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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Joran Van Der Sloot's Lawyer Denies He Got Woman Pregnant in Prison


Joran Van Der Sloot's Lawyer Denies He Got Woman Pregnant in Prison

The lawyer representing Joran van der Sloot today shot down reports that the Dutch playboy who is suspected of killing Natalee Holloway had impregnated a Peruvian woman during a conjugal visit in his Peruvian prison.
Van der Sloot told Dutch newspaper, De Telegraaf, that a woman identified only as "Leidi" was pregnant with his child.
"A test has proved" the pregnancy, he told the paper.
But van der Sloot's lawyer, Maximo Altez, told ABC News the reports are not true and the woman, whose real name he said is Carol Figueroa Uceda, told him she was not pregnant.
Whether the woman is pregnant or not, it came as a surprise to many the van der Sloot, convicted of killer a Peruvian woman and suspected of killing American Natalee Holloway, is granted conjugal visits in his prison.
Altez blamed the pregnancy rumors on his own client and said De Telegraaf had never contacted the lawyer directly.
Uceda, however, had been authorized to visit van der Sloot for conjugal visits, he said. Altez said he originally utilized the woman, who had access to the prison, to help him run errands there. Later, he helped make arrangements to grant her permission for conjugal visits with van der Sloot.
Uceda in June 2011 was also rumored to have become pregnant with van der Sloot's child.
Van der Sloot is serving a 28-year sentence in Peru for the murder of Stefany Flores. He was convicted of killing Flores in a Lima hotel in 2010, after meeting the young woman in a casino. Van der Sloot told police he killed her after she learned about involvement with Holloway's disappearance.
Van der Sloot was never formally charged with the murder death of Holloway, an American high school student who went missing in Aruba in 2005. He is currently wanted in the U.S. on charges that he attempted to extort Holloway's parents, promising to tell them where her body was in exchange for money.
Both Altez and American lawyers said van der Sloot could not evade extradition to the U.S., by fathering a Peruvian child or marrying a Peruvian woman. Peru says it will extradite van der Sloot after he has served his prison term there.
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Friday, July 20, 2012

Van der sloot getting married?

Birmingham, Ala (WIAT) Joran van der Sloot getting married? That's the tabloid buzz out of Peru where rumors are flying that the Dutchman doing time for killing a Peruvian student is about to get married. Last year the Peruvian media was abuzz with charges he had fathered a child behind bars while awaiting trial. The putative mother denied he was the father on local tv. In this latest behind bars romance, at least one website couldn't resist referring to van der Sloot as a "lady killer", a pretty grim pun considering he's doing 38 years for killing Stephany Flores. Her corpse was found in van der Sloot's Lima hotel room five years to the day of Natalee Holloway's disappearance on a graduation trip to Aruba. Van der Sloot confessed he killed Flores after she found material relating to the Holloway case on his laptop. Mountain Brook teen Holloway hasn't been seen since the night she walked out of an Oranjestad bar with van der Sloot and two of his friends back in 2005.

Van der Sloot sentence appeal under consideration

Birmingham, Ala (WIAT) Joran van der Sloot's 28 year murder sentence is under review by the Peruvian justice system. And any reduction of his prison term there could bring him to Birmingham to face federal charges he scammed the family of missing Mountain Brook teen Natalee Holloway. A court in Lima has accepted the paperwork in the case and turned it over to Peru's Supreme Court for review and evaluation. The crux of the appeal is that a former defense lawyer gave van der Sloot bad advice promising a guilty plea would get him 15 years. Instead he got 28. The Dutchman is serving a murder sentence in the death of a 21 year old Peruvian student. The corpse of Stephany Flores was found in van der Sloot's Lima hotel room five years to the day of Natalee Holloway's disappearance on a graduation trip to Aruba. Van der Sloot confessed he killed Flores in a fit of rage after she found material about Natalee on his laptop. A court convicted him instead of killing and robbing her...hence the longer sentence. Van der Sloot is considered the prime suspect in Holloway's disappearance back in 2005. Natalee was last seen leaving an Aruban bar with van der Sloot and two of his friends. He was questioned but never charged by Aruban authorities. But he does face wire fraud charges after he was indicted by a federal grand jury here in Birmingham. The feds say he promised information about Natalee's fate to the Holloway family, took their money, but only gave them bogus information. It's believed he used the Holloway money to travel to Peru for a poker tournament. That's where he met Flores. The U.S. tried to extradite van der Sloot to face those federal charges but Peru is insisting he serve his murder time there first.

Van der Sloot sentence appeal under consideration

Birmingham, Ala (WIAT) Joran van der Sloot's 28 year murder sentence is under review by the Peruvian justice system. And any reduction of his prison term there could bring him to Birmingham to face federal charges he scammed the family of missing Mountain Brook teen Natalee Holloway. A court in Lima has accepted the paperwork in the case and turned it over to Peru's Supreme Court for review and evaluation. The crux of the appeal is that a former defense lawyer gave van der Sloot bad advice promising a guilty plea would get him 15 years. Instead he got 28. The Dutchman is serving a murder sentence in the death of a 21 year old Peruvian student. The corpse of Stephany Flores was found in van der Sloot's Lima hotel room five years to the day of Natalee Holloway's disappearance on a graduation trip to Aruba. Van der Sloot confessed he killed Flores in a fit of rage after she found material about Natalee on his laptop. A court convicted him instead of killing and robbing her...hence the longer sentence. Van der Sloot is considered the prime suspect in Holloway's disappearance back in 2005. Natalee was last seen leaving an Aruban bar with van der Sloot and two of his friends. He was questioned but never charged by Aruban authorities. But he does face wire fraud charges after he was indicted by a federal grand jury here in Birmingham. The feds say he promised information about Natalee's fate to the Holloway family, took their money, but only gave them bogus information. It's believed he used the Holloway money to travel to Peru for a poker tournament. That's where he met Flores. The U.S. tried to extradite van der Sloot to face those federal charges but Peru is insisting he serve his murder time there first.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Joran Van Der Sloot Blames Lawyer, Begs Forgiveness for Murder in New Letters

