The Guardian Australia

Theo Hayez inquest: what happened at 1.02am in Byron Bay key to Belgian teen’s disappeara­nce

- Australian Associated Press

Investigat­ors believe what happened at 1.02am at a Byron Bay beach on 1 June 2019 is the key to determinin­g how Belgian backpacker Theo Hayez vanished.

After midnight, Hayez used his phone to swap messages with his stepsister, Emma, watch clips from a French quiz show, and joke with a friend on Facebook about an upcoming U2 concert.

But just after 1am his phone stopped receiving data.

An inquest into the 18-year-old’s disappeara­nce in northern New South Wales has heard police believe he clambered up the beachside cliffs, dropped his phone, then fell and was swept out to sea.

His family, who have travelled to Byron Bay from Europe for the twoweek inquest in the NSW coroners court, don’t accept their cautious boy would do something so dangerous in the dark.

They say the only way he would climb the cliffs is if someone was with him, reassuring him it was safe.

Whether Hayez encountere­d anybody else that night is one of the major mysteries the inquest will explore. Another is how he came to be on the Cosy Corner beach in the dark.

Hayez’s night began at his hostel, where he shared some “goon” wine with fellow backpacker­s before heading into town about 9pm.

At the Cheeky Monkey’s bar, the group discussed European politics as they drank a few beers.

CCTV footage played at the inquest shows Hayez occasional­ly stumbling. A security guard who thought he was swaying ejected him about 11pm.

However, the evidence he was actually intoxicate­d was “ambiguous”, counsel assisting the inquest Kirsten Edwards said on Monday.

The decision to kick him out on his own without any chance to tell his friends has caused Hayez’s family “great distress”, she said.

The 18-year-old then looked up directions to his hostel on Google Maps.

His subsequent decisions would be hard to believe if investigat­ors didn’t have Google data obtained by his family, Edwards said.

Hayez walked in the opposite direction to the route outlined on Google Maps. For seven minutes, he stopped at some cricket nets.

Next, he took a dark track through bushland towards the ocean, at points appearing to walk quickly or run.

At the urging of locals and police, coroner Teresa O’Sullivan walked the Milne Track one night last year.

Police have noted it would be strange for a foreigner to walk the frightenin­g and “spooky” track alone at night – giving rise to theories that Hayez was with someone else.

He turned off the track into steep, dense bushland and ended up on the beach.

He was at Cosy Corner when he appears to have turned off his location services just after midnight to save battery.

His lightheart­ed messages sent in the next hour suggested he felt safe, Edwards said.

At 12.55am, he sent a message to his sister. Then “something happened at 1.02am”, Edwards said.

“If we knew what that was, we think we probably would know what happened to Theo.” That’s when his phone stopped receiving data.

At 6.17am, it re-entered reception range and continued to receive data until lunchtime that day – suggesting it did not fall into the water. Hayez’s phone has never been found.

Edwards said the legal team had struggled to get data from Google, Facebook and Telstra to paint a fuller picture of that evening – in particular, whether anyone else was with the teenager. The inquest continues.

 ?? ?? NSW police search the Cape Byron state conservati­on area in June 2019. An inquest is examiningt­he disappeara­nce of 18-year-old Belgian backpacker Theo Hayez. Photograph: Dave Hunt/AAP
NSW police search the Cape Byron state conservati­on area in June 2019. An inquest is examiningt­he disappeara­nce of 18-year-old Belgian backpacker Theo Hayez. Photograph: Dave Hunt/AAP

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