logo
Dark side of Boardmasters as it's dubbed an ‘underage carnival of horrors' amid drugs, sexual assaults & tragic death

Dark side of Boardmasters as it's dubbed an ‘underage carnival of horrors' amid drugs, sexual assaults & tragic death

Scottish Suna day ago
Festivalgoer George Zographou sent a heartbreaking text in his final moments, warning that he might not survive
FESTIVAL CHAOS Dark side of Boardmasters as it's dubbed an 'underage carnival of horrors' amid drugs, sexual assaults & tragic death
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
STUDENT George Zographou set off for the Boardmasters festival for a weekend of fun after completing his A-Levels.
The 18-year-old from Bristol drove to Newquay, Cornwall, with two female friends back in 2017 - but never made it home after falling ill and dying six days later when his parents had to make the heartbreaking call to turn off his life support machine.
13
The Boardmasters beach festival is held every year in Cornwall and attracts thousands of partygoers
Credit: Alamy
13
George Zographou, 18, died after attending Boardmasters festival and falling ill
Credit: Supplied by George Zographo and family
13
Multiple people were reportedly injured during a crowd crush last year
George collapsed in a medical tent at the festival, suffering from Meningitis B (MenB), a deadly bacterial infection. In a statement issued later, the organiser said a test had not indicated the condition.
Instead, George, who could barely walk when he went to find help at the site's medical facility, was diagnosed with a fractured ankle and dehydration.
Despite deteriorating throughout the day and becoming agitated and confused, an ambulance was only called after he had a cardiac arrest. He was revived, but by then, doctors confirmed he was brain-dead.
The last text he sent read: 'I think I'm dying.'
George's mum, Elaine, believes that organisers should have done more to save her son and says that they have a higher responsibility to their audience than other festival hosts because of the age of ticket holders.
George was a sensible boy. He didn't do drugs or anything like that. He was leaving for the festival early, so the night before he left, I helped him pack his bags and gave him a kiss good night and told him I loved him.
Elaine Zographou
Boardmasters attracts a young post-GCSE and A-level crowd, teenagers looking to celebrate the end of their exams during the summer months before heading to university.
Elaine says: "I know things happen at all festivals, but at Boardmasters they are young teenagers, they're probably first timers, they're naïve. They need a little bit more security, help and backing."
This August, Boardmasters will welcome up to 65,000 fun-seekers for five days of music and partying, drawn in by headliners Raye, Central Cee and The Prodigy.
The crowd capacity has increased since 2023, when it was 53,000 visitors. 2024 saw 58,000 festival-goers attend.
Last year, safety measures at the festival were called into question after seven attendees were taken to hospital following a crowd crush ahead of a DJ set by teenage favourite Sammy Virji.
'It was carnage!' slams mum over Boardmasters crowd surge that hospitalised 7 & saw 100s of kids in tears
Eyewitnesses described horrific scenes. One woman who attended with her daughters described the 'carnage' in a social media post.
She wrote: 'There were kids holding their legs, there were kids being carried.' Another described seeing someone with what appeared to be bone 'coming out of his leg'.
A teenager who gave his name as Tristan told the BBC: "There was definitely not enough security to handle the surge.
'I saw the first broken leg ten minutes before the music was due to start. Friends of the injured boy were trying to get him to safety, but none of us could move. I could see his leg, bent horribly and covered in blood,' he said.
Jade Brooks, 23, sustained a broken knee. She recalls: "I had about 10 people fall onto my legs. I was screaming 'My legs' when I heard the crunch as someone landed on it."
Following the incident, organisers posted on X: 'No serious injuries have been reported and our pit and medical teams responded immediately to assist those involved.'
'Totally out of control'
But across social media, the festival has come under fire from concerned parents.
