THE victims of two teenage wildcats are leaving Worcester to draw a line under their ordeal.

Michelle Turnnidge - Yeomans before she re-married - and her family expect to move out of their Warndon home next month.

She fears the pair, who were locked up last week for eight months, will simply continue their reign of terror once released unless she moves.

And the 39-year-old also fears they will desecrate the grave of her stillborn son, Austin, who was buried two months ago.

Mrs Turnnidge, who lives with her five daughters and husband, Austin, described yesterday how the 14-year-old girls taunted her about her son's death.

She said on one occasion, one of the girls - whose identities the Evening News is banned from revealing under a court order - taunted the family as they visited city shops to buy clothes for the dead tot's burial, 10 days after his birth on Saturday, April 14.

Magistrates in Droitwich who convicted the girls for a string of offences, including assaulting a school caretaker and police officers, heard how on another occasion they chanted Bye Bye Baby outside Mrs Turnnidge's house in Tetbury Drive.

"In a way, I feel they've taken a big part of the grieving away from me, because I've had to think about the safety of the family," said Mrs Turnnidge.

"Yes, I grieve every day, but I won't really be able to think about it until we move away."

The family home was first put on the market when the two girls began terrorising the family, with assaults and constant verbal abuse, two years ago.

The teenagers had been friends with Mrs Turnnidge's daughters, but fell out over a boy two of them liked.

One of the girls had already been sentenced to six months in a young offender's institution.

Mrs Turnnidge said the house was taken off the market after the girl's release earlier this year in the hope there would be no repetition.

"We feel the courts have let us down. We're the ones who went through all this, but we're leaving Worcester. It's those girls who should be forced to move away," she added.

"The magistrates don't set a strong enough example because the girls kept getting away with it time and again.

"We visit our son's grave every day. I'm so frightened if they find out where it is, they'll vandalise it and that's why we have to go every day."