Joran Van Der Sloot Blames Lawyer, Begs Forgiveness for Murder in New Letters n two letters, Joran van der Sloot blamed his lawyers for his nearly three-decade prison sentence, while he reiterated he had nothing to do with the 2005 disappearance of Natalee Holloway and begged for forgiveness for the murder of Stephany Flores. Van der Sloot, 24, is serving 28 years in a Peruvian jail for the murder and robbery of Flores, a -21-year-old business student whose body was found in a Lima hotel room in May 2010, five years after the disappearance of Holloway. "I ask God every day that Stephany's parents can find it in their heart to forgive me," he reportedly wrote in the letters released by his attorney. Van der Sloot, a Dutch citizen who spent the majority of his adolescence in Caribbean island of Aruba, is the main suspect in the 2005 disappearance of Holloway, an 18-year-old from Mountain Brook, Ala., who was last seen leaving Oranjestad nightclub with van der Sloot, then 17, while she was on a class graduation trip to the island. He was arrested but has never been charged with a crime relating to her disappearance. Karel Navarro/AP Photo Joran van der Sloot looks back from his seat... View Full Size Van Der Sloot Pleads Guilty Watch Video 'The View' on Casey Anthony, Van Der Sloot Watch Video Joran van der Sloot Pleads Guilty to Murder Watch Video The letters, in which he refers to himself as a "psychological mess," were written in June but released this week by van der Sloot's attorney Max Altez, according to Reuters. In the letters he asserts that he has "nothing to do with" Holloway's disappearance, while blaming poor legal representation for his long prison sentence. He says that a previous lawyer told him if he pled guilty he would only be jailed for 15 years. "My rights have been constantly abused," van der Sloot reportedly wrote. "After bad legal advice in which my lawyer promised me I would receive 15 years if I plead guilty, I did … I have a history of psychological problems which were never taken into consideration." The Peruvian Supreme Court last month ruled that van der Sloot can be extradited to the U.S. to face charges that he extorted $25,000 from Holloway's mother, allegedly telling her that he could give her information that would lead to her daughter's body. On Sept. 6, 2010 Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf reported that van der Sloot admitted to the extortion, saying, "I wanted to get back at Natalee's family. Her parents have been making my life tough for five years." Van der Sloot confessed to the murder of Flores in January. He said that Flores had been using his laptop without his permission and discovered information linking him to Holloway's disappearance. He is now appealing the 28-year sentence. Flores died after suffering blunt force trauma to her head, which led to a brain hemorrhage, cranial fracture, and a broken neck. According to court documents her body also showed signs of asphyxiation.

Friday, May 11, 2012

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/09/joran-van-der-sloot-us-extradition_n_1503871.html all credir

A Peruvian court will soon issue a decision on whether to allow convicted killer Joran van der Sloot to be extradited to the United States on charges of extortion in the case of Natalee Holloway. The Dutchman may have far worse charges to fear, however, according to an international defense expert who said the extortion extradition is a ruse. "With all the bad guys running around -- Al Qaeda and other international terrorists -- do you really think the U.S. is going to go after every guy who tries to extort money from a U.S. citizen? Absolutely not. The U.S. wants to get ahold of him and charge him with Holloway's murder," said Michael Griffith, senior partner at the International Legal Defense Counsel. A U.S. federal grand jury indicted van der Sloot in June 2010, for soliciting money from Beth Holloway in exchange for information about her daughter, Natalee Holloway. The 18-year-old from Alabama disappeared on a trip to Aruba in 2005. Holloway's classmates said they last saw her leaving Carlos 'n Charlie's nightclub with van der Sloot, then a 17-year-old Dutch honors student living in Aruba, and his two friends, Surinamese brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe. All three young men were arrested in the case, but then were released and never charged. The alleged extortion plot began in March 2010, when van der Sloot reportedly agreed to provide Beth Holloway with details on her daughter's death and the location of her body in exchange for $250,000. A Holloway family attorney working with the FBI provided van der Sloot with an initial payment of $10,000 in cash and wired him an additional $15,000. Beth Holloway was to pay the remaining $225,000 upon confirmation of her daughter's remains. Van der Sloot kept the $25,000, but later confirmed by email that the information he provided was "worthless," according to the indictment. As authorities continued to build their case, van der Sloot used the $25,000 to fund a trip to play in a poker tournament in Peru, where he was arrested for the murder of 21-year-old Stephany Flores. The Peruvian business student was found stabbed to death in van der Sloot's Lima hotel room on June 2, 2010. Police in Peru say Flores was killed on May 30, the five-year anniversary of Holloway's disappearance. On Jan. 13, van der Sloot, 24, was sentenced to 28 years in prison for the murder of Stephany Flores. He could be paroled after serving one-third of his sentence. The process to extradite van der Sloot from Peru began in April, when a Peruvian judge approved a U.S. request for a provisional detention. On Tuesday, van der Sloot and his attorney appeared in court opposite representatives from the U.S. Embassy and the FBI. During the three-hour proceeding, U.S. officials presented their case against van der Sloot. Afterward, Judge Zenaida Vilca went over the details of the extradition request with the Dutchman. His attorney, Maximo Altez, said his client was against the extradition and said he did not feel he would get a fair trial in the U.S. "In the United States, they would find him guilty. Over there, Joran is, after Osama bin Laden, the most hated person there is," Altez told AFP. No decision was made at the close of the hearing. Vilca will make his recommendation to Peru's Supreme Court and if the court approves it, the case will go to the Ministry of Justice in Peru for a final decision. If extradited and convicted in the U.S., van der Sloot would face a five- to 10-year sentence for the alleged extortion. Under the U.S.-Peru extradition treaty, van der Sloot could be extradited only if he returns to complete his 28-year prison sentence. However, if his client is extradited, Altaz said he doubts van der Sloot would be returned to Peru. "Once he's in the U.S., there are no guarantees that he would not be charged with Holloway's murder," Altaz told ABC News. Griffith, a veteran attorney who has counseled and represented clients in more than 40 countries, also doubts van der Sloot would be returned to Peru. "It would be too much trouble and Peru would be getting rid of a huge public relations problem," Griffith said. "This case has cast a spotlight on their country and their prisons and, of course, they don't like that. They don't want their dirty clothes hung out in front of the press and that's what's been happening." Joran van der Sloot attends the continuation of his murder trial at San Pedro prison in Lima, Peru, on Jan. 11, 2012. Van der Sloot pleaded guilty on Wednesday to the 2010 murder of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman he met at a Lima casino who was killed five years to the day of the unsolved disappearance in Aruba of an American teen in which he remains the main suspect.Griffith said it is also likely that Ricardo Flores, father of Stephany Flores and a respected businessman who once ran for president, would likely support van der Sloot's possible incarceration in the U.S. "Van der Sloot is living like a king in that foreign prison," Griffith said. "In the States, they would probably put him in a supermax prison, where he would be on lockdown 23 hours a day." Griffin could be right about Ricardo Flores. In January, Flores complained to reporters that van der Sloot was enjoying favorable conditions in a Lima prison. "A jail isn't a five-star hotel," Flores said. In regard to Holloway, Altaz told ABC News, "no such evidence exists" connecting his client to Holloway's murder. Van der Sloot has, however, allegedly made multiple confessions in the case that may come back to haunt him: •In June 2005, he told police that he and Deepak and Satish Kalpoe went for a car ride with Holloway and then dropped her off at her hotel, where they last saw her stumbling toward the lobby. •Roughly five days later, van der Sloot gave a slightly different version to police, claiming he and Holloway had gone to a beach, but that she had insisted on being left there when he decided to catch a ride home. •In February 2006, a Dutch television station aired a hidden-camera confession that van der Sloot had made, claiming Holloway had died of a drug overdose at the beach and that he and a friend had dumped her body at sea. Following the broadcast, van der Sloot acknowledged making the comments, but said they were lies. •In November 2008, van der Sloot told Fox News host Greta Van Susteren that he had sold Holloway for $10,000 to a man he met in a casino. After the interview, van der Sloot called Fox and said he had been lying. •In March 2010, yet another statement by van der Sloot to the media was made public. In a 2009 interview with the German news agency RTL, van der Sloot said Holloway "fell" from a balcony and was killed. He hid Holloway's body in a swamp because he was afraid of being prosecuted, according to reports of the interview, which never aired. While the confessions alone might not be enough, Griffith said authorities in the U.S. could target the Kalpoe brothers -- even though neither is considered a suspect or person of interest in the case. "They could put pressure on them -- say to their lawyers, 'we want to serve you with a subpoena and we want their cooperation and we'll give them immunity from any charges. If you don't, we'll give their names to Interpol and have them added to the stop list.'" Griffith added, "They could be the weak link in the chain. They were with him that night." According to Peruvian media outlets, a decision on the indictment could take several weeks. Joran van der Sloot

