Baby Faced Teen

Baby Faced Teen




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A BABY-FACED teen stabbed a cyclist in the back three times after chasing him with his friends "like a pack of hounds".
Jak Pugh, then 16, hurled abuse at Neil Wilkinson as he rode past them by chance before "showing off" his blade and knifing him - and then smirking in his mugshot.
Pugh and his pals were standing outside a youth club when they pursued Mr Wilkinson "like a pack following their quarry".
Newcastle Crown Court heard the victim initially thought he had been punched by his pursuers, who were male and female teens, but then realised his shirt was "covered in blood".
Prosecutor Sam Faulks said Pugh used a Stanley knife to carry out the stabbing in Blyth, Northumberland, in August 2019.
He said the group had shouted abuse as Mr Wilkinson rode by and he stopped to ask them what they had said.
Pugh then started "showing off" his knife and the teens gave chase.
Mr Faulks added: "It was a lengthy pursuit and it was a pursuit that was with some conviction by this defendant and his associates.
"It was fast, rather unattractive and deeply unfortunate. We have a lot of hangers-on and quite a lot of girls also in the pursuit."
Mr Wilkinson said in a statement: "I knew they were chasing me, I looked back and they were right behind me.
"I tried to go as fast as I could but they were already on me. It felt like I had been punched three times in the back and I instantly fell off.
"I got to my feet and there were three lads around me. The lad who had showed me the knife was standing there.
"I took my shirt off and it was covered in blood."
Mr Wilkinson said he was "shocked and afraid" by what happened to him, adding: "It is so frightening to think kids that age are in the town centre carrying weapons like that.
"They were sitting outside a youth club, young kids go there."
The court heard after the attack, Pugh and the group travelled to a building site where he produced the knife again in front of two security officers.
Pugh, of Weardale Avenue, Blyth, admitted wounding with intent and knife possession.
He also pleaded guilty to a burglary he carried out in July 2019 where he broke into an upstairs flat and turned the taps on after blocking the sinks.
He caused a flood which meant the ceiling in the property below collapsed and the resident had to be rehoused.
Pugh also admitted racially aggravated harassment after he hurled vile racist abuse at a teenage girl in early 2020 then told her "I am really a racist" when he was challenged.
And he admitted possessing a bladed article and criminal damage in December last year when he was armed with a machete in the street.
He started coughing and spitting in a police van until he was sick, after telling officers he had Covid.
Recorder Toby Hedworth QC sentenced Pugh, who is now 18, to a total of five years behind bars with a five-year restraining order to keep him away from his victims after his release.
The judge told Pugh: "Neil Wilkinson was out cycling with a female friend in the early evening.
"A group of youths, of which you were one and became the de facto leader by the way you were conducting yourself, were shouting abuse at him.
"When he stopped to inquire what was being said, you started bragging, questioning whether he had a knife and showing off that you had a silver Stanley knife.
"He, understandably, attempted to get away as quickly as possible but your group, described in my view correctly as a pack, almost like a pack of hounds, went after him, attacking him.
"He felt what what he thought were three punches to his back, in fact it was you using the Stanley knife. When he got to his feet he was surrounded."
He added: "These injuries could have been so much more serious. I take the view it was no thanks to you they weren't any more serious."
Elizabeth Muir, defending, said Pugh had an "extremely difficult" start to life and spent time in care.
Miss Muir said Pugh was on drugs at the time of his offending and added: "He has no intention of going back to using drugs.
"He doesn't want to spend the rest of his life in custody. He wants to make a future for himself."
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Hull Youth Court is where people under the age of 18 face the consequences for their crimes
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The door opens as a baby-faced teenager enters in handcuffs and flanked by two burly security guards.
This is the disturbing sight most people will never see but which happens each week when a string of young offenders face justice.
With talk of gangs running riot in the likes of Orchard Park in recent months, there is a perception youths are ‘getting away with it’.
We spent a day in Hull youth court to find out exactly what happens and how these often troubled youngsters are dealt with.
The youth court is held at the Hull Magistrates Court and is generally held in one of the court rooms set apart from the main cluster.
The waiting room is filled with world-weary parents and very bored looking youngsters.
Some are nervous but most just look resigned, probably no strangers to the court.
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Most are wearing body warmers and jogging bottoms. Looking smart and making a good impression just doesn’t seem to be a thing in the youth court.
Many of the youngsters are unfazed and seem to be in familiar surroundings.
The court itself is a little more relaxed and less foreboding than an adult court.
But it is still an intimidating environment for anyone new to the justice system.
Indeed, the first boy up has never been in trouble before but pleaded guilty to one charge of burglary.
The court hears he and another boy stole an Xbox and ransacked cupboards in a west Hull home while the housebound resident was inside.
But a neighbour caught him on CCTV and he was identified.
Antony Farrell, representing the boy, revealed youth had never been in trouble before.
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“He doesn’t hang around with those people anymore and now has friends he can trust,” Mr Farrell said.
“He is undertaken a mechanics course which he loves and this was just a blip.”
This is a familiar appeal to the magistrates which often rings hollow but it might just be true in this case.
The experience in court for the young lad was all a bit much and he began to sob uncontrollably.
Despite his cruel crime, you could not help but feel slightly sorry for him. Genuine remorse in a courtroom is not as common as we would all like to think.