One parent on Reddit branded the event 'an underage carnival of horrors' and blasted: 'This festival was TOTALLY out of control.'
In previous years, there have been reports of sexual assaults, rapes, and dangerous drugs.
Several parents say their children saw drugs being consumed on the site, and dealers targeting youngsters. Last year, Levi Bethune-Jones, 37, and Luke Belcher, 36, were pulled over on the A30 near Bodmin on their way to the festival.
In their van, they were carrying 411 2CB tablets, 225 MDMA tablets, 174 grams of ketamine, 70 grams of cannabis resin, 31 grams of herbal cannabis, 137 grams of magic mushrooms, and two boxes of nitrous oxide canisters. Police believe they intended to sell the drugs at the festival.
Bethune-Jones, from Birmingham, was found guilty of five counts of possession with intent to supply drugs at a trial at Truro Crown Court in April 2025 and was jailed for three years and eight months. Belcher, also from Birmingham, pleaded guilty to five counts of possession with intent to supply drugs and was jailed for three years.
Rob Spring, Festival Director of Boardmasters, said afterwards: 'Boardmasters operates a zero-tolerance policy on illegal drugs and substances in line with UK law.'
In 2022, warning posters were put up around the festival site after two strains of potentially dangerous drugs were found on festival grounds.
13
Jade Brooks fractured her knee when 'ten people fell on her' during a performance
Credit: PA
13
The festival attracts a young crowd - mostly teens looking to celebrate the end of the exam season
Credit: Alamy
13
Levi Bethune-Jones and Luke Belcher were pulled over on route to the event and found to be carrying huge amounts of drugs
Credit: Devon/Cornwall Police
13
Several festival goers have reported serious sexual assaults at the event (stock image of revellers)
Credit: Alamy
Attendees have also reported serious sexual assaults at the event, with police issuing an e-fit of a man wanted in relation to a suspected sex crime only last year.
In 2022, a 17-year-old girl was raped by two men in a tent at the festival, and in previous years, a 16-year-old girl from Somerset was attacked, and a 17-year-old boy was later arrested on suspicion of rape.
A teenage girl, 17, was also subjected to a "deeply upsetting and shocking" sexual attack on a train on her way home from the festival. She was assaulted twice, by two different men.
The risks are not confined to on-site activity. In one Reddit post, a mother asks for advice on whether the festival is safe for her teenage daughter.
One reply from someone claiming to be a festival worker tells her: 'What's actually dangerous about Boardmasters is the off-site part of the festival. You have all the water-related dangers to consider, like jumping into shallow water, swimming drunk, weak swimmers etc.'
The 'worker' explains that Boardmasters is 'as safe as any other festival' and says 'there is plenty of security around 24/7' but admits 'there will be drinking, there will be sex and there will be tears' but that there will also 'be fun'.
'It was too late'
The words ring hollow for the family of George Zographou.
He had a promising life ahead of him. He was due to get his A-level results the day after the festival ended and had a place lined up at Aston University, where he planned to study international development and international business.
Elaine, 71, continues: 'George was a sensible boy. He didn't do drugs or anything like that. He was leaving for the festival early, so the night before he left, I helped him pack his bags and gave him a kiss good night and told him I loved him.'
When George first fell ill at the event, he was in contact with his parents via his mobile phone. Elaine learned that his heartbeat was three times higher than normal.
The ambulance was called. The paramedics revived him and took him to the hospital, but it was too late.
Elaine Zographou
She says: 'We decided to go and pick him up, and I spoke to the senior doctor who said, 'Don't worry, he'll be under my care. He will be with me the whole time until you come and pick him up.'
But George was moved to a recovery tent, and Elaine struggled to get more information about his condition. George's dad, Andrew, left for Cornwall around 4pm in the afternoon.
