Murder-accused boy 'probably' stabbed girl in anger

Black and white picture of Holly with long dark hair smiling at the camera
Holly Newton was killed in Hexham in January 2023 [PA Media]

A teenager accused of murdering a 15-year-old girl said he "probably" stabbed her because he was "angry" she was being horrible to him, a court has heard.

Holly Newton was stabbed multiple times in an alleyway in Hexham in January 2023 by a boy she had said was "stalking" her, Newcastle Crown Court has heard.

A 17-year-old boy, who was 16 at the time and cannot be identified, has admitted manslaughter but denies murder.

On his ninth day giving evidence, the boy said he had gone to hurt himself but "it went too far" and he attacked Holly instead.

The court has also heard the boy followed Holly for the best part of an hour after she left school with friends on 27 January 2023.

When she stopped outside Pizza Pizza in Priestpopple at about 17:00 GMT, the boy hid in a shop doorway down the street before walking up to her when she was alone, the court has heard.

He claimed he was trying to walk by to get to the bus station but Holly recognised him and started being "horrible" to him as she was "really annoyed" he was there.

She then followed him into an alley where the boy attacked her with the knife which had an 8cm (3in) long blade, jurors have heard.

The youth, who has been diagnosed with autism, previously told the court his mind was "blank" during the minute-long stabbing, but he believed he was trying to hurt himself, not Holly.

Still from CCTV showing people walking along a pavement on a shopping street. A figure all in black has been framed with a red box at the bottom of the street and a girl further ahead of him has had a yellow frame drawn around her
The boy (in the red box) followed Holly (in the yellow frame) for almost an hour [Crown Prosecution Service]

But on the fifth-day of his cross-examination by prosecutor David Brooke KC, the boy said it was "true" he was "angry" with Holly when he attacked her.

Mr Brooke asked if the boy was angry Holly had been "horrible" to him, to which the youth replied: "Yes probably."

"I'm saying that actually you did hurt Holly and you did that deliberately because you were angry," Mr Brooke said.

An intermediary assisting the boy clarified he understood the prosecutor meant the attack on Holly was "on purpose" because he was angry.

Having shown he understood, the youth said "probably", and when asked by Mr Brooke if that meant yes, the boy said: "Yes."

When he was being arrested, he told police officers he had meant to kill himself but "it went too far", the court heard.

Mr Brooke said: "Is that what happened? You may have gone thinking about killing yourself but when she was horrible to you it went too far, you hurt her instead?"

The boy replied: "Yes."

A black handled kitchen knife with a broken blade and a bent tip next to a ruler measuring the whole object at 195mm long
[Crown Prosecution Service]

Earlier, Mr Brooke had said that Holly sustained multiple stab injuries to her head, back, face and hands.

He said according to witnesses, the boy was on top of Holly stabbing her repeatedly, and after being pulled away from her once, returned to carry on the attack.

"Were you trying to hurt Holly?" Mr Brooke asked.

The boy replied he "never wanted to".

Mr Brooke said the tip of the knife bent before the blade snapped off during the attack.

"Are you sure you weren't trying to hurt Holly?" Mr Brooke asked again.

The boy replied: "I don't think so."

'Just too close'

Mr Brooke asked several more questions about the attack but the boy said he "genuinely [did] not know" the answers as he could not remember what happened.

He said he had pulled the knife from his coat pocket to hurt himself but Holly was, he supposed, "just too close" to him.

Mr Brooke asked the boy if he had suffered any injuries from the knife, to which he replied: "No I don't think so."

A pathologist told the court Holly had 36 knife injuries including 12 stab wounds, one of which caused fatal internal bleeding.

The court has heard another teenage boy initially ran into the alley and tried to pull the attacker away but ended up getting stabbed four times.

The defendant, who denies wounding the boy, has accepted he caused the injuries but said he could not remember the altercation.

The attack ended when two men finally pulled the attacker away from Holly, who was lying on her back on the ground, the court has heard.

The trial continues.

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