Is Natalee Holloway’s body buried under the Marriott Hotel?
For the most part, I have literally copied most of this article from CNN
as I don’t wish to change their version of what may have actually happened to
Natalee Holloway (an American citizen) on the
Danish Island of Aruba in the Caribbean.
Natalee Holloway was on a high school
graduation trip when she vanished. The 18-year-old from Alabama was last seen
leaving a bar with three young men, two brothers and Van der Sloot, then 17. He
says he was with Holloway that night, but left her on the beach, alone. Van der
Sloot has never been charged in Holloway's disappearance. He was arrested
several times with respect to her murder but he was always released because of a
lack of evidence.
He moved to Peru and in 2012, he pleaded
guilty to the 2010 murder of Stephany Flores in Peru. Flores was killed five
years to the day Holloway disappeared. Van der Sloot is serving a 28-year prison sentence in Peru. He is expected to
be extradited to the United States after his release. (see my article I published in my blog on May
25, 2015 about Van der Sloot)
Ten years after Natalee Holloway went missing
on the Danish Island of Aruba, a Dutch citizen says he knows where to find her.
Prosecutors, however, aren't buying it.
Jurriën de Jong told CNN's Martin Savidge
that the teen's body is buried in a crawl space at a Marriott vacation property
in Aruba, and he believes he saw her in her final moments.
De Jong says he was near Marriott's Aruba
Surf Club, then under construction, on the night of May 30, 2005, when he saw a
young man chase a young woman through the construction site.
At first, he thought the two were being
playful, but he says a short time later the man reappeared, carrying the inert woman
in his arms. He says her body appeared limp. (in an interview with T. Ward, an investigator, deJong said to him, “Van
der Sloot slammed the body of Natalee on the
floor, and then he made an opening in a crawl space, I knew she was dead.”)
He pulled (the woman) by the ankles inside
the crawl space, stayed inside for a minute and then came out and closed the
gap," Jong said.
Even though de Jong suspected he had
witnessed something serious, he says didn't go to the police because he was
involved in "illegal activities" at the time. (He hasn’t disclosed what those activities were.)
When news of Holloway's disappearance came
out, de Jong put the pieces together, but for three years he says he stayed
quiet, afraid he'd be indicted for his own crimes. He also says he was afraid
of talking to police and facing retaliation from the people he worked for in
his illegal activities, which he declined to specify.
De Jong says he had a change of heart after
seeing a 2008 Dutch broadcast of an undercover interview with Joran van der
Sloot, who was brought in for questioning in Holloway's disappearance but never
charged. In that interview, van der Sloot said that Holloway died while the two
were together and her body was dumped in the ocean.
De Jong says he got angry because he knew it
was a lie and says he felt bad because he has a daughter close to Holloway's
age. Van der Sloot later said he was lying in that interview.
De Jong then called Holloway's father, Dave
Holloway, who has never given up hope of finding his daughter. Holloway had
faced many false leads and hoaxes before and wrote de Jong off.
"I was running out of
possibilities," de Jong said. "I tried to convince the head
prosecutor, the parents, then I tried to convince the other head prosecutor,
but he didn't listen."
That's when de Jong attempted what he called
"Mission Impossible." The site where de Jong says Holloway is buried
now rests under the high-rise Marriott Aruba Surf Club resort, in an area
called the Spyglass Tower. De Jong bought an electric drill with a diamond tip
and went to Aruba to investigate the site. He says he carefully planned a
scheme to drill a hole through the hotel floor, but his efforts to take a look
in the tower's foundations ultimately failed.
Next, de Jong turned to local newspapers. But
before long, the new lead hit a snag. On
the night Holloway disappeared, officials say construction of the Spyglass
Tower hadn't started.
Aruba's chief prosecutor, Eric Olthof, says
he spent weeks investigating de Jong's assertions, including his 2010 sworn statement to police.
When asked about what construction was
underway on May 30, 2005, Olthof says Marriott officials said there was no
construction at the spot de Jong pointed out.
"It's evident now that the story of Mr. de Jong can't be true, so that's a closed
book," Oltholf told CNN.
Holloway's father says he remembers the site
from the day after his daughter's disappearance. "I can tell you for a
fact. I was there on June 1, and there was definitely construction in that
area," he says.
Holloway says he has information that
construction began in February, but he was not clear on how he knows. Natalee
Holloway was last seen on May 30, 2005.
CNN's Savidge received this statement from
Jeff Flaherty of global corporate relations at Marriott International Inc.:
"Mr. de Jong has contacted Marriott in the past and each time we have
suggested to Mr. de Jong that he present his account of the matter to the
authorities. As we have done all along, we cooperate fully with the authorities
whenever they are conducting an official investigation."
For his part, de Jong says he believes
authorities are dragging their feet. He said, "It's the inconvenient
truth. It would damage the image of Aruba as one happy island.”
Oltholf won't say that de Jong is lying, but
says his statement can't be true. He said in part, "It's the statement of
the management of the Marriott that at that time, at that place, there was no
construction. When there's no construction, Natalee Holloway can't be buried in
the crawl space under the foundation," he said.
He further added, “Marriott has provided
proof. I think they're not wrong because they can prove it with some
photographs and some other material. And I think they are right with what they
are saying. And Mr. de Jong can't prove it," said Olthof.
However, some signs complicate Marriott's
official time line of the construction of Spyglass Tower. A satellite image
from Google Earth taken in June 2005, just a few weeks after Natalee Holloway
disappeared, shows what appears to be the blurry outlines of structures that
could resemble a construction site.
What does he think about de Jong's claim that
he saw him that night, in 2005? Through his attorney, van der Sloot did not
call de Jong a liar, but told CNN's Savidge he (Jong) was a drug dealer and is only out for money.
De Jong denies he ever asked for money, and
laughs off the accusation, saying van der Sloot's angry because he's scared.
(Van
der Sloot should be scared because if de Jong is alive when Van der Sloot is
extradited to the United States on other charges Van der Sloot might actually
be charged with her murder and convicted on de Jong’s testimony alone)
Jong said, "I think he's desperate. I
mean the only reason why he does that is that he's afraid that people will believe me.”
In the United
States, Van der Sloot has been indicted on federal charges of extortion and
wire fraud. American authorities accuse him of extorting money from Holloway's
mother by offering bogus information about her daughter's disappearance. Van der Sloot had fled Aruba
after taking $25,000 from Holloway's mother, Beth, in exchange for information
about the teen's whereabouts that proved false. He still stands accused of extortion in U.S. federal
court.
I will keep
you abreast of any new information that comes my way.
No comments:
Post a Comment