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Joran van der Sloot Expected to Plead Guilty in Natalee Holloway Extortion Case

Joran van der Sloot Expected to Plead Guilty in Natalee Holloway Extortion Case
Joran van der Sloot Expected to Plead Guilty in Natalee Holloway Extortion Case


Joran van der Sloot, the Dutch national linked to the 2005 overseas disappearance of 18-year-old Natalee Holloway, is expected to plead guilty this week to extorting the missing Alabama teenager’s mother, Beth Holloway, a lawyer for Ms. Holloway said.

Mr. van der Sloot, 36, had been in Peru serving a prison sentence for murder when he was extradited to the United States in June to face federal extortion and fraud charges stemming from a 2010 indictment. He had pleaded not guilty.

But Mr. van der Sloot has now reached a plea deal with federal prosecutors, according to John Q. Kelly, a lawyer for Beth Holloway who played a role in securing Mr. van der Sloot’s indictment.

A new plea and sentencing hearing has been scheduled for Wednesday in Birmingham, Ala.

Mr. van der Sloot’s public defender, James Gibson, could not immediately be reached on Saturday. The federal prosecutor on the case also could not be reached.

The authorities in Peru this year announced that they would temporarily extradite Mr. van der Sloot to face charges in the United States. He had been serving a 28-year sentence in the country for the 2010 murder of a 21-year-old student, Stephany Flores.

Mr. van der Sloot was one of the last people to be seen with Natalee Holloway on May 30, 2005, the day she disappeared while on a trip with her high school class in Aruba, the Caribbean island nation and former Dutch colony where Mr. van der Sloot had been living.

Natalee Holloway’s whereabouts since have remained unknown. A judge declared her legally dead in 2012, and her remains have never been found.

Around the time Mr. van der Sloot was arrested in the killing of Ms. Flores, a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted him for trying to extort $250,000 from Ms. Holloway in exchange for information on her daughter’s death and the location of her remains.

Ms. Holloway made an initial payment of $25,000 to Mr. van der Sloot as part of an F.B.I. sting operation. The authorities said he provided her with what he knew to be false information.

Mr. Kelly and Ms. Holloway had welcomed the news of Mr. van der Sloot’s extradition in June, but on Saturday, the lawyer expressed concern about the apparent plea deal for Mr. Van der Sloot.

As part of the deal, Mr. Kelly said, Mr. van der Sloot would share information with prosecutors about Natalee Holloway’s death and agree to plead guilty to all charges in the extortion case.

But Mr. Kelly was worried by the possibility that Mr. van der Sloot would provide false information, pointing out that he had changed his story and admitted to lying about Natalee Holloway’s murder in the past.

“We should expect nothing less this time around,” Mr. Kelly said in a statement on Saturday. “But now he may be getting a sweetheart deal for his latest fabrication.”

Mr. Kelly added that the judge might even sentence Mr. van der Sloot on Wednesday. It was unclear what Mr. van der Sloot could receive as part of the plea deal.

Before Mr. van der Sloot serves any time in the United States, he is expected to first return to Peru to complete the rest of his sentence there.

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