A 15-year-old schoolboy described as a 'model pupil' has admitted robbing a bank with an imitation firearm.
The teenager acted like he was in a 'real-life video game' when he carried out the raid, Liverpool Youth Court was told.
The boy, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, was said to be motivated by 'greed' when he held up a Barclays bank in Liverpool, on Friday afternoon.
He made off with more than £2,000
following the raid but was handed over to the police by his mother who
was shocked to find a stash of cash, stained with dye, and a fake
firearm in his bedroom.
The
boy's mother wept at the back of the court as her son, wearing a black
suit, white shirt and tie, was brought into the dock where he entered
his guilty pleas after confirming his name, age and address.
Sending
the case to Liverpool Crown Court for sentence, District Judge Ian
Lomax said: 'This is a very serious matter. It's an armed robbery but
not in the conventional sense most people would recognise.
'It's a bizarre, surreal case of a young man almost acting like a real-life action video game. Nevertheless it was a robbery.'
The court heard that the boy was a 'model pupil' at school and was not known for misbehaving.
After
his arrest he told police he carried out the robbery because he was
envious of other people's material possessions, the court - sitting at
Liverpool Community Justice Centre - heard.
Mr Lomax said his crime was 'motivated by greed and immaturity' and by 'whatever influences' he had been under in recent times.
The judge said those influences may include 'another pupil or something you have been watching or playing.'
Debra
Chan, prosecuting, told the court that the robbery was carried out at
the bank at 11.45am on Friday when a man was seen walking into the bank
wearing a black Parka-style coat, with the hood up and scarf pulled up
to cover his face.
She
said the man produced a black handgun, went up to one of the cashiers
and said 'I'm not f****** messing around', before handing a bag over to
the cashier.
The robber
said 'Fill that up with money' before adding: 'Don't do anything
stupid. I have just got out of prison after five years.'
The
cashiers filled the bag with a 'dummy bundle' which is designed to
detonate and spray dye over the cash when it leaves the building, Miss
Chan said.
The court heard that the boy's mother discovered the money while she was tidying his bedroom on Sunday.
She then discovered a yellow bag containing a gun.
Miss
Chan said she called her family together and placed the items on the
coffee table in the living room and asked her son where they had come
from.
The boy immediately admitted what he had done and the family took the boy to the police, the court heard.
He told police: 'I robbed it (the bank) with a BB gun.'
'It's a bizarre, surreal case of a young man almost acting like a real-life action video game. Nevertheless it was a robbery'
- District Judge Ian Lomax
The boy also told officers that he
planned the raid and went on a stake-out of the bank a couple of days
beforehand and he targeted a bank because he thought it would provide
him with the 'most money'.
Miss Chan said: 'He wanted the money because he was envious of other people who had material things he wanted.'
The
court heard that the boy pointed the gun at two cashiers and a member
of the public 'so that he was not attacked from behind'.
Miss
Chan said the two members of staff at the bank were traumatised by
their ordeal but were not injured and, during his police interview, the
boy apologised for what he had done.
Miss
Chan told the court that the boy was a 'model pupil, in the top set who
attends every day' and who was now facing a 'substantial custodial
sentence.'
Esther Leach, defending, said the boy had dual nationality and had come to the UK from Zimbabwe when he was five-years-old.
She said that as soon as he was confronted by his family he made a 'full, frank and elaborate confession.'
'He is doing fantastically well at school,' Miss Leach said. 'He comes from a very, very good family,' she added.
The
boy, who pleaded guilty to two counts of robbery and one count of
possessing an imitation firearm with intent to cause fear of violence,
was granted conditional bail.
His case was sent to Liverpool Crown Court for sentence on October 15.
dailymail.co.uk
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