Elaine continued to call her son to find out what was happening, but he stopped answering his phone. At one point, a security guard answered it and said George had become agitated and confused.
Elaine recalls: 'They asked us to hurry up and pick him up because he was violent. I was absolutely shocked. That was not like George at all.'
13
George with his mum, dad and sister
Credit: Supplied by George Zographo and family
13
Elaine with George
Credit: Supplied by George Zographo and family
13
65,000 people are said to be heading to the festival this year
Credit: Alamy
13
Girls pulled out from the crowd by security at Boardmasters in previous years
Credit: Alamy
Later, someone answered George's phone and told Elaine he was asleep. At some point, George had complained about discomfort and was placed on the floor. Soon after, he suffered a heart attack.
'That's when the ambulance was called. The paramedics revived him and took him to the hospital, but it was too late,' says a tearful Elaine.
Andrew was halfway to Cornwall when someone from the Royal Truro Hospital rang him on George's phone.
He says: "He asked if I was driving and suggested I pull over. He said: 'Your son has been brought in and he is very poorly indeed'. It was a complete shock."
When he arrived at the hospital, he was told that his son was on life support. He called his wife.
Elaine says, fighting back tears: "When Andy called and told me, I was sorting George's bedroom out and putting new sheets on the bed for when he came back."
Over the following days, tests showed George was brain dead and that there was no hope. As he lay wired to machines that kept him breathing, hundreds of his friends from all over the country came to say their final goodbyes.
The paramedics revived him and took him to hospital, but it was too late.
George's mum, Elaine
Six days after George left to go to the festival, his life support system was switched off. Elaine, Andrew and his sister Nicole, 37, who rushed back from a holiday in Ibiza when she got the news, were at his side.
By then, MenB had been diagnosed. Two people from George's college had contracted the infection 18 months previously. One had died. And earlier in 2024, another student, one of George's friends, had also contracted it.
Private vaccinations are available at around £300 and after George died, the whole of his year group was vaccinated, along with his family, who now campaign to raise awareness of meningitis and particularly MenB and have raised thousands of pounds for Meningitis charities in George's memory.
Nicole now works as a health protection practitioner at the UK Health Security Agency. She believes Boardmasters should have a low threshold for sending young people to hospital, especially if no drugs and alcohol are involved, as in George's case.
She says: "It's also important for festivals to promote vaccine awareness ahead of mass gatherings.
In July 2018, the Cornwall Coroner, Dr Emma Carlyon, ruled George had died of natural causes and refused to order an inquest.
Festival promoters Vision Nine said they pride themselves on hiring a 'first-class medical team'.
They said George was never left unmonitored and claimed he had not wanted to go to hospital. They added that the mottled rash on his left foot was a 'single small red mark' and that blood tests for meningitis came back negative.
In a statement, the organisers said he had received a 'thorough examination' and he did not show any signs of sepsis or meningitis. 'Boardmasters has been staged in Cornwall for over 10 years, with over 250,000 music fans enjoying five days of entertainment in a safe and secure environment,' a spokesman for Boardmasters said.
After last year's event, police reported that 11 people had been arrested on suspicion of drug offences, sexual offences and assault.
As thousands gather for a weekend of partying this weekend, George's family will be gathering to remember their son and to mark another year since his death.
The Sun has reached out to the organisers of Boardmasters Festival.
13
Six days after George left to go to the festival, his life support system was switched off
Credit: Supplied by George Zographo and family
13
A coroner ruled he died of natural causes
Credit: Facebook
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Face to face with Victorian prisoners at Lincoln Castle
Face to face with Victorian prisoners at Lincoln Castle

