Skip to content

Search teams find body, Tenerife police say

By Marc Waddington & Rachael LazaroBBC News

Family handout Jay Slater poses with his arm around his mother Debbie Duncan's shoulder. Both are smiling for the camera.Family handout

Police say the body of a young man has been found in the area where Jay Slater went missing

Search teams looking for missing British teenager Jay Slater in Tenerife have found a body, police say.

The Guardia Civil said its officers and a mountain rescue unit found the body of a young man in the Masca area “after 29 days of non-stop searching”.

Mr Slater, 19, was last seen on 17 June, after visiting an Airbnb rented by two people he had been with at a music festival on the island.

A police statement said that “initial evidence” suggested the person found had “suffered an accident or fall in the inaccessible zone”.

While not naming Oswaldtwistle apprentice bricklayer Mr Slater directly, the statement said that “all the evidence” suggests the remains found were those of “the young British man who disappeared”.

Map of Tenerife denotes where the body was found in the Masca area

Full identification of the body is yet to be carried out, it added.

The Guardia Civil has not said when the body was found, or exactly where it was discovered.

But the charity LBT Global, which works with families of people missing oversees, said that the remains were found along with Mr Slater’s clothes and possessions, close to his mobile phone’s last known location.

The group said it was supporting Mr Slater’s family.

Mr Slater’s father Warren Slater described his disappearance as “a living hell”, while his mother Debbie Duncan told of her “pain and agony” as no trace could be found.

Lancashire Police, which had previously had its offer to help with the search turned down by the Tenerife police, said in a statement that it “had today been notified by the Guardia Civil that they have found the body of a man and that the indications are that this is Jay Slater”.

The statement added: “While at this stage no formal identification has been carried out our thoughts are very much with Jay’s family at this time, and we continue to offer them our support.”

The search for Mr Slater since his disappearance has involved his family, friends, police and specialist mountain rescue teams as well as volunteers from several countries.

But on 30 June, the Guardia Civil said it was calling off its search.

His family continued to look for him, most recently with the help of a group of Dutch mountain rescuers.

Reuters Guardia Civil agent Cipriano Martin, wearing a green jacket, speaks with search volunteers wearing high-visibility red t-shirts and fleeces, before beginning the search for missing Jay Slater in the Masca ravine on June 29, the day before the police search was called off.Reuters

A search involving expert volunteers took place near Masca on 29 June, a day before the police operation was scaled back

Handout Jay Slater the evening before he went missing wearing a grey T-shirt with a green stripe. He smiles into the camera in a selfie.Handout

Jay Slater pictured the night before he went missing

The Guardia Civil indicated in its statement that it was members of its Mountain Rescue and Intervention Group who located the “lifeless body” of a young man.

Throughout the month since Mr Slater went missing, his family have refused to give up hope.

On Saturday, a statement of an official fundraising page, which has raised more than £50,000 towards search efforts, described him as a “normal, hardworking young lad from Lancashire who is very loved by all who know him”.

“Although we don’t have any answers to his disappearance we obviously have to remain positive,” his friend Lucy Mae Law posted on behalf of his family.

Reuters A view of a large cliff face looking down on to a winding road below in the Masca area of northern Tenerife. The land is dotted with cacti and the terrain is rough and hilly. Reuters

The Guardia Civil said it appeared the person whose body was found had died in a fall

Search teams have had to contend with difficult terrain throughout their search for Mr Slater.

Tenerife is a volcanic island in the Atlantic ocean archipelago of the Canary Islands, and the area in which Mr Slater was last seen is full of steep cliffs and gorges.

The land is arid and dotted with cacti.

In his last phone call to his friend Ms Law shortly before his phone battery died, Mr Slater is said to have told her that he was bleeding and needed water.

Another friend of Mr Slater, Brad Hargreaves, later said in a television interview that Mr Slater had video called him just before the call to Ms Law, and had indicated he had slipped off the road he was walking.

Within days of Mr Slater’s disappearance, social media was awash with theories about what had happened to him, including suggestions of foul play.

The Guardia Civil has never suggested they believed any harm had come to Mr Slater by any other person or people.

But that did not do anything to quell the rampant speculation.

His family and friends said they had found themselves the victims of online trolls.

‘Worst nightmare’

Rachel Hargreaves, the mother of Mr Slater’s friend Bradley Hargreaves, told the BBC she had received a friend request from a fake account using her late mother’s photo as its profile picture.

She said “things don’t normally get to me”, but that had affected her.

“We’re living the worst nightmare you can live and this does not help,” she said.

Mr Slater’s mother also made reference to the upset caused by the online frenzy around the case.

“There is a lot of negativity unfortunately and this is adding to the heartbreak of the unknown”, she said in an update on the GoFundMe page, set up to help pay for the search.