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The model agency which discovered Kate Moss wants to sign up a Lily Cole lookalike whose 16th birthday bash was wrecked when it was invaded by 400 gatecrashers who saw the party advertised on Facebook.
Scouts from Storm model agency, which has the likes of Moss, Cole, Elle Macpherson, Eva Herzigova and Peaches Geldof on its books, have put in an approach to Georgina Hobday, just a week after her parent's 1million seafront home was trashed.
A spokesman for the agency said that she could be 'Lily Cole No2' and confirmed they were trying to get her to sign with them as a model.
She said: 'We are looking to get into touch with Georgina Hobday with the intention of putting her on our books.
'She is a very pretty girl and could well be the next Lily Cole.'
Georgina, a pupil at the 8,394-a-year Brighton and Hove High School, had organised the MTV-style My Super Sweet 16 party on November 29 for around 100 friends.
But within an hour of the party starting the house was 'invaded' by member of the so-called Facebook Republican Army.
During the fracas, in which four adult bouncers were brushed aside, 12 police cars turned up to see the house wrecked.
The boozed-up hooligans rampaged through rooms, smashed up furniture, burnt woodwork with cigarettes, turned the garden into a mudbath and smashed shed windows at the four-story townhouse in Brighton.
Georgina's parents Michael, a professor at the University of Sussex, and advertising executive Sylvia, had gone out for the night but returned to find 5,000 worth of damage after cops called them to inform them of the riot.
She raged at the time: 'It was an absolute horror show. When I left there was no alcohol in the house.
'I'll never have a party for my daughter here again.
'She had no idea who most of the people were and they were rampaging through the house.
'The garden has been ruined, the grass is just mud, people were walking through the pond and I heard one boy was trying to headbutt a mirror.
'My front garden was full and some people were climbing up the balcony and trying to get in through the windows.
'When I left there was no alcohol in the house but when I came back there were beer cans and vodka bottles everywhere.
'I think Facebook is a major cause as well as texting. I heard that a Bluetooth alert was going round saying "hot party close to the Seven Dials".
'My friends were calling me saying shall I send someone to help you.'
A Sussex Police spokesman said: 'There was a sea of people, the place was overrun and it was difficult to move which was a major safety problem that required a lot of police time and resources.
'We eventually got the unwanted guests out at around 11pm.'
source: dailymail.co.uk
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