A mother of one of the teenagers found in the crashed car in North Wales says she is ‘in a nightmare she can’t wake up from’ amid fears the group lay undiscovered in their upturned car for 48 hours.
Sixth form students Jevon Hirst, 16, Harvey Owen, 17, Wilf Fitchett, 17 and Hugo Morris, 18, had travelled to Harlech on Saturday and planned to camp in the national park on Sunday before returning home on Monday morning.
But their parents grew frantic with worry when they stopped responding to messages at around midday on Sunday – and reported them missing a day later when they didn’t return home to Shrewsbury as planned.
The hunt ended in tragedy when their Ford Fiesta was spotted on its roof on Tuesday near the village of Garreg, partially submerged in a ditch off a remote road almost two days after their last contact.
Harvey’s mother, Crystal Owen issued a heartbreaking statement, saying ‘nothing will make this nightmare go away,’ after learning of her son’s death.
She said: ‘I feel like I’m in a nightmare I wish I could wake up from but I’m not. I just wanted to say I do appreciate people’s kindness but no amount of messages is going to help me overcome this. Nothing will make this nightmare go away.’
When she first learned her son had gone missing, Ms Owen drove to Snowdonia to help with the search. She told reporters she had not been aware her son had gone camping, and would never had left him go ‘due to the winter weather conditions.’
Crystal Owen (second from right), Harvey’s mother, said ‘nothing will make this nightmare go away,’ after her son never came home from his camping trip. Pictured: Harvey left
Harvey Owen had been on a camping trip near Snowdonia National Park with his friends when they were reported missing on Monday morning
Crystal Owen, Harvey’s mother, says she is in a ‘nightmare’
‘I love you so much baby,’ Wilf’s girlfriend Maddi Corfield said in a two-part tribute on Instagram on Tuesday. ‘I’m going to miss you forever’
A candle is left by locals at the scene of the crash near Beddgelert, North Wales
Police are pictured searching the crash site today in North Wales
Teenager friends (clockwise from top left) Harvey Owen, Wilf Fitchett, Hugo Morris and Jevon Hirst were last seen getting into a silver Ford Fiesta car on Sunday morning
Police cordon off the road in North Wales as they investigate what caused their deaths
A police officer investigates the scene in North Wales
The scene where the car left the road on the A4085 near Garreg, in North Wales
Tributes also poured in from Wilf’s girlfriend Maddi Corfield, who described him as the ‘sweetest and most loving boy I’ve ever known’.
She said: ‘Thank you for all the time you have spent with me… thank you for loving me endlessly. I promise I’ll do the same for you, my sweet, sweet angel. I cannot imagine my world without you’.
A candlelit vigil will be held for the boys in Shropshire on Wednesday evening, with churches in Shrewsbury opening their doors today to console the shocked community.
Reverend Charlotte Gompertz of Oxon Parish Church in Shrewsbury spoke on BBC Radio 4 this morning and said: ‘It’s the worst news, it is not what we prayed for when we heard they were missing. This is just utterly devastating for us.’
She added that their deaths are ‘impacting everyone’ as they come from a very ‘tight-knit’ community where people have known each other since they were ‘four years old’.
Rev. Gompertz says she knows some of the families of those who have died and said that some of them are ‘high-profile folks within the community’.
‘It’s going to take a long time for us to get our heads even vaguely heads round this tragedy,’ she added.
It comes as fears grow that the group of teenagers lay undiscovered in their upturned car for up to 48 hours, as key questions over how the tragic accident happened still remain unanswered.
‘The plan seems to have been for them to camp in Snowdonia on Sunday evening, but it looks like they never made it to a campsite,’ said a source close to the investigation.
‘The car has left the road on a bend, it seems the driver lost control and ended up in water in a ditch.
‘The accident may have happened as early as midday on Sunday but police were not informed until more than 24 hours later that they were missing.
‘It is a very remote area and the weather was terrible so the car simply may not have been seen from the road.’
At around 11am on Sunday, the quartet left the area with the aim of camping in Snowdonia National Park; this was the last time they were seen alive.
The area in which the boys were camping is not believed to have a strong phone signal.
The mother of one of the boys said her last contact with her son had been at around midday on Sunday in Porthmadog, less than 10 miles from Harlech.
Local councillor June Jones, who was at the scene of the crash for most of the day yesterday, said it was not abnormal for people to be uncontactable in the area.
When asked about the length of time that it took to find the boys, she said: ‘We don’t have a good mobile signal, that is one thing that we are very aware of.
‘This valley here there is no mobile signal, so I think most of us assumed, ‘Oh they’re out of signal, they’ve gone camping, they’re having fun.”
Police believe that the car came off the road a short time later after it appeared to career off the ‘narrow and windy’ A4085 close to a bend.
After raising the alarm on Monday, the boy’s families pleaded with friends on social media to share missing persons appeals put out by North Wales Police.
The mother of 16-year-old Jevon Hirst, wrote on Facebook: ‘If anyone knows anything or can think of anything that may help find the boys, please contact the police. We are desperate for any news.’
The search took place over a vast and remote part of North Wales, with a coastguard helicopter and mountain rescue volunteers searching the national park overnight.
