A judge’s decision not to jail two teenage boys who raped two girls has been described by one of the victims as a “rock straight in my face”.
A trial at Southampton crown court heard the girls were raped in two separate attacks in Fordingbridge, Hampshire, the first attack on 26 November 2024 and the second on 17 January 2025.
The boys, aged 15, were given youth rehabilitation orders and made subject to intensive supervision and surveillance. Their sentences are to be reviewed by the attorney general.
In an interview with the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg, one of the victims – who was 15 at the time of the incident – asked: “What was the point in putting me through that?”
Speaking anonymously alongside her family, the girl, now 16, said the judge’s decision “almost made it seem as if what the boys did was not OK, but it was OK in the eyes of the law because they were still children”.
Jodie Mittell KC, prosecuting, told the trial the girl had visited one of the defendants in November 2024 after meeting him on Snapchat. The prosecutor said that after performing sex acts on the boy, who was then 14, she became “scared and anxious” when the second defendant arrived, and the pair raped her while the incident was filmed.
Mittell said that afterwards, videos of the incident had been sent around and other people had made jokes about her and she had received messages calling her a “slag”.
The complainant in the January incident, who was 14 at the time, was raped in a field near to Fordingbridge recreation ground while the incident was also filmed.
In the sentencing hearing on Thursday, a 15-year-old boy was handed a three-year youth rehabilitation order with 180 days of supervision and surveillance for the rape of each of the two girls and two indecent images charges. The court heard he had been diagnosed with ADHD and anxiety.
A second 15-year-old was given the same sentence for three charges of rape against each of the two victims and four counts of taking indecent images in relation to filming of the incidents. The court was told he had an IQ of the “bottom 1% of his contemporaries” and had been diagnosed with ADHD.
A third boy, 14, was given a youth rehabilitation order for 18 months for two charges of rape in the January incident by encouraging the second defendant and an offence of indecent images. He was described as having “mild cognitive impairment”.
Judge Nicholas Rowland told the defendants: “I have to remember that you are not small adults. I have to think how likely you are to do serious things again and I need to make sure you do not do serious things again in the future.”
Explaining his sentence, he said: “I should avoid criminalising these children unnecessarily and understand the effects of their behaviour and support their reintegration into society.”
He added that “peer pressure played a large part in what went on”.
During the BBC interview, the girl’s mother issued an appeal to Keir Starmer, asking: “If it was your daughter, your niece, your son, your nephew, your family member, would you be happy?
“Because we’re not happy and I don’t think any other member of the public will be happy too. So you’re in a position of power to help, so please help.”
Hampshire police and the crime commissioner, Donna Jones, offered to support the families of the victims if they wished to appeal against the “leniency” of the sentences.
Jones said: “This is an extremely disturbing case. I’m deeply concerned these boys felt they could carry out such terrifying acts and share them online and not go to prison.”
A government spokesperson said the attorney general’s office had received “multiple” requests for the sentences to be reviewed under the “unduly lenient” scheme.
He said: “We share the public’s shock at the details of this horrific case, and our thoughts are with the young victims during this distressing time. The law officers are urgently reviewing the case with the utmost care and attention.”
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