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Aruban National Arrested, Released in Netherlands 


Satish and Deepak Kalpoe and Joran van der Sloot



A lawyer for Guido Wever says his client was arrested in the Netherlands on May 17, 2006. But Wever was released on Tuesday, May 23rd. Wever's attorney says the Aruban citizen is suspected of "assisting in the murder" of Natalee Holloway.
While no details have been released regarding Wever's alleged involvement in the case, Wever was an aquaintance of Joran van der Sloot, and had been interviewed on three different occasions several months ago as a "witness" by police in Aruba. AMW has confirmed that Wever left the Caribbean island two weeks after Natalee's disappearance.

The Public Prosecutor's Office said Wever remains a suspect. But his lawyer claims this is only a formality, saying: "It is unthinkable that he will be arrested again on the basis of how things stand at the moment in the investigation." 

Conversation Between Former Suspects Secretly Recorded

In a press release issued by the Aruban prosecutor's office, authorities have verified that the contents of a transcribed conversation between Joran van der Sloot, Deepak Kalpoe, and Satish Kalpoe, are authentic. The recorded conversation reportedly took place in June 2005 in a police vehicle while the three suspects were being transported either to or from a court appearance or jail.

The six-page transcript shows the three young men exchanging harsh words, accusing one another of lying, and mentioning Natalee Holloway several times, referring to her as "the girl."

When the Kalpoe brothers and van der Sloot were released from custody in September 2005, then-Police Chief Gerold Dompig was still certain they were involved in Natalee's disappearance, telling AMW, "I have a gut feeling that they're guilty...either it's murder, or an accident, or rape...but something happened, and they were surely involved."

Since then, the three young men have remained under public scrutiny. Authorities will not comment further on the recorded conversation or what they make of it.

In the meantime, the Aruban coast guard has been conducting an underwater search for Natalee since Sunday, April 16, stopping on Thursday to study some underwater photos taken during the search. Despite rumors that the search has been called off, the Aruban prosecutor's office maintains it was merely a temporary halt.

Authorities' Latest Arrests

Geoffrey van Cromvoirt, a 19-year-old who was arrested on April 14, was released after 8 days.  Sources close to the investigation say he is suspected of selling drugs, possibly GHB, the so-called "date-rape drug," to Joran van der Sloot and/or his associates, and that this activity may have been involved in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway.  The Aruban prosecutor's office said van Cromvoirt "remains a suspect."

On Saturday, April 22, Aruban police arrested a 20-year-old man identified only by the initials A.B.  He was questioned about the Holloway case for 6 hours and then released.

Aruban and Dutch authorities are also looking to talk to anyone who may have seen the unique gray Honda Civic Natalee was riding in the last time she was seen. The car has a lowered suspension and extended spoilers.

Authorities also say they are looking for information about "four sweaty boys with a shovel" walking on the north end of the island on Monday, May 30, 2005 -- the day Natalee was reported missing.

New Tips Spawn New Search

In the last month, Aruban authorities have launched new searches -- both on land and at sea. But they have been tight-lipped about what may have prompted any of those searches.

Aruban police are also searching for a man they say harassed another young woman on the same beach where Natalee disappeared. With new leads coming in to Aruban police every day, the Texas Equusearch team has decided to return to Aruba to do a deep ocean search in general areas of interest.

A Boycott And New Clues

On November 8, 2005, Holloway-Twitty joined Alabama Gov. Bob Riley to propose a boycott of the island in an effort to urge Aruban officials to action. Nearly six months after Alabama teen Natalee Holloway disappeared, her family remains steadfast in their search for clues surrounding her disappearance. Natalee's father, Dave Holloway, and her mother, Beth Holloway-Twitty, have both done their part to keep their daughter's memory alive and her name in the news headlines.

Dave and Beth have also returned to Aruba numerous times, searching for clues and confronting the Aruban government about their investigation of Natalee's case. In late October, Dave, accompanied by EquuSearch - a search and recovery team for missing persons - discovered a makeshift memorial for Natalee. A small wooden cross, surrounded by rocks and coral and draped in rosary beads, stood just yards from where Natalee was reportedly last seen alive. Carved in the corner of the cross were the initials "N.H."  An American tourist later reported that she had left the cross in honor of Natalee.

