Joran van der Sloot Confesses
On June 9, 2005, 17-year-old van der Sloot and the other two locals, brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe, were arrested. Lacking evidence or confessions, they were released. They were arrested again in November 2007. Aruba prosecutors dismissed the case the following month.
The Holloway family offered a hefty reward for information about their daughter. Van der Sloot found out and contacted the family on May 10, 2010. In exchange for $250,000, he agreed to tell the family how Natalee died and where to find her remains.
The family’s attorney, John Kelly, flew to Aruba. Van der Sloot spun a yarn about how Natalee died and took Kelly to a site where he knew her remains were not present. He later admitted to Kelly that he lied about the location of Kelly’s remains. He told the Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf, “I wanted to get back at Natalee’s family—her parents have been making my life tough for five years.”
Van der Sloot continued to complicate his life when he killed Peruvian student Stephany Flores on May 30, 2010, after she discovered that he was a suspect in Natalee’s disappearance. He was convicted of Flores’s murder and sentenced in 2012 to 28 years in prison. He was also indicted in the U.S.
Van der Sloot was extradited from Peru in 2023 to face extortion charges in Alabama. As part of his plea, in which he pleaded guilty to extortion and wire fraud, he confessed to Natalee’s murder. He explained that when she refused his sexual advances, he kicked her in the face, knocking her down. He then picked up a cinder block, smashed her head in and dragged her body into the ocean. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison in the U.S., then sent back to finish his sentence in Peru.
On December 13, 2025, van der Sloot attempted to die by suicide while in prison. He sent the Flores family a message of apology a few days prior.
Has Natalee Holloway’s Body Been Found?
Natalee was legally declared dead in 2012. Paola Magni, a leading forensic scientist at Murdoch University in Australia, doubts that any approach or technology could find Natalee’s remains in the ocean 14 years later. “It's such a big, expansive area,” she tells A&E Crime + Investigation. “There is no one way of searching for it effectively. If it's not attached, the body moves with the waves and moves with the tides. Also, the decomposition process dismembers the body.”
Gene Ralston and his wife Sandy are retired environmental consultants who have spent more than 40 years helping law enforcement search for bodies in water. Gene concurs with Magni’s assessment, telling A&E Crime + Investigation, “The probability of finding her, if she is in the ocean, is slim to none. If she had been pushed into the water from shore, she would have been found on the shoreline long ago. Too many unknowns to make this anything more than a minimal chance of success in finding her at this point.”
Despite the odds, Gene flew to Aruba. He was promised every resource he needed would be available. When he arrived, he claims there wasn’t even a boat secured for him. Once he finally secured a boat to conduct his side scan sonar search, he was pointed in the wrong direction by a psychic commissioned by the firm that persuaded him to help.
Gene wound up looking half an island away from the area where van der Sloot eventually confessed he killed Natalee. “It really didn’t make any sense that Joran would have gone to the effort of going to that side of the island in the first place,” he says. They were going to continue the search the following day, but the owner of the boat never showed up at the harbor. “We spent the one day out and that was it,” Ralston recalls. “It was quite a fiasco.”
As improbable as finding Natalee may appear, Magni offers some hope. “In extreme situations, you can use environmental DNA,” she says. “You can sample the water and see if you find human DNA, and if the human DNA belongs to that person.”
She cites a case in which a boyfriend was suspected of killing his partner. He claimed to have never been in the lake where the victim’s body was found. “I went to the house of this guy, and I collected all of his clothes. And I analyzed all the clothes, not knowing what he was wearing the night of the possible murder,” Mangi says.
She was looking for diatoms, algae found at the lake. “A number of specific items had the presence of diatoms that were matching with the diatoms of the lake,” she continues. “Because every place has different types of diatoms, he had to admit that he was there.” Case closed.