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IHateGreens
07-12-2005, 02:22 PM
Aruban prosecutors seek to return two brothers to jail in case of missing Alabama teen
By MICHAEL NORTON, AP

ORANJESTAD, Aruba (AP) - A judge heard competing appeals in the disappearance of a missing Alabama teenager Tuesday as a defense lawyer sought to have a 17-year-old from Aruba released in the case and prosecutors asked for the re-arrest of two brothers from Surinam.

The brothers, Satish and Deepak Kalpoe, and Joran van der Sloot were among the last people to see Natalee Holloway before she vanished on the final night of a high school graduation trip to the Dutch Caribbean island.

The hearings were closed and the judge was expected to confer with two colleagues before issuing a ruling on Thursday.

The first hearing was an appeal of a judge's ruling earlier this month that there was insufficient evidence to hold the brothers in Holloway's disappearance. Satish Kalpoe, 18, and Deepak, 21, had been in custody since June 9, when they were arrested along with 17-year-old Joran van der Sloot. They were released on July 4.

The Kalpoe brothers left court Monday with their lawyers after brief hearings. Van der Sloot left the courthouse - handcuffed and hiding his face from the news media - in the custody of Aruban authorities.

David Kock, the lawyer for Satish Kalpoe, said he was confident the younger brother would remain free.

"There's nothing new against my client," Kock told reporters outside the courthouse. "I'm speculating but perhaps the prosecution wants to appeal for PR reasons."

Kock said prosecutors informed him Monday that they had new evidence in the case that included online chatroom conversations between Deepak Kalpoe and van der Sloot.

But Ruud Offringa, the lawyer for the older brother, told reporters that the chatroom conversations were not new evidence and had previously presented to a judge.

The judge was also hearing a fourth appeal from prosecutors seeking to overturn an order allowing van der Sloot's father, Paul, to visit his son while he's in custody.

Aruba's attorney general, Caren Janssen, has said that Paul van der Sloot, a judge in training on the island, had given his son and two friends legal advice, allegedly telling them "when there is no body you don't have a case." The father was arrested June 23 and released four days later after a judge ruled there was not enough evidence to hold him.

Holloway vanished in the early hours of May 30, just before she was to catch a flight home after a five-day vacation celebrating her high school graduation with 124 classmates. Extensive searches of the island and surrounding waters by authorities and volunteers have turned up no trace of the young woman and two volunteer search groups planned to end their efforts this week.

sws4420
07-12-2005, 02:52 PM
I hate to admit it, but I think whoever did this is going to get away with it. There's zero evidence except a pair of her panties found on a beach. Until there's a body found, I don't really think anything is going to stick to any of the guys they arrested.

Bob
07-12-2005, 04:13 PM
Yeah and those jets flew over and didn't find a thing. They said most people down there looking for her don't think she's on the island anymore.

sws4420
07-12-2005, 11:53 PM
She's probably like the runaway bride chick, only hotter.

IHateGreens
07-13-2005, 01:08 AM
I think she bailed personally. I think she took off and wanted to maybe be left alone for some reasoning that no one probably knows about, but as far as her actually being murdered, you dont need a body to convict, and unless they do something about her disappearance their tourism, which also happens to be their most valuable asset, will turn to shit and they obviously dont want that.