The non-profit, volunteer group EquuSearch has used highly sophisticated sonar equipment, helicopters and manpower to search both land and sea for clues about Natalee's disappearance. Natalee's family is hopeful that with the help of EquuSearch they may finally find some closure.

History Of False Hope


Natalee was last seen at a popular night club in Aruba.

The search for Natalee Holloway has followed a winding path. Each time Beth Holloway-Twitty and Dave Holloway have found a lead to cling to, their hopes have been dashed. 

All Suspects Released
On September 3, 2005 Joran van der Sloot, Satish and Deepak Kalpoe were all released from police custody on the condition they stay available to authorities for questioning. Although prosecutors wanted to hold all three suspects longer, an Arbuban judge ordered their release. Even though the three men are free, authorities say they will continue to investigate the connection between these three men and the disappearance of Natalee Holloway.

No Sign Of Missing Alabama Teen At Aruban Pond
Investigators serached a pond not far from the Holiday Inn where Natalee stayed -- but there were no signs. The pond was searched after a witness claimed to have seen the three suspects named in Natalee's disappearance sitting in a parked car near the pond. In addition to the pond, authorities searched a landfill three times. 


DNA Not Holloway's
According to the FBI, DNA taken from strands of blond hair stuck to duct tape found on a beach in Aruba did not match the DNA of missing Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway. A park ranger found the duct tape while collecting trash on Aruba's northeast coast - the opposite side of the island from where the Alabama woman was last seen in public. The results of two tests on the hair came back negative.

Tracing Natalee's Steps

Natalee Ann Holloway had just graduated from Mountain Brook High School in Birmingham, Ala.  She was looking forward to attending the University of Alabama on a full academic scholarship. 

On an unofficial annual senior trip Natalee and approximately 130 of her classmates ventured thousands of miles away to enjoy the white sands and blue waters of Aruba. 

For five days the recent graduates and seven chaperones relaxed, sun bathed and enjoyed the Aruba nightlife. 

Dressed in the same blue and green striped low-cut blouse and jean miniskirt that she wore at the beach earlier in the day, Holloway spent Sunday evening partying at Carlos 'N Charlie's, a popular restaurant and dance spot where tourists and locals meet in the Aruban capital, Oranjestad.

Monday morning, May 31, 2005 when the rest of the group gathered to catch their flight, Natalee was no where to be found. 

Carlos N' Charlie's master of ceremonies, Jose Hernandez, saw Natalee leave about 10 minutes before the restaurant's 1 a.m. closing. He reports that nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Meanwhile, some of Natalee's friends say they saw her getting into a vehicle outside the nightclub.

New Arrest in Natalee Holloway Case

Monday May 22, 2006 8:55am EST

By Stephen M. Silverman

Natalee Holloway
CREDIT: AP


Dutch police have arrested a new suspect in the year-old case of the Aruba disappearance of American teen Natalee Holloway.

The new suspect, who has not been named, has not been formally charged. His lawyer, Gerard Spong, said he would fight extradition to Aruba, ABC News reports.

"My client is indicted of murder and manslaughter," said Spong. "He has never met (Holloway). He claims that he has never seen her and he claims that he is completely innocent."

According to ABC News, the suspect was working in an Aruba casino when Holloway, an 18-year-old Alabama native, vanished in May 2005. The suspect claims he does not know another suspect, Joran van der Sloot, who has admitted he kissed Holloway the night she disappeared.

But Van der Sloot's lawyer, Joseph Tacopina, said, "Joran knew this individual casually, both from the tennis club and from seeing him out and about and certainly hasn't spoken to him in the last six months or so."

Holloway's mother, Beth Twitty, said she and her family are trying not to be overly optimistic: "With each arrest and question and release, we have been totally just been devastated numerous times during the investigation, so we really have to just stop, take a minute and see what happens."

Authorities have arrested eight suspects in the case, including Aruba teen Geoffrey van Cromvoirt last month, and released all of them for lack of evidence.

