing and posting pictures of himself with pals'
THE family of a young man murdered in a vicious street attack are "disgusted" after finding out his teen killer has been posting SELFIES on Facebook from his prison cell.
Jack Cramb was caged for life with a minimum of 16 years in 2011 for killing Barry Bradley in Alva, Clackmannanshire, in July 2010 when he was aged just 19.
The murderous teen slashed Barry, also 19 at the time, on the neck with a shard of broken glass - cutting his jugular vein causing him to bleed to death.
The 24-year-old jailbird hasn't let being banged up stop him from posing semi-naked pictures of himself online though, or from flirting with women on social media.
Mobile phones are banned in prisons in the UK - but Cramb has been logging into Facebook using his since 2013 under the false name of Maximus Payet.
The killer tells pals he is “dangerous” and often uses icons of weapons in his posts.
In a conversation that appears to be with other inmates and former cons in April, he posted icons of scissors and wrote: “I’m go kick f*** outta you.”
And in March, he boasted of his violence to a woman friend who asked him why he had uploaded a photograph of himself holding plastic cutlery.
He told her: “Coz I’m dangerous.”
On Thursday, Cramb, who is in Shotts prison, Lanarkshire, posted a selfie on his Facebook page and told one woman, believed to be a nurse: “That’s my come to bed eyes.”
Under another photograph in November, a female admirer told him: “Wee Jack got hot !!! Phewww pmsl :-P xxx.”
In January, Cramb uploaded another photograph of his toned torso and one woman wrote: “Perfect body babe! (can’t wait to get my hands on it)... Lucky girl me.”
Michaela Bradley, 24, twin sister of murder victim Barry, said Cramb's actions were "disgusting" after discovering his profile on Thursday night when she recognised his face.
She told the : "I saw a profile that I wasn’t friends with but had many mutual friends with me. So I tapped on it.
"I knew it was him instantly. I was really shocked and hurt that all this time we thought we had justice and he has been allowed to still have access to his life.
"My whole family are devastated. He killed my brother, how is this his punishment?
"All this time we thought we had justice but for years he has had access to the outside world.
"He’s been allowed to talk to friends and post pictures of himself smiling and laughing with his pals.
"Despite all the time that has passed, I feel like my brother’s murderer is haunting me.
"How is this justice?"
The Scottish Prison Service also told the paper: “We do not permit access to the internet and therefore to social media sites. SPS cannot close social media profiles.
“Upon identification of a profile for a prisoner, we request removal from the site. The SPS only has the ability to request removal of Facebook accounts that are proven to be accessed while a prisoner is in our care.
“The possession of a mobile phone in prison is a criminal offence. If we receive information to suggest prisoners are in possession of devices, we will take appropriate action and report it to the relevant authorities.”
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