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An inquest into the passing of Jay Slater, whose vanishing in Tenerife prompted an extensive search effort, has noted the absence of his friends who were to provide their statements.
Lucy Law, who last June received a call from the 19-year-old British tourist during which he mentioned being lost with only 1 percent battery left on his phone and in need of water, is one of the individuals that could not be found to testify, according to a coroner’s statement today.
At the commencement of the inquiry, Lancashire senior coroner Dr. James Adeley indicated that police attempts to reach Ms. Law and several other British friends of Mr. Slater had been unsuccessful.
‘We can’t find them, they have stopped responding to phone calls,’ he said while Mr Slater’s parents Debbie Duncan, 55, and father Warren Slater, 58, listened in silence.
Dr Adeley also told Preston Coroner’s Court: ‘When drugs are involved in a death, the witnesses are less than forthcoming and do not wish to speak to the authorities.’
The inquest also heard his severe skull and pelvis fractures were consistent with a fall from a height – and that traces of cocaine, ecstasy and ketamine were in his body. A friend also said that Mr Slater seemed to be ‘off his head on drugs’ the night before.
Mr Slater, from Oswaldtwistle in Lancashire, had attended the NRG Festival at Papagayo, in Playa de las Americas, Tenerife on June 16 last year.
But after becoming separated from his friends following the all-night rave he went back to an AirBnB holiday cottage in the remote village of Masca with the two Britons, convicted drug dealer Ayub Qassim, 31, and another man.
The apprentice bricklayer was last seen alive leaving the white-washed house at around 7.30am on June 17.

Jay Slater called his friend Lucy Law (pictured together) in June last year saying he was lost

Lucy Law (above) is among those who could not be traced to give evidence, a coroner revealed

Members of Jay Slater’s family including his mother Debbie Duncan (front right) arrive at Preston Coroner’s Court in Lancashire today for the inquest into the death of the 19-year-old

Jay Slater’s friend Brad Hargreaves, with whom he was on holiday in Tenerife

The Airbnb house in Masca, Tenerife, where Jay Slater was staying before his disappearance

He was apparently trying to walk the 10-hour journey back to the apartment where he was staying after missing a bus back.
An immediate focus of the investigation was a post Mr Slater uploaded on Snapchat of him having a cigarette, with the location tagged at the door of the apartment at 7.30am UK time.
Then two phone calls emerged.
Ms Law received a call at 8.30am where Mr Slater said he was lost, had 1 per cent charge on his phone and needed water.
In a video call to their other friend, Brad Hargreaves, Mr Slaterwas walking on rough, stony ground, saying he was making the long walk back.
His mother and father joined family and friends to comb the island for sightings.
As the mystery surrounding the teen’s disappearance grew, ‘vile’ and ‘distressing’ conspiracy theories began to emerge that dogged efforts to find Mr Slater.
Among the vicious rumours circulating included wild claims Mr Slater had been targeted by a criminal cartel on the island for allegedly stealing a watch from a gang member – something his family vehemently denied happened.
Tragically Mr Slater’s body was found a month later in a mountainous area of the island.
He is believed to have lost his footing and fallen while desperately trying to climb through the ravine to try and return to his hotel.
A post-mortem found that he died of traumatic head injuries, consistent with a fall from height. His death would have been instantaneous.
A forensic pathologist who examined Mr Slater’s body after its repatriation to the UK said at today’s inquest that injuries including severe skull and pelvis fractures were consistent from a fall from a height.
He found no sign of injuries associated with Mr Slater being assaulted prior to his death – but said his post mortem examination could not rule out the possibility that Jay had been pushed.
Dr Richard Shepherd said the injuries seen in assault victims were ‘very different from the type of injuries I saw with Jay’.
The pathologist said decomposition of Mr Slater’s body during the 28 days it lay at the bottom of the ravine in the hot Tenerife climate meant he could not ‘exclude’ the possibility of a push ‘because a push would not leave a mark’.
‘But with that proviso there was nothing to indicate an assault or gripping of any sort,’ he added.
Dr Shepherd said the injuries caused by the fall would have caused ‘instantaneous’ loss of consciousness and Mr Slater would have died soon afterwards.
‘Jay would undoubtedly have been unconscious and unaware,’ he added.
Even with immediate specialist treatment in a neurosurgical unit, Dr Shepherd said he would be ‘extremely surprised’ if Mr Slater could have survived his ‘severe’ injuries.
The inquest also heard traces of cocaine, ecstasy and ketamine were found in Mr Slater’s body.
Toxicologist Dr Stephanie Martin said the length of time before Mr Slater’s body was discovered meant it was impossible to carry out tests on blood or urine.
But examination of a liver sample found metabolites of MDMA and of another recreational drug MDA, as well as of cocaine.
Spanish scientists additionally tested hair and muscle samples, finding a metabolite of ketamine, she added.
However due to the length of time between Mr Slater’s death and the samples being taken she was unable to say if she had been under the influence of drugs when he fell to his death, she said.
But he would have taken the ketamine within the previous 12 hours, she added.
The hearing was also told by one friend of Mr Slater who did give evidence about a message in which the teenager mentioned being ‘thrown out’ of the rave and trying to sell an expensive watch for £10,000.
Joshua Forshaw – who gave evidence by videolink – said he met Mr Slater and his friends for the first time when they flew out for the NRG festival and swapped Snapchat details.
He told the Spanish authorities that when he saw Mr Slater on June 16 – the night before his death – he seemed to be ‘off his head on drugs’.
Asked how he seemed by Dr Adeley, Mr Forshaw said: ‘He was quite excitable. He seemed to be in a happy mood, joyful, excited to be there.’

