logo
5 bombshells from Jay Slater inquest from cause of death to chilling final text

5 bombshells from Jay Slater inquest from cause of death to chilling final text

An inquest exploring the circumstances of Jay Slater's shock death has revealed a host of new details about the tragic teen's disappearance and the recovery of his body from a ravine a month later.
Jay, 19, went missing after leaving an Airbnb in the village of Masca in Teno, Tenerife, in June 2024, prompting a massive manhunt that grabbed international headlines for more than a month. When his lifeless body was recovered from the bottom of the Juan Lopez ravine on July 15, authorities concluded he had died from massive trauma, including a serious brain injury.
The now-adjourned inquest at Preston Coroner's Court has clarified a host of facts, including shedding light on his cause of death and the Oswaldtwistle teen's final moments.
The court heard that Jay sent his last text message at 2.39am on the morning he disappeared, when he would have just returned from the NRG music festival. The message to a friend was received with concern, with his friend telling him to "come home" and that he was "off your barnet".
He wrote: "They've got a marker on me." And the friend replied: "You need to get home lad, you're off your barnet."
Lucy Law and Brad Hargreaves, two people who were with the trainee bricklayer in Tenerife and had featured prominently in coverage of Jay's disappearance, did not attend the inquest. Coroner Dr James Adeley said the two key witnesses had "denied who they are" ahead of the hearing yesterday, Mirror UK reports.
The coroner told the court they "cannot be located", saying: "We can't find them. They have denied who they are and we have had police looking for them but we can't find them."
It's since emerged that Lucy Law is currently on holiday in Tenerife and is unaware police have been trying to track her down.
Her stepfather Andy Davis said last night: "The police have only just been round today to say that she was due to give evidence. But it's the first time we knew of it... We had no idea Jay's inquest was even being held today."
Home Office pathologist Dr Richard Shepherd said Jay may have died "in an instant" after falling into the ravine, stating the fall would have had an "immediate and devastating effect on Jay's consciousness". He added that the teen had sustained "severe" injuries before concluding the official cause of death was a head injury, agreeing with an earlier consensus offered by Spanish pathologists.
He said: "The injuries were so severe I have not doubt he would have been instantly unconscious from the moment of that blow to the head. Death could well have been instant the injury was so severe. Jay would undoubtedly be unconscious and unaware. It's most likely death would have occurred instantly or extremely soon afterwards."
One witness, Josh Forshaw, told the inquest he had met Jay and his friends as they queued to board their plane from Manchester to Tenerife, and that the two had traded contact details. Josh said the group "seemed dead happy", adding Jay had later sent him a photo with "knives down his trousers".
He said the photo was captioned: 'In case it kicks off". While Josh didn't inform Spanish police of the photo, he said he informed Lancashire Police when he returned home to the UK.
Dr Shepherd told the inquest that he had considered whether Jay was restrained or assaulted before his death, and that this was "something I would always look to identify". He ultimately concluded that there was "nothing to suggest" the teen had been assaulted or restrained.
The pathologist said: "That's something I considered very carefully, something I would always look to identify. The pattern of the injuries when someone is assaulted or restrained are very different from the type of injuries and pattern I found with Jay."
When questioned whether there was anything "to suggest that was the case" the pathologist added: "Nothing to suggest an assault, gripping, holding, nothing of that sort."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jay Slater bombshell as AirBnB host says he told teen plan was 'mad'
Jay Slater bombshell as AirBnB host says he told teen plan was 'mad'

Irish Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Jay Slater bombshell as AirBnB host says he told teen plan was 'mad'

