As always, when a emotive situation is reported, a lot of people get seriously upset, and post with their emotions at top level, which is absolutely understandable.
As I have pointed out many many times, the law has to act dispassionately. It has to work on facts, and evidence, and the judge and jury have to decide based on the evidence before them, and not their emotional reactions to what has happened.
So yes, this is justice, in the true sense of the word, because the legal process has been actioned, and ruled accordingly.
It's not emotional justice, or human nature justice, of course it's not, anyone would want to see these young men out of society for a very long time.
But that is not how our system works, and the same set of rules that allow the innocent to walk free have to have equal sway when it judges that these individuals are not guilty of murder.
We don't have to like the verdict, or the rules that make it what it is, but we do have to accept the verdict, because it's the law that governs us.