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Jay Slater GoFundMe fundraiser hits £70k after teen’s grieving mum pleaded for more cash to bring son’s body to the UK

JAY SLATER’S GoFundMe page has hit an incredible £70,000 as his grieving mum pleaded for more cash to fly her boy back to the UK.

It comes just two days after the fundraiser hit £60,000 in an outpouring of support after Jay’s body was found on Monday.

a young man wearing a straw hat and a t-shirt with the word atomic on it
Jay Slater’s body was discovered in a ravine in the Masca area of Tenerife on Monday
Ian Whittaker
The teen’s family recently slammed trolls who disbelieved they needed ‘so much cash’ through the fundraiser[/caption]
Ian Whittaker
Devastated Debbie asked people to keep donating so she can give her boy ‘the send-off he deserves’[/caption]
GoFundMe
The fundraiser has raked in over £70,000[/caption]

The family’s fundraiser for the repatriation of his body home has now received more than 5,600 donations.

The page has now raised just over £70,000 – an additional £40,000 to the initial benchmark of £30,000.

Jay’s family has yet to comment on the new figure.

But on Thursday, mum Debbie Duncan, 55, posted to the GoFundMe page to thank well-wishers.

She said she was “overwhelmed” by grief and thankful for the support the family has received from the public.

Debbie also asked people to continue donating so she can give her son “the send-off he deserves”.

Online trolls have previously slammed the grieving relatives, disbelieving that they need all that cash and more.

But the family spokesperson LBT Global hit back at them, saying Jay’s family were seeing “vast amounts of hateful content online”.

Boss Matt Searle said: “This hate comes from people who, I assume, have never had to repatriate a deceased loved one.

“Those costs can top £20k easily.

“These people probably haven’t had to arrange their own child’s funeral, nor felt the need to make it the biggest and best they can as it’s the last thing they’ll ever do for their child.”

On Wednesday, heartbroken mum Debbie, dad Warren and brother Zak left touching floral tributes and handwritten notes in the mountainous region of Masca where the teen fell to his death.

The next day, the family was seen in public for the first time as they paid an emotional visit to a church in Santiago del Teide, close to where the teen tragically died.

an advertisement for deadly ravine shows where jay slater 's body was found near where his phone last pinged
Ian Whittaker
Mum Debbie and Dad Warren visited a church in Santiago del Teide on Thursday[/caption]
a man with a backpack stands on a rocky hillside
Solarpix
Jay Slater’s body was found in a ravine that locals say is so dangerous they refuse to walk past[/caption]

They also deployed a private search team to figure out the exact location the body was found.

Jay’s body was tragically found on Monday at the bottom of a treacherous ravine in Masca – four weeks after he disappeared while on holiday with his pals for the NRG music festival.

The apprentice bricklayer, 19, had travelled to a remote Airbnb in Masca with two men in the early hours of June 17.

He had been partying all night in Playa de las Americas, close to an hour’s drive away.


It comes as…


In the morning, he attempted the 11 hour walk back to his own accommodation miles away.

Jay made a tragic final phone call to friend Lucy Law to say he was lost, needed water and only had one per cent phone battery.

It was the last time Jay, from Oswaldtwistle, Lancs, was heard from, and a mammoth search mission was launched.

Jay’s dad Warren and brother Zak spent weeks searching the unforgiving terrain for a breakthrough after the teenager vanished on June 17.

They retraced his steps in the blistering heat for days on their own after Spanish cops suspended their search.

But his body was finally discovered by a helicopter crew on Monday at the bottom of a ravine close to where his mobile phone last pinged.

Timeline of Jay Slater disappearance

The grim discovery of a body came after weeks of agony for Jay’s friends and family. Here is how events unfolded:

June 16: Jay and his friends party on the last day of the NRG music festival at Papagayo nightclub in Playa de la Americas, Tenerife.

June 17th:

  • 3-6am: Jay leaves with Ayub Qassim and another man for a £40-a-night Airbnb 23 miles away in the village of Masca.
  • 7.30am: Jay shares a photo on Snapchat standing at the doorway of the Airbnb.
  • 8.50am: He calls pal Lucy Mae Law and says he is “lost in the middle of nowhere” with no water, a cut to his leg and one per cent on his phone.

June 18: Pals search the area but no sign of Jay. Local cops and mountain rescue teams start the official search. Jay’s mother Debbie Duncan flies to Tenerife.

June 19 – 20: Spanish police deploy drones, dogs and a helicopter, but find no trace. Search moves to Los Cristianos amid possible sighting, but it is ruled out and they return to Rural de Teno, near Masca.

June 21: Lancashire Police offer support but it is declined.

June 22: Mum Debbie issues an appeal to Jay saying: “We just need you home.”

June 24: Claims of Jay sighting in Santiago del Teide — near where he disappeared — and family believe a grainy CCTV image could be of him.

June 25: Debbie issues a plea for Jay to come home as more friends fly out and TV investigator Mark Williams-Thomas joins the search.

June 29: Cops rule Mr Qassim, and another man at Airbnb, out of investigation.

June 30: Spanish cops officially suspend hunt but say probe “remains open”. His family continue to search.

July 15: A body is found by a helicopter search team close to where his phone last pinged. His possessions are discovered next to human remains. Spanish cops say it points to an “accidental fall”.

July 17: Tenerife authorities confirm the body found in the mountainous area of the island is Jay’s.

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