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Post by beth on Jun 2, 2010 15:50:43 GMT -5
Police: Former Natalee Holloway Suspect Sought in Murder in Peru LIMA, Peru -- A young Dutchman previously arrested in the 2005 disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway is the prime suspect in a weekend murder of a Peruvian woman, police said Wednesday. Joran van der Sloot is being sought in the Sunday killing of 21-year-old Stephany Flores in a Lima hotel, Criminal police chief Gen. Cesar Guardia told a news conference. He said the suspect fled the country the next day by land to Chile. The Dutch government said Interpol has issued an international arrest warrant for Van der Sloot. Guardia said the 22-year-old Dutchman, who was in the country for a poker tournament, appears with the young woman in a video taken at a Lima casino early Sunday. The victim's father, Ricardo Flores, told reporters she was killed about 8 a.m. in a hotel room in the upscale Miraflores neighborhood that was splattered with blood, indicating a struggle. The killing occurred exactly five years after the May 30, 2005, disappearance of Holloway in Aruba, a Dutch Caribbean island. Van der Sloot left Peru on Monday, Guardia said, according to immigration registry. He had been staying at the hotel since May 14 and checked out on Sunday four hours after he arrived there with the victim, the police general added. "We have an interview with a worker at the hotel who says she saw this foreigner with the victim enter his room," said Guardia. Interpol has issued an international arrest warrant for Van der Sloot, Dutch Foreign Ministry spokesman Bengt van Loosdrecht told The Associated Press in The Netherlands. He cited as his sources Peruvian police and the Dutch Embassy in Lima. The embassy's head of consular affairs, Angela Lowe, told the AP she could not comment on the case. An attorney for Van der Sloot in New York City, Joe Tacopina, said he did not know his client's whereabouts and has not been in touch with him since the Peru allegations emerged. Tacopina cautioned against a rush to judgment. "Joran van der Sloot has been falsely accused of murder once before. The fact is he wears a bull's-eye on his back now and he is a quote-unquote usual suspect when it comes to allegations of foul play," Tacopina said. Van der Sloot was twice arrested but later released for lack of evidence in the 2005 disappearance of Holloway, who was on a high school graduation trip to the Caribbean island No trace of her has been found and van der Sloot remains the main suspect in the case, said Ann Angela, spokeswoman for the Aruba prosecutor's office. "What's happening now is incredible," she said. "At this moment we don't have anything to do with it, but we are following the case with great interest and if Peruvian authorities would need us, we are here." Van der Sloot's late father was a prominent judge in Aruba. The mystery of Holloway's disappearance has garnered wide attention on television and in newspapers in Europe and the United States. Two years ago, a Dutch television crime reporter captured hidden-camera footage of Van der Sloot saying he was with Holloway when she collapsed on a beach, drunk. He said believed she was dead and asked a friend to dump her body in the sea. Judges subsequently refused to arrest van der Sloot on the basis of the tape. A spokeswoman for Holloway's mother, Beth Twitty of Mountain Brook, Alabama, told the AP the family was aware of the development in Peru but would have no comment Source: FOX News
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Kay
Apprentice
Texas Bluebonnets
Posts: 109
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Post by Kay on Jun 2, 2010 19:13:32 GMT -5
Imagine how Natalee Holloway's mother must feel Disgusting!!
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Post by sadie on Jun 2, 2010 21:06:30 GMT -5
Well.....you just knew the little weasel would do something again. He got away with before.......of course isn't his father deceased now? So....probably a tougher time getting out of this one......hope they nail him on this one.
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Post by beth on Jun 3, 2010 7:35:34 GMT -5
Either this guy is the unluckiest person in the world, or he needs to be corralled and brought to justice asap. I agree, Daddy is no longer here to fix things.
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Post by Wonder Woman on Jun 3, 2010 10:20:22 GMT -5
Yeah, that's what I was thinking, Beth. I'll also point out that his attorney is right that once someone is suspect (or convicted/released) they are suspect in all cases in the area where they live.
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Post by sadie on Jun 3, 2010 11:14:56 GMT -5
The story is not very specific......but it says she was seen entering a room with him........He's been staying at the hotel since May 14th then he suddenly checks out 4 hours later after entering a room with her and she's found dead in a blood spattered room. I think he be looking a teensy bit suspicious.......and he left the country......
