Boys’ sentences for 11 counts of rape ‘too lenient’

BBC

Boys’ sentences for 11 counts of rape ‘too lenient’

Nikki Mitchell – South of England home affairs correspondent; Marcus White – South of England
5 min read

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Three teenage boys who raped two girls in separate attacks have been given sentences that are “far too lenient’, a police chief has said.

Prosecutors said the assaults in Fordingbridge, Hampshire, in 2024 and 2025, were “brazenly filmed” on phones and showed the boys laughing and encouraging each other.

Two of the boys were 14 when they carried out their attacks, the third boy was 13 when he aided and abetted the assaults on the second girl. Among other sanctions, the boys were given Youth Rehabilitation Orders and walked out of court with 11 rape convictions between them.

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Hampshire Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) Donna Jones said the sentences “offer little comfort to their victims”.

Warning: This story contains details some may find distressing

Det Sgt Naomi Stocker from Hampshire Police praised the girls “immense bravery” and added that “we are liaising with our partners at the Crown Prosecution Service in relation to the sentence passed”.

Explaining his sentencing decision at Southampton Crown Court, Judge Nicholas Rowland said: “I should avoid criminalising these children unnecessarily and understand the effects of their behaviour and support their reintegration into society.”

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The judge did stress the “seriousness” of the boys’ crimes and said their filming of the attacks made them even “more serious”.

He then emphasised their “very young” ages and said: “None of you need to go to prison today.”

Two of the boys’ mothers burst into tears as the sentence was read out.