Dutch Police Arrest Natalee Suspect

Guido Weaver, A Casino Worker, Detained In Connection With 2005 Murder



AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, May 22, 2006

An undated photo of Guido Weaver. (CBS)




(CBS/AP) Dutch police have detained a man on suspicion of participating in the kidnapping and killing of Natalee Holloway last year in Aruba, the suspect's lawyer said Sunday.


CBS News has learned the man is Guido Weaver, an Aruban national. Weaver was originally questioned as a witness last June at the start of the investigation, CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller reports.

Gerard Spong said his client, whose name was not disclosed publicly, was suspected of "assisting in the murder" of the Alabama high school senior.

The charge is the most severe "in our criminal code," Spong said on the Netherlands national television broadcaster, NOS. He also told Dutch national TV broadcaster NOS that the suspect was a croupier at the casino in the hotel where Holloway was staying.

Holloway was 18 when she went missing in May 2005 during a graduation trip to the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba with classmates. She was last seen leaving a bar with three young men on May 30.

Dutch marines, the Aruban Coast Guard, the FBI and hundreds of volunteers have all searched the island and coastal areas of Aruba for Holloway, to no avail.

The suspect was arrested Wednesday and is being questioned in the city of Utrecht, Spong said. The suspect has not been formally charged. The questioning was to continue Monday, he said.

Spong said he planned to file a suit Monday to prevent his client from being extradited to Aruba. He tells Miller his client is "completely innocent," and has never seen Holloway.

Karin Janssen, a prosecutor in Aruba's public prosecutor's office, declined to comment on the arrest.

Holloway's mother, Beth Twitty, said she learned the news of the arrest at home in Alabama, Miller reports.

"It totally caught us off guard," Twitty told CBS News.

Authorities have previously arrested eight people in connection with Holloway's disappearance and then released them for lack of evidence.

Spong said the suspect is a friend of Joran van der Sloot, the last person known to have seen Holloway alive. Van der Sloot says he left Holloway alone on a beach after the pair kissed.

The suspect was questioned three times in Aruba shortly after Holloway's disappearance and twice later by Dutch authorities, Spong said.

"With the new arrest, it doesn't look like to me it's excluding the original three suspects but only widening the circle of the suspects involved in Natalee's disappearance," Twitty said.

Utrecht police spokeswoman Danielle Friedman said Dutch officials will not comment on the investigation, which is being carried out under the authority of Aruban prosecutors.

Holloway's parents are attempting to sue van der Sloot, 18, in a New York court. Their suit alleges he imprisoned and sexually assaulted Holloway, and caused her disappearance.

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Holloway Detainee Held On Drug Charges


ORANJESTAD, Aruba, April 18, 2006


Geoffrey Van Cromviort, in a photo with his sister.

Quote

"It's a very, very new name that hasn't even been on the radar screens."

Dave Holloway


(CBS/AP) A Dutch youth who has been detained in the case of a missing U.S. teenager was arrested on suspicion of drug offenses as well as involvement in her disappearance, the Aruban prosecutor's office said Tuesday.

Geoffrey Van Cromvoirt, the 19-year-old Dutch youth, was scheduled to appear before a judge Tuesday for the first time since his arrest as a suspect in the disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway.

"G.V.C. is suspected of criminal offenses that may be related to the disappearance of Miss Holloway and of offenses related to dealing in illegal narcotics," the prosecutor's office said in a brief statement.

The prosecutor's office had not previously disclosed why the 19-year-old was held.

Monday's announcement by prosecutors that someone was being held in connection with the disappearance of the Alabama teen nearly a year ago was the first major development in months in a case that has featured numerous false leads and the arrest of seven people who were later released.

"I think we are in a pretty crucial phase. You have heard, of course, that investigation, the lead investigator has been replaced," Attorney Arlene Ellis-Schipper tells CBS News correspondent Bianca Solorzano. "It's Mr. Richardson now. He's a very analytical person."

Lawyers for a Dutch youth and two Surinamese brothers who were jailed as suspects, and released after a judge ruled there was insufficient evidence to hold them, said the 19-year-old taken into custody had not been mentioned in connection with the case.