Apprentice bricklayer Jay Slater, 19, pictured with his mother Debbie Duncan (file picture)

Jay Slater’s father Warren Slater (right) and brother Zak (left) at Preston Coroner’s Court today
He assumed Mr Slater had taken ecstasy because his friend Mr Hargreaves had asked Mr Forshaw to split a tablet with him, he said.
Later that night Mr Forshaw received a Snapchat message from Mr Slater saying he had ‘ended up getting thrown out’ with two other people and planned to sell a watch for ‘ten quid’.
Mr Forshaw said that meant £10,000 but said he never saw the watch and had no involvement in attempts to sell it.
Snapchat messages normally delete automatically, but Mr Forshaw said he saved that one and later handed it to police.
However the court was told police later accidentally deleted the image, the court heard.
As well as Mr Forshaw, witness summons were served by police on Ms Law plus Jay’s friends Mr Hargreaves and Brandon Hodgson.
They also summonsed Mr Qassim, who was renting the AirBnB he went back to, and a fellow Briton, the coroner heard.
But in most cases they were either unknown at the addresses held by police or there was no answer, the coroner was told.

Mr Slater went to an AirBnB cottage with drug dealer Ayub Qassim (pictured) and another man

A police officer overlooks Masca in Tenerife during the search for Jay Slater on June 21, 2024
Attempts to contact them via mobile phone numbers and email addresses which they gave the Spanish authorities were also unsuccessful.
Mr Hodgson did reply to say he would be away on holiday when the inquest was heard today, having booked the trip last October.
Ms Law is currently in Tenerife, the coroner was told.
‘We’ve been looking for them for months and we cannot find them,’ Dr Adeley said. ‘We really tried, we just can’t find them.’
Asking about Mr Qassim and the fellow Briton whose AirBnb the teenager went back to, Mr Slater’s father Warren told the coroner: ‘The two people who can put some light on whatever happened to Jay aren’t in court today.’
Dr Adeley said he understood his concerns.
But he said evidence from Spanish witnesses given to the Tenerife authorities due to be spelt out to the hearing would corroborate the account Mr Qassim gave at the time.

Jay Slater’s brother Zak Slater arrives at Preston Coroner’s Court in Lancashire this morning

Jay Slater attended the NRG music festival with two friends before his disappearance
In August, hundreds gathered in Accrington to bid a final farewell at his funeral, as his coffin was laid to rest amid an encore of drum-and-bass music.
During their eulogies, friends recalled Mr Slaters ‘buzzing and smiling’ demeanour and told their late schoolmate to ‘keep partying hard up there’.
His parents led the procession of mourners through the drizzle on August 10 to the service at the packed Accrington Crematorium Chapel, while many more watched on an outdoor screen.
On November 21, a GoFundMe page titled Get Jay Slater Home was closed after it had received £72,821 worth of donations.
In a final post on the page, Mr Slater’s family said they had been able to give a ‘truly deserved… send-off’ at his funeral.
They also explained how the donations were spent, which included hiring a search team from the Dutch non-profit organisation Signi Zoekhonden and paying for their stay in Tenerife while they searched for the teenager’s body.

Jay Slater’s mother Debbie Duncan arrives at Preston Coroner’s Court in Lancashire today

The coffin of Jay Slater ahead of his funeral in Accrington, Lancashire, on August 10, 2024, where mourners wore the colour blue in his memory
The same coroner also presided over the inquest into the death of mother-of-two Nicola Bulley, who went missing while walking her dog after dropping her children off at school in in St Michael’s-on-Wyre, Lancashire, in January 2023.
Her disappearance also provoked a storm of attention on social media with TikTok sleuths sharing outlandish theories.
The 45-year-old’s body was found in the River Wyre three weeks later after a huge search effort which sparked global headlines.
Dr James Adeley, senior coroner for Lancashire, later ruled that Ms Bulley’s death was accidental and that she did not have ‘any desire’ to take her own life.
That hearing took place amid tight security at County Hall in Preston, with members of the public who attended subjected to searches and warned against disrupting proceedings.
By contrast, Mr Slater’s inquest is being held at Preston Coroner’s Court.