An investigator looking into the heartbreaking disappearance and death of British teen Jay Slater in Tenerife has uncovered the reason why the young lad ventured out on his own. Mark Williams-Thomas has been piecing together Jay's last movements following his time at the NRG music festival with mates at Papagayo nightclub in Playa de las Americas on 16 June last year. Jay headed to an AirBnB flat in the early hours, which was the final place he was spotted alive before his remains were discovered on 15 July by a mountain rescue squad from the Spanish Civil Guard close to the hamlet of Masca. Now, Mr Williams-Thomas disclosed that he conversed with Ayub Qassim, the AirBnB tenant, about his last dialogue with Jay on the morning he departed. Mr Qassim recounted: "He (Jay) said to me 'Pal I'm off, this woman told me I can get a bus every 10 minutes', I told him that he's mad, there's no bus that's coming here every 10 minutes, chill out for a bit and I'll drop you off later on. "He said, 'No, no I've got to go to Los Cristianos, I need to scram, I need to chip out'. There's nothing more that I could do," reports the Mirror. "I saw him walk off maybe down the steps. I maybe shut the door and said if you need me." The last sighting of Jay alive was chilling. Shortly before, the young lad from Lancashire had fired off a photo to a mate on Snapchat, showing off two knives at his AirBnB, with the haunting label: "I've got these for my protection." When quizzed about the snap, Mr Qassim insisted he was clueless about it. "I was asleep upstairs this is the first I've heard of knives," he stated. "I let him come to my house." Last month's inquest into Jay's death went ahead without Mr Qassim's presence. The probe was put on hold at the behest of the teenager's mum, Debbie. She demanded a halt until all crucial witnesses who might shed light on her lad's tragic demise are rounded up for testimony. In a heart-wrenching plea, she urged those who were with her son on the fateful holiday to step forward with the truth. She expressed: "We want these people to be sat in front of us, because our son went on holiday and didn't come back, so there's questions we need to ask." She underlined the necessity for the inquest to remain on pause until every key witness could be corralled to testify. This list involves Jay's pal Lucy Law, currently reported to be vacationing on the island, alongside Brandon Hodges and Bradley Hargreaves.

‘I got caught', cry tourists as new ‘they take your money' Spain scam sweeps busy town amid warning for Irish holidayers
‘I got caught', cry tourists as new ‘they take your money' Spain scam sweeps busy town amid warning for Irish holidayers

The Irish Sun

timea day ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘I got caught', cry tourists as new ‘they take your money' Spain scam sweeps busy town amid warning for Irish holidayers

IRISH holidaymakers travelling to Spain this summer have been warmed to be wary of a scam targeting tourists on the beachfront. Some tourists have already admitted they "got caught" by the bogus scheme. 2 A warning has been issued to Irish holidaymakers in Spain as a new 'scam' sweeps the popular resort town Credit: Getty Frank, known as Frank the Stag Man, has been living in Benidorm and hosting lively events for tourists for over a decade. He took to Frank has captured a number of people on the beachfront in Benidorm holding clipboards and approaching tourists following an invitation to fill out a "petition." Holidaymakers are asked to sign a petition and are pushed into making a donation. Read more in Travel Frank said: "As you've seen there, this is one of the His partner interjected, saying: "They'll say it's for the blind or the disabled and that they are petitioning to get something sorted here in Spain. "It's full of a load of rubbish and illegal to do this here in Spain." Frank added: "They're illegal, scamming, and they will take your money. Some people even get their wallets out and give them a few quid." MOST READ ON THE IRISH SUN Horror moment dirty water pipe EXPLODES near tourists' balconies on Costa Del Sol But multiple people visiting the beautiful spot have been caught out by the fraudsters. Taking to the comments section, one TikTok user said: "My husband fell for this in Old Town. "A guy claiming he was deaf, my husband being deaf, we didn't realise the scam till after." Someone else added: "I got caught in Old Town, he wanted €10 from me, when I said no he was so rude until my husband showed up." A third recalled: "I had this scam done to me and my partner luckily we had no cash on us." A fourth wrote: "I had the same guy do it at Placa del Castell last Wednesday. Told him no three times for him to go away. "Felt bad for the ones who stop and listen to him that don't know any better." ANOTHER 'BIG PROBLEM' Frank has also shared a separate video last week highlighting another "big problem" with holidaymakers having their phone stolen while visiting the Spanish spot. He said: "Generally, what happens is, someone comes up to you and they'll say to you, 'Oh, I'm with some friends, and I'm lost, and I don't know where I'm going. Can you do a Google Map search for me?' "What you do, because you're a nice person, is you whip your phone out, you get your Google Maps up, and as soon as you get your Google Maps up, they grab the phone and run off with it." Benidorm was the most searched destination from Ireland on Google last year, according to The Travel Expert. And Spain is the favourite holiday sport for Irish holidaymakers with around 2.5 million people heading there each year. 2 Benidorm was the most searched destination from Ireland on Google last year Credit: Getty Images - Getty

