
Fundraiser for Scots teen who fell to his death at Ibiza Rocks hits £30,000
A fundraiser to support the family of a teenager who died after plunging from the third floor at Ibiza Rocks Hotel has now reached over £30,000.
Gary Kelly, 19, from Dundee, died instantly in the fall at the four-star hotel on the party island during the early hours of Monday, July 21. Two ambulances were sent to the scene but paramedics said there was nothing they could do to save him.
Evan Thomson, from Aberdeen, died at the hotel under similar circumstances while on holiday celebrating his 26th birthday just two weeks ago. Gary's family have been left heartbroken by the events and a fundraiser was quickly set up in his name to support his loved ones.
Over £30,000 has now been raised and it's understood the cash will soon be transferred over to the family to help with funeral payments and other costs.
A statement on the GoFundMe reads: "We are all feeling the loss of young Gary Kelly. And I know you can't put a price on life. But hopefully we can help the family through this as a nicer young man and family you would struggle to find."
Tributes flooded in from Gary as the news broke of his untimely death earlier this week.
Writing online, his sister Kharis Kelly said: "Our hearts are shattered beyond words. Our handsome boy has gone to the other side, Absolutely no words. We are asking everyone to respect our privacy as a family while we try to navigate through this tragic news. You'll forever be our boy Gary, Sleep tight."
His girlfriend Louise Essery published a tribute to Gary, who she described as inspirational across every area of his life.
She said: "I never thought I would be sat here writing a goodbye. For those who knew Gary, oh you were so lucky. His passion and dedication was inspiring, whether in hockey, work, or with loved ones. I'm struggling to understand how you are no longer with me.
"It hasn't really hit me yet. Gary taught and showed me valuable lessons that I'll carry with me forever. I think it's important to remember the good times and to celebrate the love he brought into our lives."
Gary, who played ice hockey for both Dundee Stars and Aberdeen Lynx last season, was remembered as a 'hugely talented and charismatic individual'.
Meanwhile Ibiza Rocks have resumed their schedule just days after Gary plunged to his death.
Following the deaths of Gary and Evan, who both fell from balconies at the hotel, bosses announced they would be suspending all events.
We told on Thursday, however, that the hotel were still selling party tickets despite saying they were pausing future events.
And bosses then confirmed their investigations had concluded - with their schedule resuming on Saturday.
Dizzee Rascal was scheduled to play at the hotel on Wednesday as part of the venue's '20th birthday celebrations' but that was postponed. However, Rudimental are still set to perform on July 30 for the anniversary.
Following Evan's death his loved ones raised questions about the hotel safety, slamming how the party destination handled the situation.
Friend Blair Robertson slammed the hotel, saying they tried hard to 'get things back to normal' following the death.
He added: 'Security took us away to front desk. Paramedics didn't arrive for about 30 minutes. Forensic officers didn't speak English. We were just standing there, not knowing what was going on. Reception gave us false hope.
"We heard the jet washes cleaning the ground where Evan died. That was the worst thing for us."
The fundraiser to help support Gary's family is still open. To donate, click here.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
14 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
10 free exhibitions to visit this weekend in Scotland
Surface Tensions brings together the work of three artists who explore the material, structural, and conceptual possibilities of wall-based sculpture. Artists Stephan Ehrenhofer, Molly Thomson and Derek Wilson have produced works across ceramics, constructed paintings and textile forms. Raindrops of Rani 2 August-2 November. Entry free. [[Edinburgh]] Printmakers, 1 Dundee Street, [[Edinburgh]], EH3 9FP. Aqsa Arif's exhibition uses elements of South Asian folklore to explore themes of fractured identity, displacement, and cultural synthesis through fantasy and world-building. This multimedia installation encompassing film, textile, screenprints and sculpture is set against the backdrop of the 2006 multi-million pound television commercial 'Paint' which saw 70,000 litres of coloured paint explode in and over her childhood council flat. LOVE is the thing 9-29 August. Entry free. Upright Gallery, 3 Barclay Terrace, Edinburgh, EH10 4HP. Imogen Alabaster is a contemporary artist living in Leith who has been exhibiting nationally for over 20 years and was even a contestant in the 2024 Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year contest. For this exhibition, Alabaster has focused on love. The images are both highly personal and universal self-portraits that explore identity, motherhood and transformation. The Self Portrayed 2 August-29 May 2026. Entry free. Aberdeen [[Art]] Gallery, Schoolhill, AB10 1FQ. Two artists have been commissioned by Aberdeen