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

credit CNN

CNN) -- Joran van der Sloot told a judge and prosecutor Tuesday that he would prefer to finish serving a 28-year murder sentence in Peru rather than be extradited to the United States to face charges related to the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, his Peruvian lawyer said. Representatives from the U.S. Embassy and the FBI attended the extradition hearing, which was not open to the public, Maximo Altez told InSession on Tru TV. A conviction in the United States could affect van der Sloot's chances of being paroled in Peru, said Altez. He noted that a long-standing extradition treaty between the two countries means that van der Sloot will likely be extradited, despite his stated preference about remaining in Peru. Peruvian judges in January sentenced the Dutchman to 28 years in prison for the murder in 2010 of Stephany Flores. He is also the prime suspect in the disappearance of Holloway. U.S. authorities want to try van der Sloot on charges of extortion and wire fraud in the Holloway case. I think he will be extradited within the next three months," Altez said last month. "He will go to trial in the United States. Once he is sentenced, he will return to Peru to finish serving his 28 years, and then go back to the States to serve whatever sentence he gets there." In June 2010, a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted him after allegations that he tried to extort $250,000 from Holloway's mother, Beth Holloway. Van der Sloot offered to provide what turned out to be bogus information about the whereabouts of Holloway's remains in exchange for the money, according to the indictment. He was allegedly given $25,000, which authorities say he used to travel to Peru for a poker tournament. If found guilty of extortion, he could be sentenced to 25 years in prison. Van der Sloot admitted to killing Flores, 21, in his Lima hotel room. The judges gave him a sentence two years short of the 30-year maximum. They ordered he be expelled from Peru at the end of his sentence and required him to pay about $74,500 in reparations to Flores' relatives. Van der Sloot confessed to robbery in addition to murder, admitting that he stole Flores' belongings, including more than $300 in local currency, credit cards and the victim's van as a means to leave the country. He fled to Chile and was arrested a few days later. Another van der Sloot attorney, Jose Luis Jimenez, has said that his client was under special stress the day of the 2010 murder, which marked five years after Holloway, an 18-year-old from Alabama, disappeared while vacationing on Aruba. Van der Sloot, who was among the last people reported to have been seen with Holloway, was detained twice but never charged in the case. "The world had been against him for five years before this case, for a murder he said he never committed and for which there is no evidence whatsoever," Jimenez has said. Investigators have said they believe van der Sloot killed Flores after she found something related to the Holloway case on his computer while visiting him in his hotel room. The two met while van der Sloot was in town for the poker tournament. Judges described how Flores hit van der Sloot in the face after reading the item on Holloway, leading him to hit her in the face with his elbow. Flores fainted and van der Sloot tried to strangle her, but she was still breathing, so he suffocated her with his shirt. Van der Sloot then tried to clean the room by removing the sheets and changing his bloodied shirt, they said. He was caught in a taxi near the Chilean central coastal city of Vina del Mar. Holloway's body has not been found, and no one has been charged in relation to the case in Aruba. About 6½ years after Holloway was last reported seen, in May 2005, she was declared legally dead.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Joran van der Sloot

UPDATE: 8: 19 p.m. -- The process to extradite Joran van der Sloot from Peru to the United States has begun, CNN reports. Documents obtained by Maximo Altez, van der Sloot's attorney, show a judge has approved the U.S. request for a provisional detention, the first step in sending him to America to face charges for extorting money from the mother of missing teen Natalee Holloway. PREVIOUSLY: Joran van der Sloot, the convicted killer of a young Peruvian woman and the prime suspect in the disappearance of missing American teen Natalee Holloway, could soon be extradited to the United States. Van der Sloot's attorney, Maximo Altez, has confirmed Peruvian authorities are evaluating a request by the U.S. to extradite the Dutchman for extorting Holloway's mother. Altez said his client is afraid of extradition because U.S. prisons have a reputation for being "very hard" on inmates, according to the Associated Press. On Jan. 13, Van der Sloot, 24, was sentenced to 28 years in prison for the murder of Stephany Flores. The Peruvian business student was found stabbed to death in van der Sloot's Lima hotel room on June 2, 2010. Police in Peru say Flores, 21, was killed on May 30, the five-year anniversary of the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, an 18-year-old from Mountain Brook, Ala., who vanished while on a class trip to Aruba. She was last seen leaving an Oranjestad nightclub with van der Sloot, then a 17-year-old Dutch honors student living in Aruba. Holloway's body has never been found, and van der Sloot has not been charged in her disappearance. He was, however, indicted in the U.S. on charges that he extorted $25,000 from the young woman's parents. Prosecutors said that in exchange for the money, he promised to reveal how Holloway died and the location of her body. Van der Sloot would probably face a five- to 10-year sentence for the alleged extortion. The most recent developments were predicted months ago by Michael Griffith, senior partner at the International Legal Defense Counsel. In a previous interview with The Huffington Post, Griffith, whose most renowned case, involving an American incarcerated in a Turkish prison, was the basis for the film and book "Midnight Express." said he expected van der Sloot to be extradited. However, Griffith said the move would likely be a ploy so the U.S. could get him in their grips for Holloway’s alleged murder -- something that could earn him a life sentence. "The key to that is that the U.S. has jurisdiction over anybody, anywhere in the world, who kills or injures a U.S. citizen. It kind of originated with the Leon Klinghoffer case," said Griffith. In 1985, Klinghoffer, 69, and his wife were celebrating their 36th wedding anniversary on the cruise ship Achille Lauro. Palestinian terrorists hijacked the liner, and Klinghoffer was murdered and thrown overboard. The hijackers were later given safe passage on a flight to Tunisia, but U.S. military forces intercepted the plane and forced it to land in Italy, where the suspects were taken into custody. That principle, which has been used in limited cases, is being used more often today and could be applied to the Holloway case. Van der Sloot's alleged statements, along with his previous confessions in the case, are enough for U.S. authorities to make a circumstantial murder case against him, Griffith said. Joran van der Sloot attends the continuation of his murder trial at San Pedro prison in Lima, Peru, on Jan. 11, 2012. Van der Sloot pleaded guilty on Wednesday to the 2010 murder of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman he met at a Lima casino who was killed five years to the day of the unsolved disappearance in Aruba of an American teen in which he remains the main suspect. Whether or not van der Sloot is charged with murder in the U.S. is yet to be seen. However, Max Altez, the attorney who briefly represented van der Sloot after his arrest in the Flores case, said he expects authorities in Peru to agree to the extradition. He also expects his former client to be found guilty of extortion. "He will be sentenced in U.S. and then be brought to Peru to serve his sentence for the murder of Stephany Flores," Altez predicted to News America . Authorities in Peru have yet to comment on when they will make a decision on the extradition. Meanwhile, van der Sloot remains imprisoned at Piedras Gordas prison in Ancon. credit huffingtonpost

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Natalee Holloway Suspect To Be Extradited To U.S.

