The boys are now 13 but can’t legally be named due to laws protecting young offenders, with the judge saying their welfare outweighed the wider interest in open justice.
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Moment two boys convicted of knife murder
The bid to increase their sentence will be heard this morning at the Court of Appeal under the Unduly Lenient Sentence (ULS) scheme.
Relatives, victims and members of the public can use the scheme to ask the Attorney General’s Office to review sentences that seem unreasonably low.
If the three senior judges agree it was too lenient based on the evidence at the time, they can quash it and replace it with a new one. They could also leave it unchanged.
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Seesahai family ‘disappointed’ with sentence
Mr Seesahai, originally from Anguilla in the Caribbean, had been staying in Birmingham while recovering from cataract surgery and hoped to become an engineer in the UK.
The attack happened when he and a friend encountered a group of children in a Wolverhampton park.
Prosecutors said despite doing nothing to provoke them, he was attacked after one of the boys deliberately “shoulder brushed” him and pulled out a machete.
Mr Seesahai’s friend escaped but the 19-year-old ended up on the floor where he was punched, kicked and repeatedly knifed.
The boys have been held in secure accommodation since the attack.
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