Image caption Clockwise from top left: Anthony Armour, Darnell Harte, Robbie Meerun, Elliot and Ellis Thornton-Kimmit were all killed in the crash

A 15-year-old boy who caused the deaths of five people when the stolen car he was driving crashed into a tree has been detained for more than four years.

Ellis, 12, and Elliott Thornton-Kimmitt, 14, died in the crash along with Darnell Harte, 15, Anthony Armour and Robbie Meerun, both 24.

Leeds Crown Court heard the car "split in two" when it hit a tree in Meanwood, Leeds, at 88mph, on 25 November.

The boy admitted five counts of causing death by dangerous driving.

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Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption The sisters of Darnell Harte say the sentence is too short

West Yorkshire Police said the Renault Clio they were travelling in had been stolen from the Headingley area of the city earlier the same day.

The boy, who cannot be named because of his age, was sentenced to four-and-a-half-years' detention and disqualified from driving for seven years and three months by Judge Peter Collier QC.

The court heard eyewitnesses say the car was being driven erratically and on the wrong side of the road before it crashed.

The prosecutor said a passerby who had gone to the aid of the passengers described seeing the boy fleeing the scene despite being told to wait for police.

Image copyright AFP/Getty Image caption The Renault Clio struck a tree at speed, causing car parts to be strewn over the road and pavement

The judge said: "It was your driving of that car on that night which has caused all this pain and hurt.

"I know what happened that night will shape your life every day from now on.

"I do not think there will ever be a time of day when you will not remember what happened and regret what you did."

Image copyright Reuters Image caption The stolen car hit a tree on Stonegate Road in Meanwood

Outside court Darnell Harte's sisters wept as they spoke to reporters, with one saying: "In two years' time he's going to be out and we're going to have to see his face and not say anything because he's served justice in some people's eyes - to me that's not justice, because I'm never going to see my little brother ever again.

"He was the best brother you could ever have."

Speaking at the time of the crash, police said they had been confronted by a scene of "complete carnage".

Two of the passengers were pronounced dead at the site of the crash and three died a short time later in hospital.

Image caption Supt Lisa Atkinson said the crash had affected "many, many people"

After the hearing Supt Lisa Atkinson said: "To lose three children and two adults in such a significant incident is absolutely horrendous. Many, many people were affected by it.

"I was working the weekend that it happened and I can speak personally about how everyone was affected, the emergency services, the residents.

"It was truly horrendous, a vehicle travelling at three times the speed limit in a residential area.

"A 15-year-old boy is now starting a sentence and he will be affected by this for the rest of his life."

Image copyright Peter Byrne/PA Wire Image caption Floral tributes were placed close to the scene in the days after the crash

David Holderness from the Crown Prosecution Service said: "This was a truly shocking crime in which five young people lost their lives.

"The defendant acted in a supremely dangerous way, driving erratically and at speeds of around 88mph in a residential area.

"Tragically, his victims paid the price of the driver's utter irresponsibility with their lives."