Joran Van Der Sloot, the prime suspect in the disappearance of American Natalee Holloway in Aruba in 2005, will soon be extradited to the U.S. to face charges of extortion. He is currently in Peru serving 28 years for the 2010 murder of Stephany Flores, who was stabbed to death in his hotel room. Van Der Sloot confessed to the murder as well as robbery, saying he took cash and the victim’s car in which to escape. The 24-year old was the last person to see Natalee Holloway alive and told authorities he would lead them to her body and reveal how she died in exchange for $250,000. He was allegedly given $25,000 by Holloway’s mother, Beth, which he used to travel without revealing any of the promised information. He faces a sentence of 25 years if found guilty of extortion, and the extradition will commence within the next few months. But some think the U.S. courts want Van Der Sloot here in the states so that a trial can be held regarding Holloway’s death, which will be difficult since her body has never been found. She has, however, been declared legally dead, and officials believe Van Der Sloot murdered Stephany Flores because she found incriminating evidence on his computer. “The key to that is that the U.S. has jurisdiction over anybody, anywhere in the world, who kills or injures a U.S. citizen,” said Michael Griffith, senior partner for the International Legal Defense Council. On Van Der Sloot’s future, his Peruvian attorney, Maximo Altez, said, “I think he will be extradited within the next three months. He will go to trial in the United States. Once he is sentenced, he will return to Peru to finish serving his 28 years, and then go back to the States to serve whatever sentence he gets there.”

Friday, January 13, 2012


Click to play
Van der Sloot sentenced to 28 years

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: With time served, Joran van der Sloot will be released in 2038
  • Judges order van der Sloot to pay about $74,500 in reparations
  • He's also ordered expelled from Peru after completing his sentence
  • Van der Sloot was visibly upset after the sentencing
(CNN) -- Peruvian judges on Friday sentenced Dutch national Joran van der Sloot to 28 years in prison and ordered him to pay thousands of dollars in reparations for the killing of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman in 2010.
Van der Sloot, who was visibly upset after the decision was issued, admitted this week to killing Stephany Flores in his Lima hotel room. The judges said they took his confession into account, but they still gave him a sentence two years short of the 30-year maximum.
With time served, it means van der Sloot is scheduled to be released June 10, 2038.
The defendant, 24, stood for much of the more than two-hour session and perspired through his green t-shirt. He drank three cups of water and frequently wiped his face.
The judges ordered van der Sloot expelled from Peru at the end of his sentence and ordered him to pay 200,000 Peruvian new soles, or about $74,500, in reparations to Flores' closest relatives.
Van der Sloot confessed to robbery in addition to murder, admitting that he stole Flores' belongings, including 850 soles (more than $300), credit cards, and the victim's van as a means to leave the country. He fled to Chile and was arrested a few days later.

Van der Sloot pleads guilty to murder

Natalee Holloway declared legally dead

Joran van der Sloot: 'I feel very bad'

Nancy Grace: 'Cut his mic'
It was an apparent attempt to win a more lenient sentence, using a plea called an "anticipated conclusion of the process" under Peruvian law. Five days earlier, the three judges delayed the start of van der Sloot's trial after he declined to give a plea after expressing reservations about the "aggravating factors" tied to admitting his guilt.
Van der Sloot's attorney, Jose Luis Jimenez, pressed earlier this week for a shorter sentence.
Jimenez claimed that his client was under special stress the day the 2010 murder occurred, which marked five years after Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway went missing in Aruba.
Van der Sloot -- who, with two others, was among the last people seen with Holloway - was detained twice, but never charged, in the high-profile international case.
"He was pointed at and persecuted. The world had been against him for five years before this case, for a murder he said he never committed and for which there is no evidence whatsoever," said Jimenez.
Investigators have said they believe van der Sloot killed Flores after she found something related to the Holloway case on his computer while visiting him in his hotel room. The two met while van der Sloot was in town for a poker tournament.
Judges on Friday recounted the crime in detail. They described how Flores hit van der Sloot in the face after reading the item on Holloway, leading him to hit her in the face with his elbow. Flores fainted and van der Sloot tried to strangle her, but she was still breathing and so he suffocated her with his shirt.
Van der Sloot then tried to clean the room by removing the sheets and changing his bloodied shirt, they said.
He was ultimately caught while traveling alone in a taxi near the Chilean central coastal city of Vina del Mar.
Holloway's body has never been found, and no one has been charged in relation to the case in Aruba. But van der Sloot does face possible extradition to the United States in a related matter.
In June 2010, a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted him on charges of wire fraud and extortion after allegations surfaced that he tried to extort $250,000 from Holloway's mother, Beth. Van der Sloot offered to provide what turned out to be bogus information about the whereabouts of Holloway's remains in exchange for the money, according to the indictment.
He was allegedly given a total of $25,000, and authorities believe he used that money to travel to Peru for the poker tournament.
Thursday, about six and a half years after Holloway went missing, Alabama Probate Judge Alan King signed an order declaring the teenager legally dead.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Natalee Holloway legally dead

Natalee Holloway legally dead

By msnbc.com staff and news servicesBIRMINGHAM, Ala. - An Alabama judge agreed Thursday to declare Natalee Holloway legally dead, more than six years after the teenager vanished on the Caribbean island of Aruba.
Judge Alan King announced his decision at a hearing Thursday requested by the teen's father, Dave Holloway, who was in court with Beth Holloway, his ex-wife and Natalee's mother. He told the judge in September he believed his daughter had died and he wanted to stop paying her medical insurance and use her college fund for her brother.
Thursday's hearing had been scheduled before a suspect questioned in Holloway's disappearance, Dutchman Joran van der Sloot, pleaded guilty Wednesday in Peru to the 2010 murder of a woman there.

