Teen who killed Holly Newton can be named â judge
Fifteen-year-old Holly Newton was murdered by her âjealousâ ex-boyfriend, it can now be revealed.
Holly was repeatedly stabbed in an alleyway in Hexham, Northumberland, by Logan MacPhail in January 2023.
MacPhail, who was 16 at the time, had anonymity during his murder trial but ahead of sentencing, Judge Sir Nicholas Hilliard KC lifted reporting restrictions following an appeal by media groups, including the BBC.
Hollyâs parents said their daughterâs killing should be classed as a domestic violence offence rather than a knife crime.
MacPhail, now 17, had turned up uninvited at Hollyâs home in Haltwhistle the night before the killing and stalked her through Hexham for almost an hour before he attacked.
The pair met at army cadets in Consett and were in an âon-and-offâ relationship for 18 months, which ended days before the killing.
Hollyâs family said he was controlling and prosecutors described the relationship as âtoxicâ.
Hollyâs mother Micala Trussler had arranged a meeting with Northumbria Police to discuss her fears about him for the evening of 27 January, but Holly was killed hours before it could take place.
MacPhail, who lived in Birtley, left his school in Gateshead at lunchtime that day and travelled by bus to Hexham.
That morning, Holly had told friends he was âbasically stalkingâ her and feared he would be waiting outside her school, Queen Elizabeth High School.
MacPhail exchanged messages with a friend of Hollyâs in which he lied about where he was to hide the fact he was in Hexham and asked her to âtrickâ Holly into meeting him.
After Holly left school with friends, MacPhail, who was wearing all black with a cap and snood concealing his face, tailed her for more than 45 minutes as she visited a leisure centre and shops.
CCTV footage showed him following her before he confronted her at a bus stop outside Pizza Pizza on Priestpopple at about 17:00 GMT.
After speaking for several minutes, Holly followed him into an alley beside the pizza shop where he launched a vicious attack.
Several members of the public intervened to pull him off her and he told one of them Holly had been âhorribleâ to him.
At his trial, he claimed he wanted to meet Holly to give her some of her possessions back, including slippers, clothes and teddy bears, but he did not have them in his backpack.
He also said he wanted to talk to her to find out if âeverything was done withâ and admitted he became âjealous and upsetâ when he saw Holly with friends, including another boy.
MacPhail initially told the murder trial his mind was âblankâ during the attack and he was trying to kill himself with the knife, not Holly, although the court heard he did not have any injuries.
But he then admitted he was âangryâ and deliberately stabbed her, although he went on to retract his admission.
Holly had 36 knife wounds to her head and body and died from catastrophic blood loss.
The 8cm (3in) blade of the kitchen knife, which the killer had taken from his home, broke during the attack.
Another youth who tried to stop the attack was stabbed four times, with MacPhail also found guilty of wounding.
The BBC applied for the reporting restriction, which was put in place because MacPhail was under 18, to be lifted.
Mr Justice Hilliard said MacPhail had been convicted of âgrave crimesâ which were of local and national concernâ but the âkey factorâ of the killerâs relationship with Holly could not be reported during the trial âlest it might identify himâ.
The judge said it was âimpossible to have a full and proper understanding of the case and of why the defendant behaved as he did without knowing this factorâ.
He said there was âgreat public concernâ about young people carrying knives and âviolence to women and girlsâ and legitimate debate was aided by the public knowing the âfull detail of the offencesâ.
A two-day sentencing hearing is due to begin on 31 October.
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