Current:Home > NewsNatalee Holloway’s confessed killer returns to Peru to serve out sentence in another murder -Wealth Empowerment Academy
Natalee Holloway’s confessed killer returns to Peru to serve out sentence in another murder
View
Date:2025-04-17 22:35:57
LIMA, Peru (AP) — A Dutchman who recently confessed to killing American high school student Natalee Holloway in 2005 in Aruba was returned to Peru on Tuesday to serve the remainder of his prison sentence for murdering a Peruvian woman.
Joran van der Sloot arrived in Lima in the custody of law enforcement. The South American country’s government agreed in June to temporarily extradite him to the U.S. to face trial on extortion and wire fraud charges.
Van der Sloot was long the chief suspect in Holloway’s disappearance in Aruba, though authorities in the Dutch Caribbean island never prosecuted him. Then in an interview with his attorney conducted in the U.S. after his extradition, he admitted to beating the young woman to death on a beach after she refused his advances. He said he dumped her body into the sea.
Van der Sloot, 36, was charged in the U.S. for seeking a quarter of a million dollars to tell Holloway’s family the location of her remains. A plea deal in exchange for a 20-year sentence required him to provide all the information he knew about Holloway’s disappearance, allow her parents to hear in real time his discussion with law enforcement and take a polygraph test.
Video shared on social media by Peru’s National Police shows van der Sloot, hands and feet shackled, walking on the tarmac flanked by two Interpol agents, each grabbing one of his arms. He wore a pink short-sleeved shirt, jeans, tennis shoes and a bulletproof vest that identified him as an Interpol detainee.
The video also showed him doing paperwork at the airport, where he also underwent a health exam. Col. Aldo Avila, head of Interpol in Peru, said van der Sloot would be taken to a prison in the northern Lima, the capital.
About two hours after van der Sloot’s arrival, three police patrol cars and three police motorcycles left the airport escorting a black vehicle with tinted windows.
His sentence for extortion will run concurrently with prison time he is serving for murder in Peru, where he pleaded guilty in 2012 to killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores, a business student from a prominent Peruvian family. She was killed in 2010 five years to the day after Holloway’s disappearance.
Van der Sloot has been transferred among Peruvian prisons while serving his 28-year sentence in response to reports that he enjoyed privileges such as television, internet access and a cellphone and accusations that he threatened to kill a warden. Before he was extradited to the U.S., he was housed in a prison in a remote area of the Andes, called Challapalca, at 4,600 meters (about 15,090 feet) above sea level.
Holloway went missing during a high school graduation trip. She was last seen May 30, 2005, leaving a bar with van der Sloot. A judge eventually declared her dead, but her body was never found.
The Holloway family has long sought answers about her disappearance, and van der Sloot has given shifting accounts over the years. At one point, he said Holloway was buried in gravel under the foundation of a house but later admitted that was untrue.
Five years after the killing, an FBI sting recorded the extortion attempt in which van der Sloot asked Beth Holloway to pay him $250,000 so he would tell her where to find her daughter’s body. He agreed to accept $25,000 to disclose the location and asked for the other $225,000 once the remains were recovered.
Before he could be arrested in the extortion case, van der Sloot slipped away by moving from Aruba to Peru.
After his recent confession to killing Holloway became public, prosecutors in Aruba asked the U.S. Justice Department for documents to determine if any measures will be taken against van der Sloot.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Delaney Schnell, Jess Parratto fail to add medals while Chinese diving stars shine
- Jack Flaherty trade gives Dodgers another starter amid rotation turmoil
- Jon Rahm backs new selection process for Olympics golf and advocates for team event
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Louisiana cleaning up oil spill in Lafourche Parish
- Christina Applegate opens up about the 'only plastic surgery I’ve ever had'
- NYC’s latest crackdown on illegal weed shops is finally shutting them down
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Black leaders in St. Louis say politics and racism are keeping wrongly convicted man behind bars
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- MLB trade deadline live updates: Jack Flaherty to Dodgers, latest news
- 'Crying for their parents': More than 900 children died at Indian boarding schools, U.S. report finds
- Golf Olympics schedule: When Nelly Korda, Scottie Scheffler tee off at Paris Games
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Usher is bringing an 'intimate' concert film to theaters: 'A special experience'
- Officer fatally shoots armed man on Indiana college campus after suspect doesn’t respond to commands
- Drone video shows freight train derailing in Iowa near Glidden, cars piling up: Watch
Recommendation
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
Baby Reindeer Star Richard Gadd Responds to Alleged Real-Life Stalker’s Netflix Lawsuit
Texas’ floating Rio Grande barrier can stay for now, court rules as larger legal battle persists
Team USA Olympic athletes are able to mimic home at their own training facility in France
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Matt Damon Details Surreal Experience of Daughter Isabella Heading off to College
Cierra Burdick brings Lady Vols back to Olympic Games, but this time in 3x3 basketball
2024 Olympics: Gymnast Laurie Hernandez Claps Back at Criticism of Her Paris Commentary