Natalee Holloway disappeared on a high school graduation trip May 30, 2005. She was last seen leaving a bar with van der Sloot. Her body was never found.
One of Dave Holloway's attorneys, J. Mark White, said at Thursday's hearing, "No evidence has been found that Natalee Holloway is alive," reported The Birmingham News.
Dave Holloway said he had expected to hear the judge would declare his daughter dead because he had no doubt about that. "We've been dealing with her death for the last six and a half years," he said.
He added that the judge's order closes one chapter in a long story, but added: "We've still got a long way to go to get justice.
Beth Holloway, Natalee's mom, didn't speak at the hearing, but her lawyer said she supported the request to declare her daughter legally dead, according to The Birmingham News.

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Natalee Holloway of Mountain Brook, Ala. went missing while on a high school graduation trip in Aruba.
Holloway suspect: I killed woman in Peru
On Wednesday, Van der Sloot pleaded guilty to the 2010 murder of Stephany Flores, a 21-year-old woman who died five years to the day after the disappearance of Holloway.
Van der Sloot was arrested twice in the Holloway case but he was never charged due to a lack of evidence. Holloway's family has criticized Dutch authorities for not making more progress in the case.
Van der Sloot has told police he strangled Flores, a skilled poker player and the daughter of a wealthy businessman, after he found her looking at his laptop computer in his hotel room.
The laptop contained emails about Holloway's death.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Judge asked to declare Natalee Holloway dead

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A judge holds a hearing Thursday on whether to sign a court order declaring Natalee Holloway dead more than six years after she disappeared in Aruba. The hearing comes one day after a suspect questioned in her disappearance, Joran van der Sloot, pleaded guilty to killing a woman in Peru.
Jefferson County Probate Judge Alan King is hearing a request by Natalee Holloway's father to have her declared dead. The judge ruled in September that Dave Holloway had met the legal presumption of death and it was up to someone to prove she didn't die on a high school graduation trip. The father's attorney, Mark White, says no new evidence has come forward and he will ask the judge to rule her dead.
Attorneys say both parents plan to attend.
Dutch national Joran Van der Sloot as he arrived for a court hearing earlier today (Jan. 11, 2012) at the Lurigancho prison in Lima.
Dutch national Joran Van der Sloot as he arrived for a court hearing earlier today (Jan. 11, 2012) at the Lurigancho prison in Lima.
Ernesto Benavides /AFP/Getty Images
Dutch national Joran Van der Sloot as he arrived for a court hearing earlier today (Jan. 11, 2012) at the Lurigancho prison in Lima.
Joran van der Sloot, the main suspect in the 2005 disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway in Aruba, this morning pleaded guilty to the 2010 murder of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman, Stephany Flores, in Lima.
The Associated Press reports that van der Sloot told a court in Lima that "yes, I want to plead guilty. I wanted from the first moment to confess sincerely. ... I truly am sorry for this act. I feel very bad."
The wire service adds that:
"Van der Sloot claimed in a confession shortly after the May 30, 2010, murder [of Flores] that he killed her in a fit of rage after she discovered on his laptop his connection to the disappearance of Holloway. But prosecutors say Van der Sloot killed Flores, a business student from a prominent family, in order to rob her after learning she had won money at the casino where the two met."
CNN, which live blogged today's court hearing, says van der Sloot will be sentenced on Friday. The news network says that:
"The 24-year-old Dutch national faces a sentence of 30 years in prison, but his attorney hopes his guilty plea, called an 'anticipated conclusion of the process,' will reduce that term."
As NBC-TV's The Today Show reminds us, "van der Sloot was arrested twice in the Holloway case but he was never charged due to a lack of evidence. Holloway's family has criticized Dutch authorities for not making more progress in the case."

Van der Sloot returns to court to face murder charge

CNN) -- Joran van der Sloot returns to a Peruvian courtroom on Wednesday, where he is expected to plead guilty to killing a young woman, his lawyer told CNN.
The 24-year-old Dutch national indicated on Friday that he was willing to make a "confession" in the 2010 killing of Stephany Flores, but that he did "not agree with the aggravating factors" as defined in the murder charge levied against him.
Given this statement, the panel of three judges decided to give van der Sloot until Wednesday to make a final decision. There is no jury.
This was the latest twist in a case that has made international headlines, in part because of the circumstances of the killing but also because van der Sloot was arrested twice, but never charged, in the 2005 disappearance of U.S. teenager Natalee Holloway.
Police say van der Sloot killed Flores in his Lima hotel room in May 2010, then took money and bank cards from her wallet and fled to Chile, where he was arrested a few days later.
His lawyer, Jose Luis Jimenez, said he expects van der Sloot to enter a guilty plea known as an "anticipated conclusion of the process." This means that he would admit guilt and accept all the charges made against him by the prosecution.
The hope is that this strategy will result in a substantial reduction in the 30-year prison sentence he faces, Jimenez said.

Peru awaits van der Sloot conclusion

Odd turns ahead of van der Sloot trial

Van Der Sloot friend speaks out on trial

A 'bored' van der Sloot postpones plea
Van der Sloot sues nation of Chile
He is charged with "qualified murder" and simple robbery in the killing of 21-year-old Flores.
If he pleads not guilty, then the trial will resume before the all-female judicial panel. If he pleads guilty, the sentencing phase would begin.
On Friday, prosecutors went over all the evidence and witnesses they had and gave a summation of the case against van der Sloot.
During the hearing, a judge criticized van der Sloot for yawning, slouching and showing disrespect to the court.
What people don't know is that he had been transferred to the courthouse at six in the morning and kept in a hot holding cell for four hours, wearing a bulletproof vest and jacket the whole time, Jimenez said. He hadn't slept well because he was nervous about the process and was handcuffed the entire time, he said.
The lawyer asked the court to handle van der Sloot's arrival differently Wednesday, but there were no assurances of that, he said.
The case of Holloway, who vanished in 2005 while on a graduation trip to the Caribbean island of Aruba, is part of the Peru case as well. Holloway was last seen leaving a nightclub with van der Sloot and two other men. Van der Sloot was arrested twice but never charged in Holloway's disappearance, which is still unsolved.
Jimenez pointed out last week that the fatal attack on Flores occurred exactly five years after the Alabama teenager went missing. It has been widely reported that van der Sloot killed the woman after he believed she saw something on the Internet relating to Holloway.
"He is a young man ... who has practically lived persecuted for a crime he says he did not commit ... or for a disappearance that he cannot explain," the lawyer said. "Movies and books have been made ... At that age, and with other characteristics of his psychological profile ... in that moment, he felt threatened and reacted in a brutal manner."
The victim's family, including her father, Ricardo Flores, had pushed for stiffer charges and said that van der Sloot hasn't looked "remorseful" in court appearances.
"He had an indifferent and prideful attitude. He looks as if he has everything under control. He looks better than when he appeared on TV after he was arrested," Ricardo Flores told CNN last year.
Besides the Flores murder trial, van der Sloot also faces possible extradition to the United States. In June 2010, a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted him on charges of wire fraud and extortion after allegations surfaced that he tried to extort $250,000 from Holloway's mother, Beth.
He was allegedly given a total of $25,000, and authorities believe he used that money to travel to Peru and participate in a poker tournament, where he met Flores.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Van der Sloot postpones plea

