Katie Price and JJ Slater were seen enjoying up the sun in Ayia Napa at a fancy hotel after the beauty model’skipped her last bankruptcy hearing.’
The Mucky Mansion actor, 45, and her Married At First Sight beau, 31, were reportedly spotted resting at the five-star Adams Beach Hotel, which offers premium suites for £760 per night.
Katie published a video of herself jogging on a treadmill on Instagram Stories, while JJ posted a snapshot of the pair’s feet at the gym.
The former I’m A Celeb star also shared a snap of two massage beds next to each other with the caption ”Looking after my mind body and soul’.
A tourist told The Sun: ‘I saw them checking in on Friday evening.
‘We saw them later in the bar as they were sitting near us. They were having food and drinks and seemed incredibly relaxed.


‘There was a lady singing at the piano bar. When I realised Katie should have been at a bankruptcy hearing, I was shocked.’
Katie’s aide notified Judge Mark Mullen that the celebrity could not attend her last bankruptcy hearing due to ‘depression and anxiety.’
The mother-of-five, who was declared bankrupt in 2019, owes over £760,000 in outstanding tax bills and has ongoing legal troubles.
Following her last appearance, Darragh Connell, representing the trustees, told the court: “It is critical that she is aware that this is a possibility.”
‘The respondent should be in no doubt that any future non-attendance without a reasonable excuse will constitute contempt of court and necessitate an application for a warrant for her arrest.’
In written submissions, he said Katie had been aware of the hearing ‘for a considerable period of time’ and her evidence ‘simply is not good enough’.

‘It is clear that the evidence filed very late is of a variety that is deeply, deeply unsatisfactory and we are in a very serious situation as a consequence,’ he continued.
‘In these circumstances, there is deep concern from the trustees that what is happening here is an attempt at the 11th hour to kick things off into the long grass and that should not be allowed to happen.’
Judge Mullen added: ‘It is a fact that those who do not attend without a reasonable excuse for public examinations are likely to be arrested.
‘It is important that Ms Price is under no illusion that just like any other bankrupt, she is expected to attend unless there are reasonable reasons why she should be excused.’
He said that ‘similarly brief’ letters had been sent for previous hearings, and there is a ‘consistent pattern of last-minute adjournments being sought on the basis of scanty medical evidence.’