Archives, Gallery and Museum to interpret a collection of 94 Victorian portraits. Annalee Davis and Richard Maguire were selected to create artworks based on Alexander Macdonald's portrait collection from 1878 and both have taken different routes to put their own spin on the historic artworks. Do Rocks Remember Lava? 7 August. Entry free. Listen Gallery, 60 York Street, Glasgow, G2 8JX. Do Rocks Remember Lava? (Image: unknown) Head along for the launch night of this multisensory curatorial publication that explores geological agency, deep time and non-extractive modes of engagement. For their launch night, DRRL have put together a dynamic programme of sound and performance. Empire Retold: other voices from the British Empire Exhibition 2-9 August. Entry free. Garnethill Gallery, Reid Building, Glasgow School of [[Art]], 164 Renfrew Street, G3 6RQ. The Empire Exhibition of 1938 was a major international exposition held in Bellahouston Park to showcase the achievements of the British Empire and attracted over 13 million visitors during its six-month duration. This new exhibition highlights the voices of people who were not widely represented in the official histories and legacy of the event, alongside contemporary Glaswegians who reflect on their own connections to Glasgow. SEEDLINGS: Diasporic Imaginaries 2-14 August. Entry free. Varies venues across Scotland (see event website for details) This group exhibition explores the ways to connect with our world through other-than-human perspectives. Challenging the boundaries between culture and nature, the exhibition looks to destabilise colonial systems, categories and hierarchies that tend to favour scientific theory and marginalise ancestral knowledges and indigenous cosmologies. The Breakery 2-15 August. Entry free. No31, 29 Newtown Street, Duns, TD11 3AS. Artists Lily Ashrowan, John Ayscough and Kevin Harman have put together an exhibition that presents a dialogue between their text-based practices. The trio have in common a freedom of interdisciplinary experimentation and move between formats and forms that meet the needs of the artwork, they also share an intention and urgency in their practice. Isle of Riso: A Celebration of Four Years of Risography Printing in the Highlands 2-17 August. Entry free. Inverness Creative Academy, Stephens Street, IV2 3JP. This exhibition marks four years of risograph printing in the Highlands and seeks to celebrate the experimental, collaborative spirit that has shaped the Isle of Riso. The exhibition has transformed the space at Inverness Creative Academy's Assembly Hall into a vibrant, layered showcase of community-driven printmaking and features artists, processes and practices shaped by Risograph's distinctive aesthetic and experimental nature. Long Hot Summer by Andy Keir (Image: Andy Keir) Long, Hot Summer 2 August-24 September. Entry free. Roseleaf, 23.24 Sandport Place, Leith, EH6 6EW. Leith based artist Andy Keir has put together a collection of contemporary paintings inspired by the local area. This is the second exhibition from the Dundee-born painter who hosted a successful 'Leith' show earlier in the year.


Daily Record
a day ago
- Daily Record
Siblings begged for 'one last swim' before drowning in Spain holiday horror
The brother and sister drowned after getting into difficulty in the sea at during their 'first big holiday abroad.' Two young siblings who drowned during a family holiday in Spain had pleaded for "one last swim", a devastated family member has revealed. Ameiya and Ricardo Del Brocco - affectionately known as Maya and Jubs - died after getting into difficulty in the sea at Salou last week. It was their "first big holiday abroad" with their parents and four siblings, staying at the four-star Hotel Best Negresco near Llarga Beach, reports the Mirror. But the trip ended in heartbreak when the pair reportedly asked parents Shanice and Ricardo Snr, both 31, if they could go for one final dip in the ocean - but tragedy struck. Shanice had taken one of the other children to the toilet, while Ricardo Snr stayed on the beach watching the children. But moments later, disaster unfolded. The heartbroken dad dived into the water to try and save them. Emergency crews rushed to the scene but were tragically unable to save the siblings, aged just 11 and 13. Shanice's sister Macalia Del Brocco, 46, said: "She (Shanice) came back out (from the toilet), she couldn't see any of them. At that point, she panicked. And it was at that point the police arrived and things started happening. Then it hit what was happening. It was obviously the children that were in the water." Ricardo Snr also had to be pulled from the sea after swallowing "a lot of water" and was left exhausted. Medics managed to resuscitate him on the beach. Macalia described 11-year-old Ricardo as 'the softest, sweetest, gentlest boy you could wish to meet' who 'dreamed of being a YouTuber'. Big sister Ameiya, 13, was 'a unique character' who loved fashion and athletics, and acted like a 'second mum' to her younger brothers and sisters. She praised hotel staff for their kindness, saying they had been 'absolutely beautiful' in supporting the grief-stricken family from Birmingham. One sibling, six-year-old