By Guy Hedgecoe & Jonny Humphries, Lynette Horsburgh, BBC News
The body found in Tenerife during the search for Jay Slater has been confirmed as the missing teenager, officials say.
A Spanish court said fingerprint tests showed the body is that of the 19-year-old.
It added his death was caused by “trauma consistent with a fall in a rocky area”.
Jay Slater’s mother, Debbie Duncan, said in statement that the confirmation of her son’s death was the “worst news”, adding: “I just can’t believe this could happen to my beautiful boy. Our hearts are broken.”
The teenager, from Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire, was last seen on 17 June, after visiting an Airbnb rented by two people he had been with at the NRG music festival on the island.
‘Steep and inaccessible’
The High Court of Justice of the Canary Islands said in a statement: “We have a positive identification and more data: fingerprint tests show that the body is [that] of Jay Slater and that the death was caused by trauma consistent with a fall in a rocky area.”
Charity LBT Global said a body was found on Monday with the 19-year-old’s clothes and possessions near his last known location.
LBT Global’s Matthew Searle was with Mr Slater’s mother when they heard the news that the body had been identified as her son and said the family were devastated.
Mr Searle said the charity, which helps families in missing persons cases overseas, would be supporting the family “to make this horrific time as easy as possible”.
He added: “We are working with the family now to sort out the next steps of taking Jay home, recovery of his belongings and laying him to rest.”
An earlier court statement today said that documentation found on the body discovered on Tenerife on Monday belonged to Jay Slater.
“It is confirmed that the documentation that was on the body found yesterday in the mountains of Masca belongs to Jay Slater,” it said.
It went on to say that “everything suggests that it was an accidental fall” but the results of the official investigation into the death would take more time.
Mr Slater’s body was discovered by members of a mountain rescue team from the Spanish Civil Guard, near the village of Masca.
Spanish police released video footage of rescuers climbing rock faces and battling through scrub as they had carried out the search.
Part of the clip showed two members of the search team being winched out of the area by helicopter after the body had been found.
They said Mr Slater could have fallen in the steep and inaccessible area where he was discovered.
Jo Cann, from Hertfordshire, is on holiday in Tenerife close to where Jay Slater was last seen before he got into a car and headed north to the mountains.
From the busy Playa de El Bobo beach, she said it was “really sad” news.
“I wouldn’t like to begin to imagine what they are going through,” Ms Cann added.
‘Missed more than you know’
Earlier, a friend of Jay Slater had paid tribute to “the happiest and most smiley person in the room”, after the news a body had been found in Tenerife.
Lucy Law, who was the last known person to speak to Mr Slater during a phone call on 17 June, paid tribute to him on her Instagram page.
She said: “Honestly lost for words. Always the happiest and most smiley person in the room, you was (sic) one of a kind Jay and you’ll be missed more than you know.”
Ms Law’s tribute continued: “I’m sure you’ll ‘have your dancing shoes polished and ready’ waiting for us all.
“We all love you buddy. Fly high.”
Accrington and Rossendale College, where Mr Slater was studying as an apprentice brick-layer, said it was “deeply saddened” to hear the news of his death.
It added, Mr Slater was a “hard-working apprentice” at the college “with a very bright future ahead of him”.
“Our thoughts and condolences go out to his family, friends, and all who knew and loved him.”