The court heard a post-mortem examination found injuries consistent with hanging, while no alcohol or illicit drugs were found in his system.
A further Section 60 order, which gives police enhanced powers to stop and search and is designed to minimise violence, was put in place on Thursday evening.This follows the original Section 60 order brought in for 24 hours from 17:00 BST on Wednesday evening.
The latest order came into effect at 18:00 BST and will also last for 24 hours, with extra officers in the area, Merseyside Police said.Judge Menary said: "Continuing to prevent full reporting at this stage has a disadvantage of allowing others up to mischief to continue to spread misinformation in a vacuum."He acknowledged his decision was "exceptional" but said "the balance clearly comes down in favour of the public interest in allowing full reporting of these proceedings".
Arguing against naming the defendant, the prosecution said he had an "autism spectrum disorder diagnosis" and had been "unwilling to leave the house and communicate with family for a period of time".He attended an appearance at a youth court at about 09:00 BST, arriving in a prison van with a large police escort.
In front of a packed press gallery, he glanced at reporters before he was asked to sit down before District Judge James Hatton.
Wearing a grey police-issued tracksuit, the defendant pulled his sweatshirt above his nose and lowered his head during the five-minute hearing, in which he did not speak.This year she has been racking up the wins and is rarely out of the top two in her class.
Nellie said she loves winning because she gets "medals and trophies".It can be a tough watch for her dad as she reaches speeds of up to 55mph out on the track.
"My heart rate goes through the roof, it's knocking years off my life," said Chris."All sport holds some danger and she has had spills, but it doesn't put her off. She loves it."