Two teenage girls who tortured and murdered a vulnerable woman in her own home will NEVER be named

Two teenage girls who tortured and murdered a vulnerable woman while posing for Snapchat selfies will NEVER be named after winning High Court bid to keep their identities secret because they could be attacked on the street

  • The teenage girls were 13 and 14 when they killed 39-year-old Angela Wrightson
  • The put the vulnerable woman through a five-hour ordeal at her Hartlepool home
  • They got life sentences in 2016 and told they must serve a minimum of 15 years
  • The judge refused to lift restrictions preventing the media from naming the two
  • The anonymity expired at 18, but lawyers asked court to grant lifelong anonymity
  • A judge today gave them permanent injunctions – preventing them being named

Two teenage killers who murdered a vulnerable alcoholic in her own home have won a High Court bid to keep their identities secret for life.

The girls were aged 13 and 14 when they put 39-year-old Angela Wrightson through a five-hour ordeal at her Hartlepool home while posing for Snapchat selfies.

They were handed life sentences at Leeds Crown Court in 2016 and told they must serve a minimum of 15 years behind bars.

At the end of the trial, judge Mr Justice Globe refused to lift reporting restrictions preventing the media from identifying the killers, due to their vulnerability.

Their anonymity automatically expired when they turned 18, leading their lawyers to ask a High Court judge in October last year to grant them lifelong anonymity.

In a ruling published on Thursday, Mrs Justice Tipples granted the pair – known only as D and F – permanent injunctions, preventing them from being identified in relation to the murder.

The girls were aged 13 and 14 when they put 39-year-old Angela Wrightson through a five-hour ordeal at her Hartlepool home while posing for Snapchat selfies

They were handed life sentences at Leeds Crown Court in 2016 and told they must serve a minimum of 15 years behind bars. Pictured: Ms Wrightson

They were handed life sentences at Leeds Crown Court in 2016 and told they must serve a minimum of 15 years behind bars. Pictured: Ms Wrightson

The girls spent hours battering Ms Wrightson with her own possessions, including a TV set (pictured)

The girls spent hours battering Ms Wrightson with her own possessions, including a TV set (pictured)

In her judgment, the judge said: ‘I am quite satisfied that this is a case where there is a real and immediate risk of serious physical harm or death to F at her own hand if her anonymity is not preserved.’

This is an ‘exceptional’ case where ‘it is necessary to grant F the injunction sought in order to prevent her from being identified in connection with the murder of Angela Wrightson’, she said.

The judge said the other girl was also entitled to an injunction banning her identification as one of the killers, noting that expert psychological evidence had shown that if her identity was revealed it would ‘significantly increase her risk of self-harm’.

In the judgment, the judge notes it is clear there is ongoing media interest in the case and if the girls’ identities were revealed ‘it is inevitable that this will attract very significant media coverage locally and nationally.’

The younger girl even took a photo of her friend in the back of the police van on their way home from the murder. She posted it online with the caption: ‘Me and (name) in the back on the bizzie van again’

The younger girl even took a photo of her friend in the back of the police van on their way home from the murder. She posted it online with the caption: ‘Me and (name) in the back on the bizzie van again’

She goes on to say: ‘However, the evidence before me does not … demonstrate convincingly that, if the claimants’ identities are revealed there is a real and immediate risk of serious physical harm or death to either D or F from third parties.’

Mrs Justice Tipples also said that while there is evidence of ‘identifiable threats from social media and online comments’, she did not consider there is ‘a credible threat of violence from social media and on-line comments’ which engages the two killers’ rights under human rights laws.

At October’s hearing, Edward Fitzgerald QC told Mrs Justice Tipples that both girls suffer from ‘recognisable mental conditions’, adding that they are ‘extremely psychologically vulnerable’.

There are also concerns that ‘lifting anonymity would create a very significant risk of harm from third parties’, he said.

Flowers were left outside of Ms Wrightson's house following the murder on December 8, 2014

Flowers were left outside of Ms Wrightson’s house following the murder on December 8, 2014

Mr Fitzgerald argued: ‘The claimants live in fear that, if their names are disclosed, they will be attacked. And that affects their mental health and threatens their rehabilitation, and indeed promotes the risk of self-harm or even suicide.’

Miss Wrightson suffered a horrific and prolonged attack at her home in Stephen Street, Hartlepool, in December 2014.

She was hit with a shovel, a TV, a coffee table and a stick studded with screws after she let the girls into her home.

The victim was known locally as Alco Ange and would let schoolchildren drink in her living room.

Miss Wrightson, who was 5ft 4in and weighed six-and-a-half stone, was found dead in her blood-spattered living room the next morning.

A selfie posted on Snapchat showed the defendants smiling with Miss Wrightson pictured in the background shortly before her death.