Western Mail

Custody for ‘Columbine’ terror plot schoolboys

- HENRY CLARE AND DAVE HIGGENS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

TWO 15-year-old boys who plotted to murder pupils at their school in a re-enactment of the 1999 Columbine massacre have been given custodial sentences after a judge told them they had “intended to cause terror on the scale of a school shooting in America”.

The teenagers, who can now be named as Thomas Wyllie and Alex Bolland, were said to have been influenced by the “poisonous effect of the internet” when they developed hero worship towards Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold.

The boys were said to have been so obsessed by the murderers, who took arms and killed 13 people at the Columbine High School in Colorado, that they devised a similar plan at their school in Northaller­ton, North Yorkshire.

They were said to have developed their plan so extensivel­y that they had a “hit list” of targets who had either bullied or wronged them, with prosecutor­s claiming that they had downloaded bomb-making manuals, researched weapons online and warned friends about what was to come.

Addressing Wyllie, who was said to have been the ringleader of the pair, the judge said: “You saw yourself as someone outside the system, someone special.”

Making comparison­s between the defendants and their idols, she said: “Those two saw themselves as antiheroes, with the power to choose who lives and who died.”

The jury heard that Wyllie discussed his motivation­s for the plan in a diary which espoused what jurors were told was his “twisted ideology”.

The inside cover of the book, which was recovered from the teenager’s home in October 2017, apologises for either committing “one of the worst atrocities in British history” or killing himself.

Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb said that the journal’s entries were “desperatel­y sad words for a 14-year-old boy with a family”.

In a secret hideout in Catterick Garrison, he had kept a rucksack filled with screws, boards and flammable liquid, which prosecutor­s suggested were instrument­s for making an explosive device which was to be part of the killing.

According to Paul Greaney QC, prosecutin­g, the bullying that Bolland suffered was a motivation for the attack, saying: “In other words, they were driven by a desire for revenge.”

After a Snapchat conversati­on discussing details of the plot came to light in September 2017, he made “clear and unvarnishe­d confession­s” to a teacher and police, claiming that his targets were “infecting the gene pool” and that they were doing a “service to society”.

However, the pair were not arrested until October 2017, after Wyllie’s secret hideout was found by officers.

Following a trial at Leeds Crown Court, they were both convicted of conspiracy to murder by the jury, with Wyllie additional­ly being convicted of the unlawful wounding of a teenage girl.

Yesterday he was given a 12-year custodial sentence, with an additional licence period of five years, while Bolland was handed a ten-year custodial sentence.

Richard Pratt QC, defending Wyllie, claimed that the teenager did not agree with the jury’s verdict, but added: “He has recognised that which he did, even on his own account, caused a great deal of terror to a number of people, a great deal of hurt and a great deal of harm.”

In defence of Bolland, Tom Price QC told the court that he was “a follower rather than a leader”, claiming the boy would not have become involved had he not met Wyllie.

 ??  ?? > Thomas Wyllie
> Thomas Wyllie
 ??  ?? > Alex Bolland
> Alex Bolland

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