US anti-deportation protests continue and spread beyond 'test case' Los Angeles
US anti-deportation protests continue and spread beyond 'test case' Los Angeles

The Journal

timea day ago

  • The Journal

US anti-deportation protests continue and spread beyond 'test case' Los Angeles

PROTESTS AGAINST AGGRESSIVE immigration raids have continued in the United States after President Donald Trump ordered the deployment of National Guard troops and US marines in Los Angeles this week, against the wishes of the state's Democratic governor. More than 1,000 people massed yesterday in America's second-biggest city for a sixth day of demostrations, as peaceful protesters marched through the streets. A second night of curfew was in place as city leaders try to get a handle on the after-dark vandalism and looting that scarred a few city blocks in the city. 'I would say for the most part everything is hunky dory right here at Ground Zero,' protester Lynn Sturgis, 66, a retired school teacher, told the AFP news agency. 'Our city is not at all on fire, it's not burning down, as our terrible leader is trying to tell you.' The mostly peaceful protests are the result of a sudden escalation by the Trump administration to arrest and deport undocumented immigrants. Police kettle protesters under arrest on in LA Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Pockets of violence have included the burning of self-driving taxis and the hurling of stones at police. Arrests by masked and armed men, who have refused to identify themselves during raids, continued yesterday. A pastor in the LA suburb of Downey said five armed men driving out-of-state cars grabbed a Spanish-speaking man in the church's carpark. When she challenged the men and asked for their badge numbers and names, they refused. 'They did point their rifle at me and said, 'You need to get back,'' Lopez told broadcaster KTLA. 'The first, perhaps, of many' Police and National Guard members have fired rubber bullets at protesters, and reporters , while Los Angeles residents have been demanding the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) to get out of the city. The deployment of US military personnel on the streets of a major American city has been met with shock and concern by many. This week, Mayor Karen Bass said LA residents are living in fear and that the city had become the site of an 'experiment' conducted by the Trump administration. 'Our city is actually a test case for what happens when the federal government moves in and takes the authority away from the state or away from local government,' she said on Tuesday. LA police officers on Wednesday Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo 'By having the military, it de-escalates,' Trump said about the decision to send 700 marines to LA. Advertisement 'They're stopping an invasion,' he told graduates in an address at West Point military academy. 'This is the first, perhaps, of many,' Trump said yesterday of the National Guard and Marine deployments. 'Democracy is under assault' Trump won the election last year partly on promises to combat what he claims is an 'invasion' by undocumented migrants. 'We're going to have a safe country,' he told reporters on his way into a performance of 'Les Miserables' in Washington. 'We're not going to have what would have happened in Los Angeles. Remember, if I wasn't there… Los Angeles would have been burning to the ground.' Around 1,000 of the 4,700 troops Trump deployed are actively guarding facilities and working alongside ICE agents, said Scott Sherman, Deputy Commanding General Army North, who is leading operations. The Pentagon has said the deployment will last for 60 days and cost taxpayers $134 million. Governor Newsom, a Democrat widely viewed as eying a 2028 presidential run, has charged that Trump is seeking to escalate the confrontation for political gain. He warned on Tuesday that the unprecedented militarization would creep beyond his state's borders, claiming 'democracy is under assault right before our eyes.' Los Angeles Metro police ride on a vehicle during a protest on Wednesday Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Lawyers for California are expected in court today to seek an order blocking troops from accompanying immigration officers as they arrest migrants. Trump administration lawyers called the application a 'crass political stunt.' Not just LA Despite Trump's threats to deploy the National Guard to other Democratic-run states, protesters appear to be undeterred. In Spokane, Washington, a night curfew was declared after police arrested more than 30 protesters and fired pepper balls to disperse crowds, police chief Kevin Hall told a news conference. Demonstrations were reported in St Louis, Raleigh, Manhattan, Indianapolis and Denver. In San Antonio, hundreds marched and chanted near city hall, reports said, where Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott has deployed the state's National Guard. A nationwide 'No Kings' movement is expected on Saturday, when Trump will attend a highly unusual military parade in the US capital. The parade, featuring warplanes and tanks, has been organized to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the founding of the US Army but also happens to be the day of Trump's 79th birthday. With reporting from AFP Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store