Joran van der Sloot on Friday asked for more time to "reflect" on what plea he will make during his murder trial, shortly after his attorney indicating the 24-year-old Dutch man suddenly had changed his strategy in relation to the killing.
Earlier in the day, his attorney said van der Sloot was expected to plead guilty to all charges, but when it came time to tell the court, he asked instead for more time.
When asked for a plea by the magistrates, van der Sloot said he wanted to give a "sincere confession" -- a type of guilty plea that can qualify him for a reduced sentence -- but did not agree with all of the charges against him. When the judge
The trial is postponed until Wednesday, when van der Sloot is expected to finally give his plea. He is charged with "qualified murder" and simple robbery in the killing of 21-year-old Stephany Flores.
On Friday, prosecutors went over all the evidence and witnesses they had and gave a summation of the case against van der Sloot.
The Dutch national was considered the prime suspect in the case of Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway, who vanished in 2005 while on a graduation trip to the Caribbean island of Aruba. She was last seen leaving a nightclub with van der Sloot and two other men. Van der Sloot was arrested twice but never charged in connection with Holloway's disappearance, which is still unsolved.
He now stands accused of killing Flores in his Lima hotel room in May 2010. Police say he took money and bank cards from her wallet and fled to Chile, where he was arrested a few days later.
Van der Sloot faces a sentence of up to 30 years in prison. Flores' family later tried -- unsuccessfully -- to convince three judges from the superior court of Lima to impose an even more serious slate of charges that could have included a life sentence.
The victim's family, including her father, Ricardo Flores, had pushed for stiffer charges and said that van der Sloot hasn't looked "remorseful" in court appearances.
"He had an indifferent and prideful attitude. He looks as if he has everything under control. He looks better than when he appeared on TV after he was arrested," Ricardo Flores told CNN last year.
Three judges are presiding over van der Sloot's trial, and there is no jury.
Besides the Flores murder trial, van der Sloot also faces extradition to the United States. In June 2010, a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted him on charges of wire fraud and extortion after allegations surfaced that he tried to extort $250,000 from Holloway's mother. He was given a total of $25,000, and authorities believe he used that money to travel to Peru and participate in a poker tournament, where he met Flores.
Holloway's father told HLN's "Nancy Grace" show on Friday night that he felt van der Sloot appeared intent on trying to "cause ... issues and problems" during his court appearance. The father said he that believed the Dutch national seemed to be trying to manipulate the Peruvian system, saying he felt he'd done the same in court appearances in Aruba surrounding his daughter's disappearance.
"He's done this many times before," Dave Holloway said. "I think this was all planned outasked for clarification, he said he needed more time to decide his plea.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Van Der Sloot Trial Under Way In Peru

In a last-minute defense strategy change, Joran van der Sloot is expected to plead guilty to all the charges against him in connection with the killing of a Peruvian woman, his lawyer told CNN Friday.
The original plan going into the trial, which began Friday in Lima, Peru, was to admit to killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores, but to fight more stringent charges that could land him more time in prison, attorney Luis Jimenez said.
Jimenez said the intention of the new strategy is to give a "sincere confession," which under Peruvian law can qualify him for a more lenient sentence.
If van der Sloot goes forward with this approach, he could be sentenced as early as next week.
The trial got under way Friday with the prosecutor going over for the court the witnesses and evidence collected against van der Sloot.
The Dutch national was considered the prime suspect in the case of Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway, who vanished in 2005 while on a graduation trip to the Caribbean island of Aruba. She was last seen leaving a nightclub with van der Sloot and two other men. Van der Sloot was arrested twice but never charged in connection with Holloway's disappearance, which is still unsolved.
He now stands accused of killing Flores in his Lima hotel room in May 2010. Police say he took money and bank cards from her wallet and fled to Chile, where he was arrested a few days later.
Van der Sloot was charged last September with "qualified murder" and simple robbery, which together could carry a sentence of up to 30 years in prison. Flores' family later tried -- unsuccessfully -- to convince three judges from the superior court of Lima to impose an even more serious slate of charges that could have included a life sentence.
The victim's family, including her father Ricardo Flores, had pushed for stiffer charges and claimed that van der Sloot hasn't looked "remorseful" in court appearances.
"He had an indifferent and prideful attitude. He looks as if he has everything under control. He looks better than when he appeared on TV after he was arrested," Ricardo Flores told CNN last year.
Three judges are presiding over van der Sloot's trial, and there is no jury.
Besides the Flores murder trial, van der Sloot also faces extradition charges to the United States. In June 2010, a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted him on charges of wire fraud and extortion after allegations surfaced that he tried to extort $250,000 from Holloway's mother. He was given a total of $25,000, and authorities believe he used that money to travel to Peru and participate in a poker tournament, where he met Flores.
InSession's Jean Casarez and Mayra Cuevas contributed to this report.

Joran van der Sloot charged in Natalee Holloway extortion plot on day he's arrested for Peru murder

Police officers take Joran van der Sloot, right, into custody after his arrest in a Santiago, Chile, Thursday.



On the same day police nabbed Joran Van der Sloot in the murder of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman, the Dutch man was hit with extortion charges in connection with high-profile crime that first put his name in headlines - the disappearance of American teen Natalee Holloway.
The criminal complaint filed in federal court in Birmingham, Ala., Thursday accused Van der Sloot of promising to divulge the location of Holloway's body in return for $250,000 last month, the Associated Press reported.
The target of the alleged extortion plot was not named, but Holloway's family hails from Mountain Brook, Ala.
Van der Sloot, 22, was caught by Chilean police Thursday in a Santiago neighborhood, ending an international manhunt for the suspect in the murder of Stephany Flores.
The daughter of a famous Peruvian racecar driver, Flores was killed in a Lima, Peru hotel room May 30 – five years to the day after Holloway disappeared in Aruba in 2005 while on a trip to celebrate her high school graduation.
Both women were last seen alive with Van der Sloot.
Holloway, then 18, met Van der Sloot at a nightclub.
Her body was never recovered, and Van der Sloot was never charged in the disappearance, despite being taken into custody twice during the investigation and confessing to her murder.
Van der Sloot slipped out of Peru to Chile Monday before Flores' battered body was discovered in the hotel room two days later.
Beth Twitty, Holloway's mother, released a statement Thursday stating that she "extends her deepest sympathy to the family of Stephany Flores Ramirez and prays for swift and sure justice."