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Post by sadie on Jun 3, 2010 12:58:54 GMT -5
Hey....saw some news blip that he was arrested in Chile!!!!
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Post by beth on Jun 3, 2010 22:51:55 GMT -5
Hey....saw some news blip that he was arrested in Chile!!!! Here's the news story - Chile Police Detain Joran Van Der Sloot in Peru Murder LIMA, Peru -- A Dutch man long suspected in the disappearance of an Alabama teen in Aruba was arrested Thursday in the murder of a young woman in Peru. Stephany Flores, 21, was killed in a Lima hotel Sunday, five years to the day after Holloway disappeared. The suspect, Joran van der Sloot, was escorted by three police officers as he was taken from a dark vehicle into a police office in downtown Santiago, Chile. He made no comment as he entered, walking calmly and without handcuffs as journalists shouted his name. Van der Sloot was detained while traveling in a taxi, about halfway to the coast on Route 68, said Prefect Alfredo Espinosa, chief national spokesman for Chile's investigative police. The suspect did not resist and has been calm in detention, Espinosa said. Chilean police are awaiting instructions from their counterparts in Peru, Espinosa added. In Lima, police Gen. Cesar Guardia said Flores, who had been seen with the suspect early Sunday, was found Wednesday lying face down on the floor of van der Sloot's hotel room. Her neck was broken, and she was fully clothed, with no signs of having been sexually abused, Guardia told The Associated Press. Authorities found no potential murder weapons in the room, Garcia said. Flores was killed exactly five years after the May 30, 2005, disappearance of Holloway during a high school trip in Aruba, a Dutch Caribbean island where van der Sloot's late father was a prominent judge Prosecutors said van der Sloot is still their main suspect in the case even though he was never charged. Guardia said the 22-year-old Dutchman was in Peru for a poker tournament and appears with the dead woman in a video taken at a Lima casino early Sunday. The two were later seen entering the hotel by one of its employees about 5 a.m. and the Dutchman departed alone about four hours later, he said. "We have an interview with a worker at the hotel who says she saw this foreigner with the victim enter his room," Guardia said. The victim's father, Ricardo Flores, 48, is a former president of the Peruvian Automobile Club who won the "Caminos del Inca" rally in 1991 and brings circuses and foreign entertainers to Peru. He ran for vice president in 2001 and for president five years later on fringe tickets. A lawyer for van der Sloot in New York, Joe Tacopina, cautioned against a rush to judgment. "Joran van der Sloot has been falsely accused of murder once before. The fact is he wears a bull's-eye on his back now and he is a quote-unquote usual suspect when it comes to allegations of foul play," Tacopina said. Van der Sloot was twice arrested but later released for lack of evidence in the 2005 disappearance of Holloway in Aruba. No trace of her has been found and van der Sloot remains the main suspect in the case, Ann Angela, spokeswoman for the Aruba prosecutor's office, said Wednesday. "What's happening now is incredible," she said. "At this moment we don't have anything to do with it, but we are following the case with great interest and if Peruvian authorities would need us, we are here." The mystery of Holloway's disappearance garnered wide attention on television and in newspapers in Europe and the United States. Two years ago, a Dutch television crime reporter captured hidden-camera footage of van der Sloot saying he was with Holloway when she collapsed on a beach from being drunk. He said he believed she was dead and asked a friend to dump her body in the sea. Judges subsequently refused to arrest van der Sloot on the basis of the tape. A spokeswoman for Holloway's mother, Beth Twitty of Mountain Brook, Alabama, told the AP the family was aware of the development in Peru but would have no comment. www.foxnews.com/world/2010/06/03/chile-police-detain-dutchman-peru-killing-years-holloway-slaying-aruba/
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Post by beth on Jun 7, 2010 7:14:04 GMT -5