Casius, had an emotional conversation with Macalia, telling his aunt "Juby went to heaven in a helicopter". Talking to the Mail Online, Macalia continued: "He told me 'Did you know Maya and Jubs are in heaven now? Juby went to heaven in a helicopter'. "So that's his understanding of it, which is bittersweet, because that was what he saw. And it's beautiful that he thinks that's what happened, but very sadly tragic at the same time." The family have now raised more than £18,000 through a GoFundMe page to help bring the children's bodies home and support the parents through the unimaginable loss. Relatives, including the siblings' gran, flew out to Spain on Wednesday. Macalia continued: "Ricardo is feeling, obviously, very pained because he was in the water with them, so that's going to be hitting him hard. "That's not going to disappear from his mind. It's going to be a lot of trauma mentally for him to deal with. But families pull together, and there will be support all the way around." Paying tribute to the siblings, Macalia described their inseparable bond and adoration for another. She said: "They would fight like cat and dog at times, but they adored each other. "Maya was about to go into year nine. Very, very bright girl, even when we think she's not doing her homework, she obviously is, because her report we got at the end of summer was amazing. "She is very, very athletic. Very determined individual. When she wanted something she was adamant she was going to get it. She was very as a character, she was very sarcastic and humorous."


Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
Brit siblings, 11 and 13, who drowned in Spain begged for 'one last swim'
Ameiya Del Brocco and younger brother Ricardo, from Birmingham, drowned after getting into difficulty at Llarga Beach near the four-star Hotel Best Necresgo in Salou, which is in Spain Two siblings who drowned on holiday in Spain had begged their parents for "one last swim," a heartbroken family member said. Ameiya and Ricardo Del Brocco - known affectionately as Maya and Jubs - died after getting into difficulty in the water at Salou last week. They and their four siblings family were enjoying their "first big holiday abroad," having stayed at the four-star Hotel Best Necresgo near Llarga Beach. But it was at this beach, towards the end of the break, where Maya and Jubs drowned, having reportedly asked their parents Shanice and Ricardo Snr, both 31, for one final dip in the ocean. Ricardo Snr watched over the siblings while Shanice took one of the other children to the toilet - but tragedy struck. Ricardo Snr had dived in the choppy water and rescue crews assisted with the operation, but Ameiya nor Ricardo Jnr could not be saved. Shanice's sister Macalia Del Brocco, 46, said: "She (Shanice) came back out (from the toilet), she couldn't see any of them. At that point, she panicked. And it was at that point the police arrived and things started happening. Then it hit what was happening. It was obviously the children that were in the water." Macalia, whose friend has created a GoFundMe page to help support the family, described Ricardo as the "softest, sweetest, gentlest boy you could wish to meet", adding he "loved the idea of being a YouTuber when he was older". She said Ameiya, who was into athletics and fashion, was a "unique character" and acted as a "second mother" to her younger siblings. Ricardo Snr had swallowed "a lot of water and was exhausted" but medics were miraculously able to resuscitate him on the beach. Macalia stressed hotel staff have been "absolutely beautiful" in helping support Ricardo Snr, Shanice and their children, who are from Birmingham. One sibling, six-year-old Casius, had an emotional conversation with Macalia, telling his aunt "Juby went to heaven in a helicopter". Talking to the Mail Online, Macalia continued: "He told me 'Did you know Maya and Jubs are in heaven now? Juby went to heaven in a helicopter'. "So that's his understanding of it, which is bittersweet, because that was what he saw. And it's beautiful that he thinks that's what happened, but very sadly tragic at the same time." More than £18,000 has been raised to help bring Ameiya and Ricardo' bodies back to the UK, and support the family here. Some relatives, including the siblings' grandmother, flew to Spain on Wednesday. Macalia continued: "Ricardo is feeling, obviously, very pained because he was in the water with them, so that's going to be hitting him hard. "That's not going to disappear from his mind. It's going to be a lot of trauma mentally for him to deal with. But families pull together, and there will be support all the way around." Paying tribute to the siblings, Macalia described their inseparable bond and adoration for another. She said: "They would fight like cat and dog at times, but they adored each other. "Maya was about to go into year nine. Very, very bright girl, even when we think she's not doing her homework, she obviously is, because her report we got at the end of summer was amazing. "She is very, very athletic. Very determined individual. When she wanted something she was adamant she was going to get it. She was very as a character, she was very sarcastic and humorous."