But it was a member of the public that then spotted the silver Ford Fiesta at around 10am on Tuesday, upside down and partially submerged in water, between Garreg and Port Aberglaslyn.
North Wales Police announced yesterday that four bodies had been recovered from the car, which is believed to have been travelling in dismal weather conditions.
When the news broke, tributes poured in for the boys, including from Maddi Corfrield’s mother Lisa, 37, who said he was ‘absolutely heartbroken’ for her daughter and ‘all of the boys family involved’ (sic).
‘Wilf was such a lovely kind lad and treated Maddi in a way only a mother could hope her daughter be treated,’ the grieving mother said.
Lisa added: ‘We will all miss you dearly Wilf. Thank you for bringing so much love and happiness into Maddi’s life and I promise to look after her for you.’
The entrance to the road was closed off by police after the discovery was made (pictured: police closing the road at Garreg to the south)
Police investigate the scene where four young men died in North Wales
A crane was brought in to retrieve the vehicle from the crash site, where it was found upside down and partially submerged
Superintendent Owain Llewelyn said the crash appeared to have been a ‘tragic accident’
The car was found on the A4085, which winds its way between Garreg and Nantmor. Locals described the driving conditions on Sunday as treacherous
Police cordoned off the A4085 near the village of Garreg
Police also blocked the road near Beddgellert, North Wales where four sixth form students were found dead in an overturned car
DVLA records showed that a new logbook had been issued for the car at the end of August. Drivers can legally take to the road from the age of 17.
Last night Liz Saville Roberts, the local MP and Welsh Seredd Member Mabon ap Gwynfor said: ‘This news is truly heartbreaking and foremost as parents ourselves, our thoughts go out to the families and friends of the four young men whose lives have been lost in this tragic accident.’
‘We would like to pay tribute to the emergency services and local mountain rescue teams involved in the search operation, and to members of the public for their assistance in helping to locate the vehicle.’
‘No words can sufficiently reflect the sorrow that this news brings to our whole community.’
Superintendent Owain Llewellyn of North Wales Police said on Tuesday afternoon: ‘Police officers located a Ford Fiesta on its roof, partially submerged in water.
‘Tragically, the bodies of four young males were found within the vehicle. The families of the missing boys have been informed. Our thoughts are with them at this desperate time.
‘While the search has concluded there is a search ongoing to formally identify those within the vehicle and understand what led to this tragic incident.’
Supt Llewellyn continued: ‘At present, this appears to have been a tragic accident, and our thoughts are with the family and friends of the four young men at this very difficult time.
‘This has been an extensive search involving a number of different agencies and volunteers, and this is sadly not the outcome that any of us would have wanted. We would ask that the family be afforded the appropriate privacy and respect.’
Police cordoned off a four mile stretch of the A4085 between the villages of Garreg and Port Aberglaslyn, near Porthmadog, north Wales yesterday.
A fire engine heading to the scene of the crash in north Wales after the vehicle was found
A flatbed lorry arrives at the scene of the tragedy to collect the vehicle for crash investigators
A police vehicle parked close to the scene of the quadruple tragedy earlier on Tuesday
Locals reported that a helicopter had been searching the Penrhyndeudraeth area before heading toward Nantmor and Beddgelert. The car was found at Garreg
Emyr Owen, who lives near the crash site, said that it had been ‘atrocious’ weather on the morning the boys went missing.
He told the BBC that police began combing the area at 5am and closed the roads. Ambulances entered the cordon at around 1pm, followed by a police forensics team.
Manasa Boma, manager at The Royal Goat Hotel in Beddgelert, close to the scene, said: ‘Our handyman messaged me to say there had been a terrible accident. Our thoughts and prayers are with everyone who’s involved’.
A spokesman for the police said the car had been located ‘following information from a member of the public’.
Officers and other emergency services are currently at the scene and that they keeping the teenager’s families updated with information, they added.
Cllr June Jones told Sky News that the ‘whole area is in complete shock’ and ‘everybody’s feelings are very much with the families at this time’.
‘It has been extremely wet and the rivers have been extremely high over the last few days. Obviously, it is November, the weather is bad. It is bad weather to be travelling in, especially with somebody who doesn’t know the roads very well’, she said.
In a statement Shrewsbury Colleges Group, where the boys were all A-level pupils, said: ‘We would like to offer our deepest condolences to the family and friends of the four young men who tragically died in the suspected traffic accident.
‘This news is truly heartbreaking, and our thoughts go out to those affected by this tragic news. We would like to thank the emergency services and local mountain rescue teams, as well as members of the public for their assistance in helping with the search and helping to locate the vehicle.
‘We will be working directly with students and staff who are affected by this terrible accident and have put in place a range of support measures for all of our community.’
A Welsh Ambulance Service spokesman said yesterday: ‘We were called on Tuesday at approximately 10.08am to reports of an incident near the A4085 between Nantmor and Tan-Lan.
‘We sent an operations manager, two emergency ambulances and two Cymru high acuity response units to the scene where we were supported by the emergency medical retrieval and transfer service in two Wales Air Ambulance charity helicopters.’