In handing him in eight-month referral order – effectively a second chance – presiding magistrate Caroline Heaton said: “I hope not to see you again and I really hope this is a blip.
“You need to accept you will struggle to get employment if you have a significant criminal record.
“You need to work hard and you have loving parents.”
Talking of parents, they are often blamed for the way some troublesome youngsters turn out.
It was a surprise that the majority of those in court were supported by mums and dads who really did seem to care.
The next case saw a boy aged just 13 years brought up from custody and marched into the dock by two security guards who then had to uncuff him.
The slight youngster, wearing a grey tracksuit top, could not remember his address when asked.
He made a brief appearance to see if he could be returned to the community before he is dealt with.
He has been charged with two robberies and a number of thefts.
Sadly, there was no prospect of him returning home and he will have to remain at a detention centre in Leeds for now.
Rather than a probation officer, support comes from the Hull Youth Justice team.
A member of the team told the court: “We cannot support him and ensure his safety in the community.”
Barely registering any emotion, the boy was handcuffed once more and led back downstairs and to his secure room in west Yorkshire.
Next in was a morose 16-year-old lad who had breached a supervision order.
Dressed in a full grey tracksuit, he fitted the stereotype more than some others - cocky, unrepentant and with a lack of understanding over the gravity of his situation.
When asked why he had not stuck to the appointments as part of the order, he just shrugged his shoulders and said: ‘Dunno’.
The breach was adjourned for a week as he is up next week for more offences. He ambled out with an air of disinterest.
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The most shocking case of the day arrived which would leave many parents in a cold sweat.
The 14-year-old boy was marched into the dock flanked by two security officers.
It was revealed the west Hull youngster, along with others, had broken into five primary schools in just one week and stolen thousands of pounds of computer equipment.
While dreadful offences, the reasons behind them proved horrifying.
“When the boy was interviewed after his arrest he said he committed the offences to fund an £80-a-day crack cocaine habit,” James Byatt, prosecuting, said.
“In relation to the primary school burglaries, windows were smashed in each case and computer equipment taken. A total of £5,000 compensation is being sought.”
As well as the primary school burglaries, the boy also stole a television from a property in a west Hull street and also broke into two outhouses at a property in west Hull, setting fire to one of them.
“Two males went into the garden of a home belonging to an 82-year-old woman who lives on her own,” Mr Byatt said.
“One outhouse was broken into and then another. Smoke could be seen coming from one of them.
“The woman later said she was shocked by what had happened. She said she did not feel safe in her own home and now felt vulnerable and upset.”
John Robinson, representing the boy, admitted the case was a concerning one.
 “You will be alarmed by the serious nature of the offences, particularly of someone at such a young age,” he said.
“The offending began in June last year when his family were made homeless and shares one room in a B&B.
“He ended up having around with a couple of older boys and he was subjected to peer pressure.
“It was the older boys that got him into the drugs.”
In many ways, it was a tragic case of so much going wrong so quickly and it prompted presiding magistrate Mrs Heston to give the boy a chance to turn his life around.
“What I found upsetting was that you showed no remorse,” she said. “But we have since received a letter from you which suggests it has hit home.”
The boy responded by telling the court: “I realise now they were not really mates.”
Mrs Heaton warmed the boy he needs to pick his friends carefully.
She said: “You need to be careful who you associate with as you are easily led.”
The boy was given a 24-month youth rehabilitation order along with an electronic curfew from 9pm to 7am.
“We are giving you a chance and address your drugs problem and other issues,” Mrs Heaton said.
“You are still very young and you need to turn a corner and decide what you want to do with your life.”
Another boy, 14, was brought up from custody. Even at this stage, it was still unsettling to see such young boys marched in wearing handcuffs.
His animated dad, unaware of any court decorum, jumped up to ask his son if he was OK.
“How are you doing? Are they looking after you OK?” the dad asked anxiously.
The boy was locked up in Manchester so the family had not seen him for some time.
He was up for a number of thefts and motoring offences.
His solicitor Lawrence Watts told the court the boy has been taken advantage of.
“He has been recently diagnosed as being on the autism spectrum,” Mr Watts said.
“He is a vulnerable young man who has been subjected to criminal exploitation. He has been associating with older people who are more criminally sophisticated.”
He appealed for the boy to be bailed so he could return to his family but the application was rejected.
On leaving the court he shouted: “This is f****** b*******!”
Another shocking case arrived next.
The 16-year-old swaggered into the courtroom flanked by his mum and a social worker.
Among the offences the boy denied was malicious wounding and the description of the case was brutal.
Mr Byatt outlined the details of the case alleged by the prosecution.
“He allegedly pulled a boy off the bench,” Mr Byatt said, “and then punched and kicked him in the head and body.
“There are reports he then pulled out a Stanley knife and tried to stab the boy in the abdomen and then slashed the boy just above the knee and the thigh.”
The boy was animated and reacted with disgust as the case was outlined, sighing and shaking his head.
So serious were the charges, the magistrates decided the case had to go to Hull Crown Court for trial.
There was due to be a trial in the afternoon but the case had to be adjourned.
It involved a 16-year-old who had allegedly taken a series of prank calls too far.
He is accused of making a hoax bomb call to a school, thought
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