Phil Neville's wife Julie slams rape threat Twitter trolls who also abused her disabled daughter






Mum-of-two Julie says new laws which mean internet trolls can face up to two years in jail do not go far enough



  Phil Neville and family attend the World premiere of "The Class of 92"
Targets: Couple with Isabella and Harvey
Phil Neville’s wife has told how the vile Twitter trolls targeting her family with a torrent of abuse has left her feeling terrified.
Julie Neville, her former England football star husband and even their disabled 11-year-old daughter have suffered a string of attacks as well as death threats from online cowards hiding behind anonymity.
And the 39-year-old told of one chilling tweet that warned she would be raped while Phil was away with his team Everton for an overnight trip.

Getty Phil Neville




Captain fantastic: Phil in action for Everton
Mum-of-two Julie said she was at home making the children’s tea when her phone beeped with a sick message from a troll who told her captain Phil had been seen getting on the squad bus and they would be round to her house at 8pm to “give it to her”.
She felt even more horrified when she called her husband to ask where he was and he replied: “On the team bus.”

It was the same troll who had been hounding her for weeks.

WireImage Phil Neville and Julie Neville launch the new Win Naturally range at Selfridges
Sick abuse: Phil and wife Julie were trolled
Julie said: “I was terrified. I felt like we were being watched. Before then I had just been deleting the tweets and trying to ignore them. I was relatively new to Twitter and didn’t realise you could block people.
“But I couldn’t ignore this. For weeks afterwards I was constantly looking in my rear view mirror to see if I was being followed.
“If I came home at night and it was dark I would be anxious and rush into the house. Nobody should have to live like that.
“What kind of a person randomly takes it upon ­themselves to send vile and abusive messages to someone they don’t even know and what makes them feel this is acceptable? Usually it’s because they know they can.”
Julie told how Phil, now a BBC football pundit, received his share of nasty tweets, too, mostly from rival fans – but also his own supporters.
She said: “At Everton he would get abuse off opposing fans if the club was doing well. Then, when he was on the management team at Manchester United and the season wasn’t going well, he would get abuse.
"People saying things like, ‘I wish you would die’.”

Getty
Online abuse: Criminal conduct on Twitter is on the rise
But while being bombarded with vicious tweets was bad enough for the couple, they were left devastated when the trolls started targeting daughter Isabella, who has cerebral palsy.
The pair were told by doctors the ­youngster would never walk, but she defied the odds and now gets around with splints.
Julie said: “We had someone tweet saying they were selling T-shirts captioned, ‘Phil Neville’s daughter is a spastic, a cyclops and has eight toes,’ asking us if we wanted to buy them.
“Death threats and rape threats are bad enough, but when people start abusing our daughter, that is ­something else.
“I was sat in bed watching TV when the tweets came through. I felt ­physically sick to the pit of my stomach and it kept me awake all night. I simply replied, ‘Shame on you’.
"But Philip retweeted it and they ended up receiving threats from other fans.
“It is beyond belief. The only mercy is that Isabella isn’t old enough to read Twitter. Ignorance and abuse like that could damage someone for life.
"Isabella is a bright, brave, beautiful little girl and we tell her that she can do anything that she wants to do. What right have these people to abuse her just because her dad is in the public eye?
“If she was to read the messages how would she feel? Luckily she is a strong person. I saw an actor from Breaking Bad talking on TV about his disability.
“He spoke so eloquently about how these bullies and outsiders don’t realise his disability is his greatest strength.
“People like Isabella overcome such adversity on a daily basis that mean words are the least of their worries. But to a child like Isabella, and us as her parents they still hurt.”

Daily Mirror Phil and Julie Neville pictured here with their children
Family matters: Couple with children when younger
Isabella’s brother Harvey was also a target for the twisted trolls.
The 12-year-old is a talented ­footballer with Manchester City’s academy – the club which were Phil’s bitterest rivals in his United days.
Harvey once posted a picture of him and his team-mates on Instagram and was met with a volley of abuse.
Julie said: “Grown men were sending him the most awful messages. Things like, ‘Your dad was a Man Utd legend so what the f*** are you doing in a Man City shirt?’. The bad language and abuse went on and on.
“Why shouldn’t Harvey be on ­Instagram just like all his friends? You want to protect your children, but also you want them to be able to do the same things as all their friends. I think it is such a shame.
“Twitter is a fantastic tool, you can learn so much, interact with so many people and it makes the world a smaller place. But the downside is that people have no social responsibility.
“They think they are faceless and nameless because they are hiding behind a keyboard. They are just cowards. These people would never come up to my face and say these things, so why do they feel it is acceptable to do it online?
"I might tweet ­something random like I am going to meet my mum for lunch, and then I will get people tweeting me back calling me a f****** ugly slag. How is that normal behaviour?”

PA Manchester United's Phil Neville arrives with his wife Julie
Glamorous: Julie and Phil
New laws brought in earlier this year mean internet trolls can face up to two years in jail.
It means a stiffer penalty for anyone convicted of sending abuse.
Previously, police had to rely on outdated laws including harassment legislation which sometimes led to cases eventually being dropped.
A campaign for specific laws on trolls followed the abuse Chloe Madeley faced after mum Judy said the rape carried out by footballer Ched Evans had been “non-violent”.
But Julie does not believe it goes far enough and is calling for even tougher restrictions and harsher sentences.
She said: “A jail term and monetary fines would be a good deterrent.
“But these need to be implemented. Yes, there may be a few high profile cases whereby trolls have been ­prosecuted. But these are the minority out of the hundreds of thousands of trolls abusing people on a daily basis with no comeback.
"I have never reported any trolls.

Got to stop: More must be done to prevent innocent people being abused
"I suppose because I have never felt that it would lead to anything, or that my case would not be treated seriously as if they were letters through the post or face to face abuse in the street.
“Philip is much stronger than I am. He can ignore the abuse and if there is a particularly bad patch he will just come off Twitter for a few days and let it die down. I can’t.
“I am not strong enough to read these horrific tweets without it affecting me and getting me down.
“The trolls need to take a long hard look at their behaviour and think about the effect it may have on those they are targeting. It isn’t just a bit of a laugh.
“It can have a serious effect on people’s lives.”