Repost by Jencin www.foxnews.com/world/2010/06/06/dutch-murder-suspects-asks-private-lawyer-spent-week-police-office-peru/Holloway Suspect's Peru Detention Extended Published June 07, 2010 | Associated Press LIMA, Peru — Joran van der Sloot will spend all week at criminal police headquarters being questioned in the death of a 21-year-old Lima woman and has asked to be able to hire his own lawyer, authorities said Sunday. The Dutchman, who is also the prime suspect in U.S. teen Natalee Holloway's 2005 disappearance in Aruba, is being held in a seventh-floor cell with a bunk bed and blanket and gets three hot meals a day, said Maj. Jose Gamboa, spokesman for the Peruvian national police. Van der Sloot is suspected in the May 30 killing — five years to the day after Holloway's disappearance — of Stephany Flores, a business student who police say he met playing poker at a casino. Police released video Saturday taken by security cameras at the hotel where van der Sloot had been staying since arriving from Colombia on May 14. It shows the two entering van der Sloot's room together and the Dutchman leaving alone four hours later. The woman's battered body was found on the room's floor more than two days later, her neck broken. It's been five years since 18-year-old Natalee Holloway disappeared while on a high school graduation trip to Aruba. Now, Joran van der Sloot, the last known person seen alive with the young Alabama woman, has confessed to hiding her body in an island marsh, according to a Dutch newspaper, and has been apprehended by Peruvian officials for the suspected murder of 21-year-old Peruvian Stephany Flores. "The only possessions of my daughter they found were her empty wallet and her cell phone," her father, circus empresario Ricardo Flores, said in TV interview Sunday night. "There wasn't a peso in her wallet." Van der Sloot crossed into Chile on Monday, where he was arrested three days later. In video taken of the husky 22-year-old Dutchman that was broadcast Sunday by a TV channel, Peruvian police search van der Sloot's belongings in his presence. They pull out of his backpack a laptop, a business-card holder and 15 bills in foreign currency. Van der Sloot tells police the money includes Thai, Cambodian and Bolivian currency. He is asked for credit cards and documents and appears to say — his Spanish is very rudimentary — that they are in a hotel room back in Chile. Peru's chief homicide investigator, Col. Miguel Canlla, would neither confirm nor deny a Sunday report in the Lima newspaper El Comercio that van der Sloot told his Peruvian questioners he was innocent of the Flores killing. "I don't know where that information came from," Canlla told The Associated Press. "We are still in the investigative stage." Chilean police said earlier that van der Sloot declared himself innocent in the Lima slaying but acknowledged having met Flores. Van der Sloot was represented by a state-appointed lawyer during Saturday's questioning. Until he hires his own counsel, "the guys prosecuting him will decide which attorney he's going to get," van der Sloot's U.S. attorney, Joseph Tacopina, told the AP, Tacopina said the suspect's family "is trying to find competent counsel." Dutch Embassy chief consular officer Angela Lowe said her government was providing van der Sloot with "regular consular assistance, which means an occasional consular visit, and we will make sure he is being treated decently, just like any other inmate." She said Peruvian authorities have assured the Dutch government they are treating him well. "They are taking this case very seriously," she added. "The world is watching." Van der Sloot is one of 117 Dutch citizens currently in Peruvian jails or prisons, most of them on drug-related charges, Lowe said. The suspect spoke to his mother by telephone for the first time Saturday, Lowe said, adding that she did not know whether the mother plans to travel to Peru. Van der Sloot's father, a former judge and attorney on the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba, died in February. The suspect has two brothers. After a a 17-hour journey up the Pan-American Highway from Chile in a police caravan Saturday, the young Dutchman was paraded, sheathed in bulletproof vest and handcuffed, before reporters at criminal police headquarters in Lima. He was then submitted to an initial interrogation. A judge subsequently granted prosecutors' request to extend van der Sloot's preliminary detention order seven more days, said Gamboa, the national police spokesman. If tried and convicted of murder, van der Sloot faces a potential prison term of 35 years. He remains, meanwhile, the prime suspect in the disappearance in Aruba of Holloway, an Alabama teen who hasn't been seen since May 30, 2005. He was arrested and released in that case, and faces no charges.
Van der Sloot was charged Thursday in the United States with trying to extort $250,000 from Holloway's family in exchange for disclosing the location of her body and describing how she died.U.S. prosecutors say $15,000 was transferred to a Dutch bank account in his name. In the Netherlands on Friday, prosecutors raided two homes in the case, seizing computers, cell phones and data-storage devices. Peruvian President Alan Garcia told reporters Friday that van der Sloot would have to be tried in Flores' death before any extradition request could be considered. Holloway, 18, was celebrating her high school graduation on Aruba when she disappeared. Van der Sloot told investigators he left her on a beach, drunk. That's the last anyone saw her. Two years ago, a Dutch television crime reporter captured hidden-camera footage of van der Sloot saying that after Holloway collapsed on the beach he asked a friend to dump her body in the sea.