Joran Van der Sloot ate breakfast, drank coffee as he mulled fate of Stephany Flores' body: report

The chilling details of Joran Van der Sloot's alleged confession paint the picture of a cold-blooded killer.
The young Dutchman reportedly told Peruvian investigators he sat and sipped an espresso in his hotel room while the dead body of Stephany Flores lay sprawled on the floor, according to La Republica.
"I was going to use one of the traveling bags to take the body out of the hotel," Van der Sloot told police, the Spanish-language paper reports. "I didn't because I was afraid to be confronted because I was leaving without paying."
The 22-year-old ate several biscuits and reportedly took several amphetamine pills as he considered what to do with his alleged victim.
Fearing he would be caught, the paper reports, Van der Sloot showered, got dressed - leaving his clothes from the night before on the bed - and fled at 8:45 a.m. on May 30, less than three hours after he'd arrived at the hotel with Flores.
Authorities believe Van der Sloot had possibly thought to get rid of the body in the ocean, based on maps charting currents found in his backpack when he was arrested in Chile.
The body of 21-year-old Flores was found in Van der Sloot's room at Hotel Tac last week. The Dutch citizen was arrested days later in Chile, after fleeing Peru.
According to earlier reports, Van der Sloot allegedly killed Flores after she used his laptop and learned of his involvement in the Natalee Halloway disappearance in 2005. He is widely suspected of murdering the young Alabama high school student.

Joran Van Der Sloot, suspect in Natalee Holloway’s disappearance, to begin murder trial


 In this file photo, Dutch citizen Joran Van der Sloot is escorted by police officers outside a Peruvian police station.




Joran van der Sloot, a Dutch citizen widely suspected in the disappearance of American teen Natalee Holloway, will begin his trial for murder on Friday in Peru.
Van Der Sloot, 24, is charged with “qualified murder” in the death of Stephany Flores, a 21-year-old Peruvian woman in his Lima hotel room in 2010.
The trial comes nearly seven years after Van der Sloot made international headlines as the main suspect in the Alabama teen's disappearance. Since then, he has described himself as a pathological liar in interviews and often contacts Holloway's family, baiting them with knowledge of their missing daughter. Most recently, American officials say he extorted $25,000 from Holloway's mother offering her to lead her to her daughter's body in Aruba.
There is no evidence that he followed through on that promise.
Authorities say that Van Der Sloot confessed to killing Flores, the Peruvian woman, after he saw her looking at stories about Holloway on his computer in his hotel room. Her family's lawyers, who are allowed to participate in the trial under Peruvian law, also believe that he killed her to steal money from Flores that she won at the casino where they met.
Van der Sloot's lawyers told the Associated Press that his confession was made without an attorney or proper translator present and will argue that he was in a state of distress when he killed Flores, and hope to reduce the charges to from first degree-murder to simple homicide.
"He is a young man ... who has practically lived persecuted for a crime he says he did not commit ... or for a disappearance that he cannot explain," his lawyer told CNN. "Movies and books have been made ... At that age, and with other characteristics of his psychological profile, ... in that moment, he felt threatened and reacted in a brutal manner."
If Van der Sloot’s lawyers are successful, he would face between eight and 20 years in prison, the AP reported. If he is convicted of first degree murder, he could face life.
His lawyers told the AP that their client is doing well in prison, reading self-help books and doing crafts.
"His mood is super good," his lawyer, Jose Luis Jimenez said.
Twitty, Holloway's mother, had no comment on the case when the Associated Press reached her by phone
Joran van der Sloot goes on trial in the murder of a young Peruvian woman Friday, nearly seven years after he became the prime suspect in the unsolved disappearance of an American teenager on holiday in Aruba.
Van der Sloot, 24, is charged with killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores in his Lima hotel room on May 30, 2010, after the two left a casino together in the day's wee hours.
The slaying happened five years to the day after the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, a 19-year-old from Alabama who was celebrating her high school graduation on the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba and was seen leaving a nightclub with Van der Sloot. Her body has never been found.
Authorities say Van der Sloot confessed to killing Flores, claiming he became enraged after she discovered his connection to Holloway.
His attorney says the confession should be voided because the defense lawyer present when he made it was state-appointed and no official translator was present.
Police and Flores' family dispute Van der Sloot's version of her death that the defendant was hard up for cash and knew the Peruvian business student had been winning at the casino.
Prosecutors are seeking a 30-year prison sentence for Van der Sloot on murder and theft charges in a trial that will be held at Lima's Lurigancho prison. He is accused of murdering Flores with "ferocity and great cruelty," and prosecutors say he also stole 600 soles, about $220, from the victim.
The handsome, garrulous Dutchman, a staple of true-crime TV shows for years after Holloway's disappearance, has in several interviews described himself as a pathological liar. He's been in custody after his arrest in neighboring Chile just days after Flores' death.
Van der Sloot shares a cell with a Mexican and a Chinese inmate at the maximum security Miguel Castro Castro prison, separated from convicted prisoners, said his lawyer, Jose Luis Jimenez.
He said Van der Sloot spends his days making crafts and reading self-help books.
"His mood is super good," Jimenez said during a telephone interview Wednesday.
The defendant has granted several jailhouse interviews to media and was confronted there in September 2010 by Holloway's mother, Beth Holloway Twitty, when she accompanied a Dutch television crew. Her lawyer, John Kelly, said at the time that she was determined to get answers about her daughter.
The Associated Press reached Twitty by telephone on Thursday and she had said she no comment on the trial or whether she feels any closer to knowing her daughter's fate.
Van der Sloot has told several people he was involved in Holloway's disappearance, only to later deny it.
U.S. law enforcement officials say he extorted $25,000 from Twitty after offering to lead Kelly to Holloway's body in Aruba, using the money to fly to Lima on May 14, 2010, just days after meeting with Kelly.
The defense will argue that Van der Sloot killed Flores in a state of emotional distress.
"We will challenge the aggravating factors (charged by the prosecution) and seek to reduce the charge from first-degree murder to simple homicide," Jimenez said. That charge carries a prison sentence of from eight to 20 years.
He said his client, whose prominent lawyer father died of a heart attack on an Aruba tennis court in February 2010, was in a fragile state from years of being under suspicion for Holloway's presumed death and other legal problems stemming from that case.
"The killing was impromptu. There was no planning to carry it out," Jimenez said.
Lawyers for Flores' family, who are allowed to participate in the trial under Peruvian law, will try to show that Van der Sloot killed the woman to steal money she won at the casino.
If the court finds that to be true, a conviction could result in Van der Sloot being sentenced to life in prison.
"This guy wanted to take the money of the girl because he, in communications he had with his friends in Holland through Facebook and email, stated that he had no money, that he had no money or food, that his stay in Peru was hard and he told them: 'I am on the verge of prostitution,"' family lawyer Edward Alvarez said in an interview.
Alvarez predicted Van der Sloot would plead guilty Friday in an effort to get a reduced sentence.
Jimenez, the defense attorney, ruled out that possibility.
He said that would require his client to make a confession that accepted all the charges alleged by the prosecution.
The lawyer didn't dispute that Van der Sloot confessed to the killing, but he said the Dutchman's rudimentary Spanish didn't allow him to respond properly during his interrogation.
Van der Sloot met Flores, the daughter of a circus promoter and former race car driver, at the Atlantic Casino in Lima.
Video from casino cameras show the two playing at the same table, then leaving together.
In his confession, Van der Sloot said they planned to play Internet poker at the down-market TAC Hotel where he was staying.
He said in his confession that while they were playing, his computer received an instant message on his links to the Holloway case. He said Flores then struck him, and he became enraged and strangled her.
Hotel video shows Van der Sloot entering the hotel with Flores then leaving alone a few hours later. Her body was found in the hotel room three days later.
Two days later, the Dutchman was arrested in Chile.
That same day, he was charged in Alabama with trying to extort the Holloway family in return for disclosing the location of Natalee Holloway's body.

