'Justice has been served', victims' families say as custodial sentences issuedpublished at 17:02 BST
Cachella Smith
Live reporter
Image source, ReutersTwo boys convicted of raping two teenage girls have had their original non-custodial sentences overturned by the Court of Appeal and have been given four years’ detention.
The initial sentences were referred to the court after Attorney General Lord Hermer called them “unduly lenient”.
The offenders - anonymised in court as X and Y - were both 14 at the time of the attacks and initially sentenced to Youth Rehabilitation Orders.
These were referred to the Court of Appeal after an outcry from the girls and their families and from politicians. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer described it as "an appalling case".
A third defendant - referred to in court as Z - was found guilty of rape offences by aiding and abetting two attacks on the second victim.
He has not had his sentence changed - his age and his involvement in the second incident only were referenced in that decision.
Their victims - known as C1 and C2 - were aged 15 and 14 respectively at the time of the separate attacks in November 2024 and January 2025.
A "crucial feature" of the case was that the boys' actions were repeated in a second incident which took place months after the first, the appeal judge found.
The girls' families said today they were "thankful" their voices had been heard, adding they were relieved the court recognised the "seriousness" of the crimes.
It followed one of the girls telling the BBC the original judge's decision had felt like a "rock in the face".
"Justice has been served," C2's family said.
In a separate statement, C1 said the attack left her "harmed so severely" she doesn't think she will "ever be the same".
We are ending out live coverage now, but our news story has more details.





