Boy A thought he was carrying out the orders of a British spy

The 14-year-old boy, dubbed Boy B in court, created a series of fictional characters in chatrooms, one of which ordered Boy A to murder him.

Boy A, a 15-year-old, stabbed Boy B twice, but he did not die, Manchester Crown Court heard.

Boy A admitted attempted murder and Boy B has admitted incitement to murder.

Spy sex promise

Boy B also admitted perverting the course of justice.

Boy A, who is now 17, was served with a two-year supervision order and is allowed no contact with Boy B.

Skilled writers of fiction would struggle to conjure up a plot such as that which arises here

Judge David Maddison

Read how Boy B spun his web of deceit

The court heard Boy B's actions were part of an "extraordinary suicide attempt".

He groomed the older boy to carry out the attack by persuading him he was a female spy who had ordered Boy B to commit murder, the court heard.

He believed that by doing so he would be recruited into the British secret service and would be rewarded with sex with the spy, a middle-aged woman, the court heard.

But the court was told that in reality Boy B had fallen in love with Boy A, conned him into performing sex acts on a webcam, and tricked him into stabbing him twice in Altrincham, Greater Manchester.

'Could you stab someone?'

Posing as the spy on the internet, and promising him sex and cash, Boy B sent messages to Boy A to stab him to death.

These messages included the following exchange:

'Spy' (in reality Boy B): could you stab someone?

Boy A: i haven't really thought about it

'Spy': well think please



Boy A: ok erm well i watch a lot of films

They travelled to the Trafford Centre, where they bought a knife.

The next day, 29 June 2003, Boy A carried out Boy B's orders "to the letter", the court heard.

It was incitement to commit murder - his own murder

Julian Ross, Greater Manchester Police

Boy B survived, and spent a week in Wythenshawe Hospital recovering.

Sentencing, Judge David Maddison said the case was "extraordinary".

"Skilled writers of fiction would struggle to conjure up a plot such as that which arises here," he said.

He added such offences would normally carry a lengthy jail sentence.

"But these could not be described as any normal circumstances," he said.

'Unique' case

The police officer who led the investigation said the boys' lives and the lives of their families had been devastated.

"It was incitement to commit murder - his own murder," said Detective Chief Inspector Julian Ross of Greater Manchester Police.

"I am not aware of any other cases where that has taken place."

Despite the devastating effect the ordeal had on Boy A, Mr Ross said he did not believe Boy B intended to harm him.

"The 14-year-old boy showed no intention to hurt anybody but himself," he said.

"I am quite convinced it was a deliberate suicide attempt."

Mr Ross added: "We have not come across any underlying things that would turn a child to do this sort of thing.

"There is nothing you would see in these boys that is different from any other middle-class family, and the word that keeps coming back to us is what a tragedy it all was."

Sally Hogg, the Criminal Intelligence Analyst, who examined the 56,000 lines of emails and messages, said Boy B developed a dangerous influence over his older friend.

She added: "It sounds so far-fetched that he could have been absorbed by it but there was nothing in the body of the text that would have made him suspicious."