A 17-YEAR-OLD girl, who was found murdered in an alley in Bolton, is believed to have been working as a prostitute.
Carly Bateman was strangled and dumped in a passageway off Crawford Avenue, The Haulgh, on Saturday night.
Miss Bateman, who lived in the Bolton area, was discovered in the early hours of Sunday.
It is understood that she was under the care of Bolton Social Services which has launched an investigation into the circumstances leading up to her murder.
A source told the BEN that the teenager worked as a prostitute to feed her drug habit.
He said: "Every time she was picked up by the police, the emergency social services team was called and she was taken back home again.
"Within half an hour she was back on the streets again.
"I believe at the time of her death, she didn't have an allocated social worker.
"There was talk about finding her secure accommodation so she couldn't get back on the streets."
A Bolton Council spokesman said: "The social services department did know the young woman.
"All the agencies involved will be looking at the circumstances leading up to her death."
A post mortem examination carried out yesterday confirmed she died from compression injuries to her neck.
Shocked residents living in nearby Crawford Avenue and Bromwich Street were woken about 4am by police carrying out door-to-door inquiries. Crawford Avenue and the alleyway were cordoned off yesterday while scenes of crime and forensic scientists made a finger-tip search of the area.
The body of the teenager, who is originally from Yorkshire, was found close to the red-light district where many prostitutes either tout for business or live in bed-sit accommodation.
Residents have repeatedly complained about women walking the streets and punters kerb-crawling at night.
Detectives are desperate to trace the last movements of Carly before her death and are appealing for anyone who saw her on Saturday night or saw anything suspicious to come forward.
Her murder is not being linked to the discovery of a man's badly burned body on moorland in Bolton on Sunday morning.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article