Joran van der Sloot goes on trial in the murder of a young Peruvian woman Friday

LIMA, Peru — Joran van der Sloot goes on trial in the murder of a young Peruvian woman Friday, nearly seven years after he became the prime suspect in the unsolved disappearance of an American teenager on holiday in Aruba.
Van der Sloot, 24, is charged with killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores in his Lima hotel room on May 30, 2010, after the two left a casino together in the day's wee hours.
The slaying happened five years to the day after the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, a 19-year-old from Alabama who was celebrating her high school graduation on the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba and was seen leaving a nightclub with Van der Sloot. Her body has never been found.
Authorities say Van der Sloot confessed to killing Flores, claiming he became enraged after she discovered his connection to Holloway.
His attorney says the confession should be voided because the defense lawyer present when he made it was state-appointed and no official translator was present.
Police and Flores' family dispute Van der Sloot's version of her death that the defendant was hard up for cash and knew the Peruvian business student had been winning at the casino.
Prosecutors are seeking a 30-year prison sentence for Van der Sloot on murder and theft charges in a trial that will be held at Lima's Lurigancho prison. He is accused of murdering Flores with "ferocity and great cruelty," and prosecutors say he also stole 600 soles, about $220, from the victim.
The handsome, garrulous Dutchman, a staple of true-crime TV shows for years after Holloway's disappearance, has in several interviews described himself as a pathological liar. He's been in custody after his arrest in neighboring Chile just days after Flores' death.
Van der Sloot shares a cell with a Mexican and a Chinese inmate at the maximum security Miguel Castro Castro prison, separated from convicted prisoners, said his lawyer, Jose Luis Jimenez.
He said Van der Sloot spends his days making crafts and reading self-help books.
"His mood is super good," Jimenez said during a telephone interview Wednesday.
The defendant has granted several jailhouse interviews to media and was confronted there in September 2010 by Holloway's mother, Beth Holloway Twitty, when she accompanied a Dutch television crew. Her lawyer, John Q. Kelly, said at the time that she was determined to get answers about her daughter.
The Associated Press reached Twitty by telephone on Thursday and she said she no comment on the trial or whether she feels any closer to knowing her daughter's fate.
Van der Sloot has told several people he was involved in Holloway's disappearance, only to later deny it.
U.S. officials, who have indicted him on extortion and fraud charges, say Van der Sloot extorted $25,000 from Twitty after offering to lead Kelly to Holloway's body in Aruba, using the money to fly to Lima on May 14, 2010, just days after meeting with Kelly.
"I don't think he'll ever give the details of Natalee's disappearance," said Kelly, because "he gravitates toward the limelight and (maintaining the mystery is) his main method of gaining attention."
Van der Sloot's attorney, Jimenez will argue that his client was in a state of emotional distress when he killed Flores and "seek to reduce the charge from first-degree murder to simple homicide." The latter carries a prison sentence of from eight to 20 years.
Jimenez said his client, whose prominent lawyer father died of a heart attack on an Aruba tennis court in February 2010, was in a fragile state from years of being under suspicion for Holloway's presumed death and other legal problems stemming from that case.
"The killing was impromptu. There was no planning to carry it out," Jimenez said.
Lawyers for Flores' family, who are allowed to participate in the trial under Peruvian law, will try to show that Van der Sloot killed her to steal money she won at the casino.
If the court finds that to be true, a conviction could result in Van der Sloot being sentenced to life in prison.
"This guy wanted to take the money of the girl because he, in communications he had with his friends in Holland through Facebook and email, stated that he had no money, that he had no money or food, that his stay in Peru was hard and he told them: 'I am on the verge of prostitution,'" family lawyer Edward Alvarez said in an interview.
Alvarez predicted Van der Sloot would plead guilty Friday in an effort to get a reduced sentence.
Jimenez, the defense attorney, ruled out that possibility.
He said that would require his client to make a confession that accepted all the charges alleged by the prosecution.
The lawyer didn't dispute that Van der Sloot confessed to the killing, but he said the Dutchman's rudimentary Spanish didn't allow him to respond properly during his interrogation.
Van der Sloot met Flores, the daughter of a circus promoter and former race car driver, at the Atlantic Casino in Lima.
Video from casino cameras show the two playing at the same table, then leaving together.
In his confession, Van der Sloot said they planned to play Internet poker at the down-market TAC Hotel where he was staying. He said that while they were playing, his computer received an instant message on his links to the Holloway case. He said Flores then struck him, and he became enraged and strangled her.
Hotel video shows Van der Sloot entering the hotel with Flores then leaving alone a few hours later. Her body was found in the hotel room three days later.
Two days after that, the Dutchman was arrested in Chile.
That same day, he was charged in Alabama with trying to extort the Holloway family in return for disclosing the location of Natalee Holloway's body.

CNN: Van der Sloot to plead guilty today in Peru killing

  1. By Karel Navarro, AP
    Joran van der Sloot, a central figure in the disappearance of American teenager Natalee Holloway, has changed his defense strategy and is expected to plead guilty today in Peru to all charges in the killing of a Peruvian woman, his lawyer tells CNN.

The 24-year-old Dutchman is charged with "qualified murder" and simple robbery, in the death of 21-year-old Stephany Flores in Lima. The charge carries a 30-year sentence.



Before the change of plans, Van der Sloot had intended to admit killing Flores in her hotel room in May 2010, but to fight harsher charges that could bring more time in prison, his attorney, Luis Jimenez tells CNN.

Jimenez says the new strategy is for Van der Sloot to give a "sincere confession," which under Peruvian law can qualify him for a more lenient sentence, CNN reports.

Three judges will preside over the non-jury trial that opens today in Lima.

Police say Van der Sloot took Flores' money and bank cards from her wallet and fled to Chile, where he was arrested a few days later.

Van der Sloot was linked, but never charged, in the disappearance of Holloway, who vanished in 2005 while on a high school graduation trip to Aruba. She was last seen leaving a nightclub with Van der Sloot, but he has maintained he had nothing to do with her disappearance.

In June 2010, Van der Sloot was charged in the U.S. attempting to extort a million dollars from the Holloway family by promising to say where Natalee's body was.

He used a $25,000 advance to pay for a flight to Lima, where his fatal meeting with Stephany Flores took place, Radio Netherlands reports.