
The five people who need to be held to account for jay slater's death
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By FRED KELLY Published: 07:07 EDT, 22 May 2025 | Updated: 07:07 EDT, 22 May 2025 It was a day that should have provided closure for a family still consumed by grief. But instead,
yesterday's inquest into the death of British teenager Jay Slater in Tenerife last year quickly descended into farce. For no sooner had Jay's family filed into Preston
Coroner's Court, than it emerged not a single one of the key witnesses to their son's final days was to be present. 'We can't find them, they have stopped responding to
phone calls,' revealed senior coroner Dr James Adeley of the five key witnesses: Jay's holiday companions Lucy Law, Brandon Hodgson and Bradley Geoghegan (also known as Bradley
Hargreaves); and the two men he stayed with the night before his disappearance, Ayub Qassim and Steven Roccas. On two separate occasions, Jay's mother, 55-year-old Debbie Duncan,
pleaded desperately with the coroner to bring the witnesses before the inquest. 'We want these people in front of us,' she begged, breaking down in tears: 'My son went on
holiday and didn't come back so there are questions we need to ask. Please.' The coroner duly announced shortly after 3.30pm that the inquest would be delayed so that further
attempts could be made to bring forward the absent five - stressing that multiple attempts to locate the witnesses had been made, albeit unsuccessfully, including via the police. Whereupon
farce became cruel pantomime as the family of Lucy Law announced that, so far from disappearing as had been claimed, she was once again on holiday on the very island where Jay had died - and
was unaware that they wanted her to give evidence. 'We had no idea Jay's inquest was even being held today,' said her stepfather Andy Davis, speaking at the family home in
Burnley. '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.' This inquest had taken months of
preparation. Yet for now at least - it is already over. And the questions millions of people have waited so long for remain unanswered. Having spent just shy of a month reporting on the case
from Tenerife last year - and feeling first-hand the pressure to find answers - I am shocked and appalled that the British inquest into Jay's death could have been quite so poorly
planned. In June last year, 19-year-old apprentice bricklayer Jay Slater, from Oswaldtwistle in Lancashire, travelled to Tenerife where he stayed in a resort hotel near the popular Playa de
Las Americas party strip with friends Lucy Law and Bradley Hargreaves. The trio had been attending the New Rave Generation music festival on the Spanish island when Slater - on the final
night of festivities - met Qassim and Roccas. For reasons that remain unclear, Slater got into the back of the pair's Seat Leon at 5am and travelled 25 miles from the Papagayo nightclub
to the Casa Abuela Tina Airbnb in the northern village of Masca, a sleepy spot nestled in the remote mountains. The following morning, Slater unfathomably attempted to make the 10-mile walk
back to his hotel while in a state of extreme dehydration and with drugs in his system. Having walked across that same unforgiving terrain on numerous occasions myself while trying to
reimagine Jay's journey, I can assure you it is hard enough to navigate when sober. At 8.30am, Slater made a call to Lucy Law in which he revealed his phone was on one per cent, he was
dehydrated and was lost. Sadly, Slater was never heard from again. He was declared missing at 9.04am the same morning. It would take Spanish police a month to find his body in the Juan Lopez
ravine - by that time it was barely recognisable as the young bricklayer from Lancashire. The cause of death was ruled to be head trauma consistent with a fall from a height. Despite the
premature closure of yesterday's inquest, there were a number of revelations made which help to piece together a somewhat better picture of Slater's final hours. Firstly, it was
confirmed that Slater's body contained traces of the drugs cocaine, ketamine and ecstasy. Secondly, Home Office pathologist Dr Richard Shepherd confirmed that there appeared to be no
signs of a struggle: 'Nothing to suggest an assault, gripping, holding, nothing of that sort,' he told the inquest, likely ruling out previous conspiracies of possible foul play.
'The injuries were so severe I have no doubt he would have been instantly unconscious from the moment of that blow to the head,' Dr Shepherd's assessment continued.
'Death could well have been instant, the injury was so severe.' Evidence was also provided by Joshua Forshaw, who had met Jay at the NRG music festival. Forshaw told the inquest
that Slater had been 'thrown out' of the rave at the Papagayo nightclub and had been trying to sell a luxury watch for £10,000. It is unclear, however, if these two things relate
in any way to Jay's death or his decision to travel up into the mountains. The truth is that for all these piecemeal revelations and rumours, no true closure will be possible until the
five people who were with Jay in the hours and days before his death answer the questions that so desperately need asking. It is thought that Lucy Law is currently in Tenerife, while Brad
Hargreaves revealed he is on a holiday he booked last October. The whereabouts of the other three witnesses remains a mystery. 'When drugs are involved in a death,' revealed
coroner Dr Adeley talking from professional experience, 'the witnesses are less than forthcoming and do not wish to speak to the authorities.' That may well be the case. But these
five absent witnesses would do well to remember that until they are brave enough to face the music, the Slater family will be left in cruel and agonising suspension. Jay Slater