Van der Sloot confesses to Peru slaying

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Van der Sloot confesses to Peru slaying

Paper reports suspect lost his temper after victim grabbed laptop



LIMA, Peru - A high-ranking Peruvian government official confirmed to NBC News Monday night that Joran van der Sloot confessed to the slaying of a 21-year-old Lima woman.

According to La Republica newspaper, he said that his anger exploded and he broke Stephany Flores' neck after she grabbed his laptop without his permission, and found out that he was involved in the disappearance of an American woman.

The paper quoted Van der Sloot as saying, "I did not want to do it. The girl intruded into my private life."

The Dutchman, who is also the prime suspect in U.S. teen Natalee Holloway's 2005 disappearance in Aruba, is being held in a seventh-floor cell with a bunk bed and blanket and gets three hot meals a day, said Maj. Jose Gamboa, spokesman for the Peruvian national police.

Van der Sloot is suspected in the May 30 killing — five years to the day after Holloway's disappearance — of Flores, a business student who police say he met playing poker at a casino.

Police released video Saturday taken by security cameras at the hotel where van der Sloot had been staying since arriving from Colombia on May 14. It shows the two entering van der Sloot's room together and the Dutchman leaving alone four hours later.

The woman's battered body was found on the room's floor more than two days later, her neck broken. Van der Sloot had by then crossed into Chile, where he was arrested Thursday.

In video taken of the husky 22-year-old Dutchman that was broadcast Sunday by a TV channel, Peruvian police search van der Sloot's belongings in his presence.

They pull out of his backpack a laptop, a business-card holder and 15 bills in foreign currency. Van der Sloot tells police the money includes Thai, Cambodian and Bolivian currency. He is asked for credit cards and documents and appears to say — his Spanish is very rudimentary — that they are in a hotel room back in Chile.

Earlier, Peru's chief homicide investigator, Col. Miguel Canlla, would neither confirm nor deny a Sunday report in the Lima newspaper El Comercio that van der Sloot told his Peruvian questioners he was innocent of the Flores killing.

"I don't know where that information came from," Canlla told The Associated Press. "We are still in the investigative stage."

Chilean police said earlier that van der Sloot declared himself innocent in the Lima slaying but acknowledged having met Flores.

Van der Sloot was represented by a state-appointed lawyer during Saturday's questioning.

Until he hires his own counsel, "the guys prosecuting him will decide which attorney he's going to get," van der Sloot's U.S. attorney, Joseph Tacopina, told the AP.

Dutch Embassy chief consular officer Angela Lowe said her government was providing van der Sloot with "regular consular assistance, which means an occasional consular visit, and we will make sure he is being treated decently, just like any other inmate."
She said Peruvian authorities have assured the Dutch government they are treating him well. "They are taking this case very seriously," she added. "The world is watching."
Van der Sloot is one of 117 Dutch citizens currently in Peruvian jails or prisons, most of them on drug-related charges, Lowe said.

The suspect spoke to his mother by telephone for the first time Saturday, Lowe said, adding that she did not know whether the mother plans to travel to Peru.

Van der Sloot's father, a former judge and attorney on the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba, died in February. The suspect has two brothers.

After a a 17-hour journey up the Pan-American Highway from Chile in a police caravan Saturday, the young Dutchman was paraded, sheathed in bulletproof vest and handcuffed, before reporters at criminal police headquarters in Lima.

He was then submitted to an initial interrogation. A judge subsequently granted prosecutors' request to extend van der Sloot's preliminary detention order seven more days, said Gamboa, the national police spokesman.

If tried and convicted of murder, van der Sloot faces a potential prison term of 35 years.
He remains, meanwhile, the prime suspect in the disappearance in Aruba of Holloway, an Alabama teen who hasn't been seen since May 30, 2005. He was arrested and released in that case, and faces no charges.

Van der Sloot was charged Thursday in the United States with trying to extort $250,000 from Holloway's family in exchange for disclosing the location of her body and describing how she died.

U.S. prosecutors say $15,000 was transferred to a Dutch bank account in his name. In the Netherlands on Friday, prosecutors raided two homes in the case, seizing computers, cell phones and data-storage devices.

Tacopina said the suspect's family "is trying to find competent counsel."

Peruvian President Alan Garcia told reporters Friday that van der Sloot would have to be tried in Flores' death before any extradition request could be considered.

Holloway, 18, was celebrating her high school graduation on Aruba when she disappeared. Van der Sloot told investigators he left her on a beach, drunk. That's the last anyone saw her.

Two years ago, a Dutch television crime reporter captured hidden-camera footage of van der Sloot saying that after Holloway collapsed on the beach he asked a friend to dump her body in the sea.

The same journalist, Peter de Vries, reported later in 2008 that van der Sloot was recruiting Thai women in Bangkok for sex work in the Netherlands.
 

Rx Alchemist.
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Unfortunately it took the death of another young women to nail this scumbag.

I think I would rather hang than spend the rest of my life in a Peruvian jail.
 

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From what im hearing he will be going into a living hell at that prison there and it one of the worst in the world.i really think he will not live very long in it.
 
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Looks like Holloway's family will be sending a Moneygram every week to Jose Molinas Gonsalves Durado. I'm sure the clerk at their local Wal Mart will not question what it is for. I'm betting it's pretty cheap to make sure he gets raped and tortured regularly; not that it won't happen anyways, but I'd want to be sure if I was the dad. At the same time, I would pay for protection to keep him alive, along with one more bribe for one of the guards to send me some video of his misery.
 

ONE
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Yeah, Too bad they don't have the death penalty

Just learned from the news, they don't have life sentence for murder there either.Max is I think 35 years.They say that a confession will usually get you less.
 

I think I want my money back!
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This won't go well for him. His reputation is world wide and if i'm not mistaken I don't believe Peru prison systems seperate the inmates like they do here in the US for special protection.
 

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35 yrs or less does not matter, even if he make it that long in prison without getting kill and he served his time, the United States will be waiting at the prison door to bring him to the states for the money thing he was trying to do...............ck
 

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35 yrs or less does not matter, even if he make it that long in prison without getting kill and he served his time, the United States will be waiting at the prison door to bring him to the states for the money thing he was trying to do...............ck

The extortion will reach its statue of limitations.
 

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I'm sure anyone would trade 30 days in Peruvian Prison for 1 year in a US prison.

I'm sure every prison guard in Peru is trying to contact the family of that US girl to make a little side money.
 

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Lock-up the judge father that got him off the first time too. He had to know his son was f*ck up in the head, and to get him off to walk the streets makes you responsible for his actions.
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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he's going to live a miserable existence in jail in Peru, worse than dying
 

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He ge gone
Lock-up the judge father that got him off the first time too. He had to know his son was f*ck up in the head, and to get him off to walk the streets makes you responsible for his actions.
 

powdered milkman
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i hope he confesses to one more murder then justice will be completed
 

Home of the Cincinnati Criminals.
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speak for yourself. have you seen "locked up abroad?"

No thanks

I'm sure anyone would trade 30 days in Peruvian Prison for 1 year in a US prison.

I'm sure every prison guard in Peru is trying to contact the family of that US girl to make a little side money.
 

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