Lindsay Birbeck’s teenage killer, 17, is unmasked as traveller named after boxer Rocky Marciano

The teenager who murdered teaching assistant Lindsay Birbeck has been unmasked as a traveller named after boxing sensation Rocky Marciano. 

The 17-year-old strangled the 47-year-old mother-of-two, who was found wrapped in two plastic bags at the back of a cemetery in August 24 last year.

The discovery of her body, by a dog walker, was made 12 days after she went missing from her home in Accrington, Lancs.

A post-mortem found the mother-of-two, who had left her home for a walk when she went missing, had died as a result of compression of the neck.

Rocky Marciano Price previously could not be named for legal reasons as he is under the age of 18 granting him automatic anonymity under UK law.

But reporters in court today challenged the restriction due to the severity of the crime, but Justice Yip has now lifted the restrictions. 

She said: “The murder was a truly shocking event. This was a dreadful crime which generated strong public interest.

Rocky Marciano Price (pictured) previously could not be named for legal reasons as he is under the age of 18, but reporters in court challenged the anonymity order due to the severity of the crime

Lindsay Birbeck, 47, from Accrington, Lancashire, was found buried in a shallow grave at the back of Accrington Cemetery in August last year

Lindsay Birbeck, 47, from Accrington, Lancashire, was found buried in a shallow grave at the back of Accrington Cemetery in August last year

“The public naturally wish to know who this person was as they come to terms with something that rocked the local community.

“The defendant’s photograph was already placed in the public domain [as part of a CCTV appeal]. I consider it inconceivable anybody who would wish him ill-harm would not discovery his identity.

“The wider public are likely to want to know his identity and background with a view to making sense of how such a young person could do something so dreadful.

“There is a strong public interest in full and unrestricted reporting of what is plainly an exceptional case. The real public interest exists now at the time of conviction and sentence.

“Continuing reporting restrictions would substantially and considerably restrict the freedom of the press.”

The teenager – named after unbeaten heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano – is from Accrington and lives not far away from the cemetery where Lindsay Birbeck was found.

The 17-year-old’s is understood to be living with his parents, Martina and Creddy Price, who were in court for every day that their son had to attend along with other relatives, as reported by the Lancashire Telegraph.  

Jury members had previously heard how the teenager, who was 16 at the time, had killed Mrs Birbeck in a woodland before moving her body to Accrington Cemetery in a wheelie bin. 

He attended a police station several days after Mrs Birbeck was found, when police released a CCTV clip of a young male pulling a blue wheelie bin behind him on Burnley Road. 

He went on to admit dragging the bin from the Coppice on August 17 – with Mrs Birbeck inside – across Burnley Road to the cemetery where he buried her.

Prior to her murder, Mrs Birbeck had left her home in for a late afternoon walk to a nearby wooded area known as the Coppice.

Prior to her murder, Mrs Birbeck had left her home in for a late afternoon walk to a nearby wooded area known as the Coppice. Pictured: The last CCTV sighting of Ms Birbeck before she was murdered

Prior to her murder, Mrs Birbeck had left her home in for a late afternoon walk to a nearby wooded area known as the Coppice. Pictured: The last CCTV sighting of Ms Birbeck before she was murdered

A post-mortem found the mum-of-two, who had left her home for a walk when she went missing, had died as a result of compression of the neck. Pictured: Police search where Mrs Lindsay's body was found at Accrington Cemetery

A post-mortem found the mum-of-two, who had left her home for a walk when she went missing, had died as a result of compression of the neck. Pictured: Police search where Mrs Lindsay’s body was found at Accrington Cemetery 

She had invited her teenage daughter, Sarah, and Sarah’s boyfriend over for tea at 6pm.

But when she did not return from her walk, her worried family raised the alarm.

The court heard her attacker had been on the prowl in the woods for lone females and is thought to have killed Mrs Birbeck shortly after she entered the Coppice.

Shortly before Mrs Birbeck entered the Coppice, another woman said she feared for her safety when a lone male wearing a grey tracksuit and his hood up followed her on her walk. 

On Wednesday, a jury at Preston Crown Court convicted the youngster guilty of murder after deliberating for more than four hours. 

The verdict was returned exactly a year after the murder of Mrs Birbeck, who had split up from her husband and moved to a new home in March last year after she started a new relationship.

Jury members had previously heard how the teenager had killed Mrs Birbeck in a woodland  (pictured) before moving her body to the cemetery in a wheelie bin

Jury members had previously heard how the teenager had killed Mrs Birbeck in a woodland  (pictured) before moving her body to the cemetery in a wheelie bin

The teenager had previously pleaded guilty to assisting in the disposal of her body but claimed he played no role in her death.

He said he was offered ‘a lot of money’ by a mystery man to ‘get rid of the body’.  

He stated: ‘I have not met this man before. I have not met him since, nor have I had any contact with him. He has not paid me any money.

‘He told me that he would leave the money for me near where the body had been at first once everything was clear.’

The Crown Prosecution Service did not accept his version of events and said the defendant’s account was ‘implausible fiction’.

Sentencing is expected to take place on Friday.