BLOODLUST OF THE TINY TORTURERS; BROTHERS FROM HELL GUILTY: Savages aged 10 and 11 face life sentences: Leave me to die: BABY-FACED BEASTS COULD GET LIFEFOR VILE TORTURE OF TWO BOYS.TWO torturers aged just 10 and 11 yesterday admitted beating, stabbing, burning and sexually degrading two young boys in an orgy of violence. The attackers, who are brothers, will be sentenced later and could be locked up for life. The case brought back horrific memories of the murder of James Bulger James "Jamie" Patrick Bulger (16 March 1990 – 12 February 1993) was a two-year old toddler who was abducted and murdered by two 10 year-old boys, Jon Venables (born 8 August 1982) and Robert Thompson (born 23 August, 1982), in Merseyside, England. in 1993. The baby-faced thugs left their older victim for dead, half-naked and partly submerged in a water-filled ravine. Hetold them: "Leave me. I can't see. Leave me to die." The other lad, who had been burned on the EYELIDS eyelids, n.pl a moveable fold of thin skin over the eye. The orbicularis oculi muscle and the oculomotor nerve control the opening and closing of the eyelid. with cigarettes, was found wandering the streets by a group of girls. He was bleeding so badly that onlookers thought someone had thrown a tin of red paint over him. The brothers, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had been charged with attempted murder In the criminal law, attempted murder is committed when the defendant does an act that is more than merely preparatory to the commission of the crime of murder and, at the time of these acts, the person has a specific intention to kill. but pleaded guilty to the lesser crime of grievous bodily harm grievous bodily harm Noun Criminal law serious injury caused by one person to another Noun 1. grievous bodily harm - street names for gamma hydroxybutyrate . They sat surrounded by social workers and showed little emotion as their gruesome crimes were described. The older boy, now aged 12, yawned several times. The brothers met their victims,who were aged 11 and nine, at a park in Edlington,near Doncaster, Yorkshire onSaturday, April 4. They were in foster care in the former mining village after a nightmare upbringing with a mother who fed them cannabis to keep them quiet. The brothers lured the boys to a patch of waste ground called the Brick Ponds by promising to show them dead toads and foxes, then ordered them to hand over their trainers, a mobile phone and pounds 5 pocket money. The two lads refused and the brothers went berserk ber·serk adj. 1. Destructively or frenetically violent: a berserk worker who started smashing all the windows. 2. . They lashed out with bricks and sticks, stamped on their victims and threw them down the 15ft high side of a ravine. One brother picked up a broken old kitchen sink and dropped it on the 11-year-old's head. A noose was placed around the boy's neck. He had ligature Two or more typeface characters that are designed as a single unit (physically touch). Fi, ffi, ae and oe are common ligatures. marks when he was found. The nine-year-old, the nephew of the older victim, told police that the brothers stamped on his face and genitals, forced him to eat nettles and threatened to strangle Strangle An options strategy where the investor holds a position in both a call and put with different strike prices but with the same maturity and underlying asset. This option strategy is profitable only if there are large movements in the price of the underlying asset. him. One of his tormentors tore a branch off a tree and thrust the sharp end into his arm, ripping it open to the bone. Lit cigarettes were pushed into the wound. The nine-year-old was also burned with cigarettes on his eyelids and ears. Both boys had cigarette burns. The brothers told the younger boy to "go away and kill yourself", and he was so terrified ter·ri·fy tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies 1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten. 2. To menace or threaten; intimidate. that he tried to convince them he was obeying them by ramming a stick down his own throat. The two attackers amused themselves by trying to force their victims to kiss and perform a sex act together. When the brothers finally got bored, they decided to go and visit their father, who lived nearby. One told the other they could not leave without killing the boys because they would be able to identify them to police. But they eventually wandered off. The younger boy staggered away from the Brick Ponds towards the village, where the girls found him. A man who lived locally took him into his home. The boy was covered with blood from head to toe. Locals began a frantic search for the other victim, who was found unconscious in the ravine with a gaping wound to the back of his head. An air ambulance air ambulance Emergency medicine A helicopter or, less commonly, a fixed wing aircraft, used to evacuate a person who requires immediate medical attention that cannot be provided at his/her current location rushed to the scene. Paramedics took more than an hour to stabilise the boy before he was flown to an intensive care unit. He had so many cuts and bruises on his body that his dad said he looked like Freddy Krueger. The brothers were found with their dad. Police had already been looking for them - they were supposed to report to the police station that day to be interviewed about an attack on another 11-year-old a week before. That attack took place at the same spot, and they used a similar story about a toad to lure the victim to the scene. At Sheffield Crown Court yesterday, both brothers pled guilty to causing grievous bodily harm with intent. Prosecutors said they had agreed to drop the attempted murder charges to spare the victims from giving evidence at a trial. They pointed out that the maximum sentence for GBH GBH (in Britain and South Africa) grievous bodily harm was the same as for attempted murder - life. The brothers also admitted robbing their victims of a phone and cash, and two counts