The same journalist, Peter de Vries, reported later in 2008 that van der Sloot was recruiting Thai women in Bangkok for sex work in the Netherlands.
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Post by sadie on Jun 7, 2010 9:38:19 GMT -5
They showed video on the Today Show this morning......and it sure shows him going into his hotel room with the woman....and four hours later he leaves....and supposedly tells the desk not to wake up his girl.....the tv is left on kinda loud....and they don't go in there for two days (which I find odd).
And then to find out he probably financed his trip with the money from the Holloway's.....what an absolutely worthless individual.......then he's going to appear on TV all teary eyed and want any sympathy.........my understanding is the Peruvian jails aren't probably up to his standard of living.....and he won't be getting out on bail.........
Heard the father of this new girl say that maybe his daughter will be the instrument of justice for Natalie Holloway.......wow.....don't know that I could be that kind yet.....but I guess that is a way of looking at it. Know that he is kind of a celebrity of his own.....guess VanDersloot should have checked that out before he chose her for a victim.
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Post by gabriel on Jun 8, 2010 4:29:55 GMT -5
www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/06/08/world/main6559272.shtmlJune 8, 2010 Van Der Sloot Confesses to Flores Killing Prime Suspect in Natalee Holloway Disappearance Has Confessed to Killing Peruvian Student, According to Peruvian Police Dutchman Joran van der Sloot, long the prime suspect in U.S. teen Natalee Holloway's 2005 disappearance in Aruba, has confessed to killing a young woman in his Lima hotel room last week, a police spokesman said. Police Col. Abel Gamarra, head of the Information Directorate of Police, told The Associated Press late Monday that Van der Sloot admitted under questioning by police that he killed 21-year-old Stephany Flores. Gamarra said the case will be turned over to prosecutors who will present formal charges against Van der Sloot. The National Prison Institute will determine which prison he will be held in while awaiting trial. Police planned to take Van der Sloot to the hotel on Tuesday to participate in a reconstruction of the events leading to Flores' slaying, Gamarra said. Gamarra did not provide further details about the confession. Earlier, Peruvian media said the Holloway case played a role in the Flores killing. The media reports that police say van der Sloot hit Flores because she saw private information on his computer regarding Holloway. Flores' May 30 killing was five years to the day after Holloway's disappearance. Flores was a business student who police say he met playing poker at a casino. Police released video Saturday taken by security cameras at the hotel where van der Sloot had been staying since arriving from Colombia on May 14. It shows the two entering van der Sloot's room together and the Dutchman leaving alone four hours later. The woman's battered body was found on the room's floor more than two days later, her neck broken. Van der Sloot had by then crossed into Chile, where he was arrested Thursday. In video taken of the husky 22-year-old Dutchman that was broadcast Sunday by a TV channel, Peruvian police search van der Sloot's belongings in his presence. They pull out of his backpack a laptop, a business-card holder and 15 bills in foreign currency. Van der Sloot tells police the money includes Thai, Cambodian and Bolivian currency. He is asked for credit cards and documents and appears to say - his Spanish is very rudimentary - that they are in a hotel room back in Chile. Chilean police said earlier that van der Sloot declared himself innocent in the Lima slaying but acknowledged having met Flores. Van der Sloot was represented by a state-appointed lawyer during Saturday's questioning. Until he hires his own counsel, "the guys prosecuting him will decide which attorney he's going to get," van der Sloot's U.S. attorney, Joseph Tacopina, told the AP, I'm not into this case but I've been reading a bit. This Dutch creep is a piece of work. Why would any woman go with him?
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Post by sadie on Jun 8, 2010 8:31:47 GMT -5
Drunk? ?
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Post by Dex on Jun 8, 2010 15:00:54 GMT -5
Confessed did he? I wonder how they wrung that out of him?
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Post by sadie on Jun 11, 2010 8:19:06 GMT -5
Well now he says he knows where Natalie's body is.....do you think he's trying to get a deal?
I think he will just keep telling stories to mess with people and to keep getting special treatment.
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beez0811
Craftsman
Nerdypants!!
Posts: 1,617
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Post by beez0811 on Jun 11, 2010 11:39:17 GMT -5
He's a top-notch a--hole!
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