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The 14-year-old youngster, terminally ill at the time with a rare cancer that eventually killed her, hoped doctors would one day be able to bring her back to life.

But her divorced parents could not agree about her wish to be “cryogenically preserved”.

So the girl, from the London area, took legal action and asked a High Court judge to side with her mother, who supported her wish.

** CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT HOW CRYONICS WORKS **

(Image: GETTY)

Mr Justice Peter Jackson made the ruling she wanted last month.

Lawyers say her remains have now been taken to the US and frozen at a specialist facility.

The judge ruled that no-one involved could be identified.

He said the girl’s application was the only one of its kind to have come before a court in England and Wales – and probably anywhere else.

It was an example of new questions science posed to lawyers, he said.

Her dad had been reluctant to approve the plan.

He had told the judge: “Even if the treatment is successful and she is brought back to life in, let’s say, 200 years, she may not find any relative and she might not remember things.”