of causing a child to engage in sexual activity. And they further admitted charges of causing actual bodily harm The medical idea of (grievous) bodily harm is more specific than legal ideas of assault or violence in general, and distinct from property damage. It refers to lasting harm done to the body, human or otherwise, although in its legal sense it is exclusively defined as lasting to the other youngster they attacked. They were cleared of GBH on the boy. The brothers will be sentenced later, probably in early November, after reports have been prepared. The older of the two, dressed in a black shirt and tie, spoke confidently as he answered the charges. His younger brother was more hesitant and seemed to struggle to follow the proceedings. At one point, his barrister asked for a pause so he could explain something to his client. The brothers were allowed to sit at the lawyers' table rather than in the dock, and had social workers to look after them. The judge and lawyers did not wear wigs or gowns. Judge Mr Justice Keith told the brothers: "This is clearly very strange for you. I can tell you it is pretty strange for us lawyers to haveboys your age in acourt like this." Later, the mother of the older victim said: "We're pleased they did plead guilty, and now we're just waiting to see what happens in November. Wejust want to get on with it now." The mum said the boys' families were not upset that the charges had been reduced. She said Crown lawyers had explained the decision to them, and they were happy that the boys would not have to go through a trial. The father of the older boy said he wanted the brothers to be hanged. He added: "They tried to kill my son. They were trying to kill both of them. It was premeditated. "Things are getting better bit by bit. It's a very slow process. "You sometimes see bits of our lad's old self come back but I don't think he'll ever get back to the way he was. "He'll be mentally scarred for life. We all will, but we didn't go through what he's been through." of Bulger hell JAMES BULGER James Bulger can refer to:
He had been attacked with bricks, stones and a piece of metal. His body was then placed on the railway track and was cut in two by a train. Robert Thompson Robert Thompson may refer to:
A prisoner who has served their tariff (minimum sentence) becomes eligible for parole. in June 2001 after serving just eight years. Thompson and Venables were given new identities to protect them from reprisals, and the press were banned from reporting anything about their new lives. KIDS RAISED ON DIET OF CANNABIS AND VIOLENCE THE brothers endured a grim childhood in a squalid, chaotic home with a cannabissmoking mother who "doesn't give a s***". The mum laced their tea with cannabis to send them to sleep so she wouldn't have to look after them. And the boys were left to grow up wild, staying up all night, watching gruesome horror films when they were six, and even setting their bedroom wardrobes on fire. Hard-working neighbours of the family on a Doncaster council estate were terrorised by the mother, her drunken, violent partner and her seven sons. A relative of the family said: "The two boys could have been lovable, given the right family. But you just knew that one day they would really hurt someone." The brothers' house, with its wrecked car and broken fridge in the front garden, was notorious on the estate. A sign outside said: "Beware of the kids." Aneighbour said the mum smoked cannabis constantly, and added: "I think that's why she doesn't give a s***." Locals said the woman's partner, who lived in the house, was a "violent drunk". One described the man's daily routine as "drink, drink, drink, kick off, beat the kids, drink, drink, drink". The brothers were often seen scavenging for food and clothes. Alocal teenager said: "Their fingernails were always black. Their shoes were too big for them. They used to scavenge scav·enge v. scav·enged, scav·eng·ing, scav·eng·es v.tr. 1. To search through for salvageable material: scavenged the garbage cans for food scraps. 2. trainers and tracky bottoms from skips." Both boys were known for random violence. One of them had been arrested for beating a girl of 11 with a baseball bat, and they stabbed a female cousin twice in the face. The older brother had been in court four times for violence. and was given a 12-month supervision order for battery in January. The younger of the pair had committed actual bodily harm and assault. He was facing two charges of assault and one of burglary at the time of the Edlington horror. One of the pair's older brothers had been caged for mugging an old lady at knifepoint knife·point n. The sharp end of a knife. Idiom: at knifepoint Under threat of being stabbed or cut with a knife: was mugged at knifepoint. and they told anyone who would listen that they wanted to be like him. He had told them it was good to be locked up "because you get three square meals a day". Some locals believe the brothers committed crimes to get their mum's attention. Both were on the child protection register and had been expelled from school. The family left the estate on the day of the brothers' first court appearance over Edlington. Locals shouted abuse as they were driven away by social workers. Critics were last night asking why the brothers were put in foster care in Edlington rather than secure accommodation. And fingers were being pointed at Doncaster's child protection department, which has a disastrous reputation. Inquiries have been ordered into seven child deaths in the area in the last five years, and a team from Westminster was sent to take over the department a month before the Edlington attack. Devil brothers beat, burned, stamped on, throttled and degraded 11-year-old victim as he begged them to... CAPTION(S): ABDUCTED: Little JamesEchoes SEARCH: Cop at crime scene KIDDIES IN COURT: Brothers had small army of social workers to support them. LEFT: Diagram shows where their victims were found |
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