Jay Slater search 'focuses on last phone ping' one week after he went missing

Search teams looking for the missing teen, Jay Slater, have been revisiting areas they had previously scoured in hopes of finding new leads.

The emergency services, including police and fire officers, were once again seen meticulously searching a ravine where it is believed the 19 year old's phone last "pinged" shortly after his disappearance. Fresh photos of the apprentice bricklayer have surfaced, depicting him enjoying himself at the NRG festival in Tenerife's south-west.

According to the Mirror, Jay left the event with two British lads to return to their holiday let. The apartment in Los Cristianos, where his best mate Lucy Law, 18, and other pals were staying, was over 20 miles away, an arduous 11-hour trek through perilous terrain.

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On Monday morning (June 17), he rang Lucy, telling her he was stranded in the middle of nowhere, attempting to get back with no water and a phone battery at 1%. It is understood his mobile died 20 minutes later, at 8.50am, somewhere in the Parque Rural de Teno nature reserve.

Last night, Jay's heartbroken mum Debbie Duncan, 55, was still waiting anxiously for updates alongside his dad Warren Slater, 58. His older brother Zak, 24, said: "We just want him to come back. We don't know where he is or what has happened. I just want him to come home safe. I just wish he had come home."

Zak and Warren last night put up missing posters in Santiago del Teide, where a witness told police they believe they saw Jay last Monday night. The small village lies nearly four miles from Masca, the last place where Jay was confirmed to have been seen, roughly 10 hours prior. In Jay's hometown of Oswaldtwistle, people gathered for a service dedicated to him, led by Reverend Matt Smith at the West End Methodist Church.

Meanwhile, Jay's friends have been flying into the Spanish island to aid in the search efforts, joining forces with strangers moved by his plight. A British woman, opting to remain anonymous, expressed her sentiments, saying: "I didn't know Jay but I just felt like I had to do what I can. It's heart-breaking."

Former police detective Mark Williams-Thomas, renowned for his role in unmasking Jimmy Savile and his involvement in numerous high-profile missing persons investigations, has reached out to Jay's family to offer his assistance.

Williams-Thomas, who has since become an investigative journalist, stated: "I have offered the help of my team to get Jay's mum answers. With feet on the ground I will very quickly be able to say if his disappearance is him alone or has third-party involvement."