BBC News

time4 hours ago

  • BBC News

Face to face with Victorian prisoners at Lincoln Castle

Striking photos are bringing museum visitors face to face with Victorian prison images have gone on display at Lincoln Castle for the first time and offer an insight into crime and punishment during the were found in a document recording the lives and misdeeds of people who were held at the castle's Victorian them were two Norwegian sailors, George Dahl, 24, and Harry Olsen, 22, who were sentenced to three months' hard labour for burgling a house in Barrow upon Humber in June 1876. The Register of Habitual Criminals was used by police to keep track of the previous convictions of people who the prisoners was John Holmes, aged 14, who was accused of stealing two pigeons and jailed for 21 man, James Pringle, 21, from Grimsby, was given a month for stealing six tins of condensed photos will be on display in the Magna Carta vault at the castle until February. Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here. Download the BBC News app from the App Store for iPhone and iPad or Google Play for Android devices

Scots paedo caught uploading sneaky sex pictures of colleagues to social media spared jail
Scots paedo caught uploading sneaky sex pictures of colleagues to social media spared jail

Scottish Sun

time11 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Scots paedo caught uploading sneaky sex pictures of colleagues to social media spared jail

The sheriff's comments to McDougall were scathing Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A PAEDOPHILE who uploaded sexually suggestive pictures of female colleagues in the workplace and tried to distance himself from his crimes has been spared jail. Neil McDougall, 58, sneakily snapped 35 images on a company mobile phone between January 2021 and March 2024. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 McDougall appeared at Glasgow Sheriff Court Credit: Alamy The dad-of-one posted the pictures on Twitter with sexualised captions and hashtags. The quantity surveyor was sacked from a Glasgow based construction consultant firm after an ex-colleague found the social media page and recognised the victims. Shamed McDougall was later caught with a further 147 indecent images of children as young as one on his mobile phone. McDougall pleaded guilty in May at Glasgow Sheriff Court to behaving in a threatening or abusive manner. He also admitted possession of indecent photographs of children. Sheriff Iain Fleming ordered McDougall to do 300 hours of unpaid work at today's sentencing. McDougall was also put under supervision and the sex offenders register for two years. The sheriff said: "I am not going to send you to custody. "You let yourself and your family down in a significant and prolonged way. "Look at yourself in the mirror - it doesn't get worse than this. "The fact your family stands by you is not only a tribute to them but it's time you owned this behaviour and deal with it. "It is sad to see a man of your age and background in the courts facing charges like this. "What is a greater damage is the harm you imposed on your victims. "You tried to distance yourself from the behaviour during this process - it's time to face up and accept it." The court heard that McDougall's former colleague Greg McCallum noticed an account on social media chatting app Telegram. The account - which used McDougall's phone number - had a username which linked to a Twitter page on it. Mr McCallum found that the Twitter page included sexualised images of two of his ex-colleagues. Prosecutor Josh Dowie said: "It was clear that the pictures were taken without the knowledge or consent in the workplace." A number of examples of the images were read to the court. One image of an employee had the caption 'Really love the autumn, boots are being worn around the office' with a devil and a kiss emoji alongside it. Another picture had the caption 'Hot or not?' with a devil and a love heart emoji. Mr Dowie said: "The images were pornographic in nature." It was found that one of the images had been viewed 400,000 while others were in the tens of thousands. Comments from unknown users were also noted below the posts. The hearing was further told that McDougall had uploaded a video of himself in the office bathroom performing a sex act with a pair of high heels. These were later confirmed to belong to one of his colleagues who kept them under her desk. The matter was reported to the police and McDougall's phone was seized. A total of 33 still images and 10 videos were found - 35 of which were of women in the office without their knowledge. Three of the images were of McDougall performing a sex act. McDougall was also discovered with 147 still and moving sexual images of children aged between one and 14-years-old. The matter was reported to the police and a partner at the firm and McDougall was spoken to. He stated to the partner that he "had a problem." John Kilcoyne, defending, told the sentencing that his client is not working after he lost his job due to the incident. The lawyer added: "He accepts the position regarding indecent images and he is disgusted with himself - he is shown insight into his offending. "He can't understand why he has done this - he accepts he has a problem and wants to deal with that. "His brother is a former police officer and is in court with him, he has a daughter who is aware of it as does his mother."

Boardmasters drug warning as thousands set to descend on festival
Boardmasters drug warning as thousands set to descend on festival

BBC News

time16 hours ago

  • BBC News

Boardmasters drug warning as thousands set to descend on festival

Sniffer dogs and increased police patrols will be deployed on roads as up to 58,000 people descend on the area for a five-day and Boardmasters organisers are cracking down on illegal drugs, enforcing a zero-tolerance policy across the surf and music festival in detection dogs will be working at all gates at the festival, which runs from Wednesday until Sunday, and searches are a condition of entry, Devon and Cornwall Police found with illegal substances or banned items will be refused entry and could face being arrested. Supt Ben Asprey, who is in charge of the festival's police operations, said: "Drug suppliers don't sell drugs for fun or as a public service, they sell entirely for profit and have no concern about the harmful effects the substances they sell could have on people who buy them."He added that there is a chain of criminality including exploitation, coercion and violence behind the illegal drugs trade. Organisers have worked with police, the ambulance and fire service and other bodies to improve safety after seven people were hurt in a crowd surge last will present throughout the festival, as well as extra patrols in Newquay and on the Asprey advised festival-goers: "If you're attending the event, please be safe, look out for each other and stay hydrated."Police reminded revellers to report anything which does not feel right to a steward, security staff, police or at the festival's 24-hour welfare tents at the main arena and campsites. Headliners Festival headliners include 90s electronic pioneers The Prodigy, pop songstress Raye, and rapper Central taking to the stage across the weekend are indie band Kaiser Chiefs, chart-topping singer Natasha Bedingfield, and hip-hop duo Rizzle and car parks are due to open at 10:00 BST and will close at 12:00 on festival is spread over two locations with the main arena and campsites at Watergate Bay, whilst Fistral Beach hosts the Boardmasters Open, surf competition and shopping village.A one-way traffic system and soft road closures have also been introduced to reduce the impact during peak arrival and departure times.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store