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Created on: February 27, 2010 Last Updated: March 02, 2010
The title of this piece is interesting. "Natalee Holloway murder" .... Go no further. There is the perception among a large percentage of the people interested in this case that the girl was indeed "murdered". She has disappeared and is now presumed to be dead. She had been seen in the company of a number of young men in Aruba.
Their behaviour was noticeably suspicious, at least if media reports are to be believed. The Aruba police conducted inquiries, albeit very inefficiently, and released the individuals concerned for lack of evidence.
One of these suspects, a young Dutchman called Joran van der Sloot (about whom I will say more later) keeps turning up like the proverbial bad penny, particularly on Dutch television and in Dutch newspapers.
The important point to make at this point, though, is that there is no concrete evidence that the girl was indeed murdered. Rumours, street legends and speculation abound about what happened to her.
Evidence, though, a precious commodity that would be needed to complete a successful prosecution in a court of law, simply does not exist.
The possibility exists that she died accidentally. At the moment, the possibility of her wandering in a drunken state into the sea and drowning cannot be ruled out. It would seem unlikely, in that no evidence of the body was found when the sea was scanned in the neighbouring area following her disappearance, even if the general perception is that this search was not as thorough as it might have been.
Given the ecological cycle, and the way that creatures of the sea use remains as part of the food chain, it is unlikely after all this time that even the most sophisticated search technology could find much now that would be of use.
There is also the explanation given in one of Joran ven der Sloot's "confessions". He and Natalee were making love on the beach, when she suddenly lost consciousness and died. He panicked and arranged with a local boat-owner for the body to be ditched in the sea.
This is highly irresponsible behaviour, which, if true, constitutes a criminal offense. He could be prosecuted for disposing of a dead body without reporting it. This does not, though, constitute a case for murder. The death in this instance would again fall under the category "accidental".
Then, if you follow this case on YouTube, you can find a number of interesting alternatives that definitely stretch
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