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Three teenagers who kicked and punched a homeless man to death in Liverpool for a dare have been sentenced.
Liverpool Crown Court heard Kevin Bennett, 53, was attacked as he slept rough outside a supermarket in August.
He was taken to hospital with serious injuries and died six days later.
Brothers Connor and Brandon Doran, aged 17 and 14, and Simon Evans, 14, were told they would remain in custody until the Home Secretary approved their release.
Passing sentence, Judge Clement Goldstone QC, the Recorder of Liverpool, said: "I think it is a desperately sad reflection on this society that each of you was party to serious violence purely for the sake of it."
He added the tariffs given were, "to all intent and purpose, life sentences".
The three boys, who all denied murder, were found guilty in February following a four-week trial.
'I booted him'
Earlier in the trial the jury was told Connor Doran had goaded Evans by saying: "I bet you haven't got it in you to do him in."
Evans later told his friend: "I started kicking him, I booted him and now he's dead."
Brandon Doran stood look-out as the attack took place, the prosecution said.
Mr Bennett, described as "vulnerable" by the prosecution, suffered a fractured eye socket, a collapsed lung and a broken ribcage.
He died in hospital from blood poisoning after an infection set in, causing organ failure, a post-mortem examination found.
Connor Doran, labelled the "leader of the pack" by the judge, was sentenced to a minimum of 12 years.
Evans was ordered to serve at least eight years and Brandon Doran received six years for acting as look-out during the attack.
Takeaway murder
The Doran brothers' mother, Linda Doran, 42, was jailed for 30 months after being convicted by the jury of perverting the course of justice by providing false alibis for her sons.
Kevin Bennett died in hospital six days after the attack in August 2012
Her eldest son, Ryan, 23, was convicted of murder and jailed for life in October after he attacked a stranger with a bottle in a takeaway.
The judge told the mother: "You have another son who is serving life for murder. There are not many parents who have that sort of personal agony to bear.
"But then again, not that many mothers would have shown themselves to be either so unwilling or unable to shoulder the responsibility of motherhood as you have."