Solorzano reports the teen lives at his family's home, and his father owns a security company. But it's the island's beaches where Van Cromvoirt spends a lot of his time, working as a beach patrol member or in water sports. Friends tell CBS News he's very outgoing, always joking around with co-workers and tourists.

Joseph Tacopina, who represents Dutch youth Joran van der Sloot, told CBS News Van Cromvoirt was detained because police recovered a T-shirt belonging to him with "relevant forensic information" from the south side of the Dutch Caribbean island.

The prosecutor's office has declined to specify the detainee's alleged connection to Holloway, who was last seen leaving a bar with van der Sloot and the two Surinamese brothers, Deepak and Satish Kalpoe.

Van der Sloot's father told The Associated Press that his son has never met the 19-year-old detainee.

"Joran did not know him at all," said Paulus van der Sloot, a former island justice official who also was detained and later released on suspicion of involvement in Holloway's disappearance.

Ronny Wix, a lawyer who represents the Kalpoe brothers, said he was not yet sure whether his clients know the detainee but he believes they will eventually be cleared of any involvement.

"There is no evidence that my clients have anything to do with the disappearance of Natalee Holloway," Wix told AP.

Tacopina, who represents van der Sloot in a civil suit filed against him by Holloway's family, said the detention of "G.V.C." was good news for his client because it suggested the investigation was heading in a new direction.

"This kid has been under an umbrella of suspicion for 11 months based on no evidence," he said. Van der Sloot has said he left Holloway, then 18, at a beach near her hotel after they kissed on the final night of her high school graduation trip.

"The next step, hopefully, is this investigation keeps rolling in the direction it is. Hopefully there's some additional leads that are followed up on. Hopefully there's some resolution," Tacopina told The Early Show Monday.

Dave Holloway, the young woman's father, told the "Today" show he was hopeful about the detention, which came days after the police said they had received dozens of tips after a Dutch television program aired in Aruba and the Netherlands appealing to the public for help in the case.

"It's a very, very new name that hasn't even been on the radar screens," Holloway said. "Maybe it's a break in the case. Maybe it's that card that will bring the whole deck down. We don't know at this point."

"Of course I'm encouraged about the news and the new development and the arrest, and I hope it leads to something," Beth Twitty, Natalee's mother, said in a television interview. "We just have to be guarded. We've seen it happen too many times where nothing ever came to fruition, nothing."

Holloway has been the subject of extensive searches involving Dutch Marines, the FBI and hundreds of volunteers.
DAN GORDON HAS JUST COME ONBOARD TO WRITE "EVERYBODY'S CHILD." HIS CREDITS AS LISTED ON IMDB PRO ARE:

DAN GORDON

Profession
: Writer / Producer / Actor  more »
Known for: The Hurricane / Passenger 57 / Wyatt Earp
Awards: 2 wins  more »
 STARmeter™

Current rank: 41,510
Click graph for more detail



Update contact/agent


Filmography sorted by:

Jump to:
Past Films & Videos   Past Television   Appearing as Himself  

Past Films & Videos (12 titles) Year MOVIE
Meter Budget Opening
Weekend US Box
Office
The Celestine Prophecy - Writer (screenplay)  2006  1,667      
 
Curry Cookies (short) - Special Thanks  2004  107,811      
The Hurricane - Writer (screenplay)  1999  2,288  $38M  $337K  $50.7M
The Assignment - Writer (written by)  1997  10,848    $118K  $540K
 
Waiting for Mo - Producer, Homeless Guy  1996  140,822      
Murder in the First - Writer (written by)  1995  5,430      $17.4M
Wyatt Earp - Writer (written by), Executive Producer  1994  2,383  $63M    $25.1M
Surf Ninjas - Writer (written by), Executive Producer  1993  5,650      $4.92M
Passenger 57 - Writer (screenplay) (story)  1992  5,568      $44.1M
Gotcha! - Writer (screenplay) (story)  1985  6,633      $8.8M
Tank - Writer  1984  11,842      
Train Ride to Hollywood - Writer  1975  89,884      

 
Past Television (8 titles) Year MOVIE
Meter User
Rating User
Votes
Terror in the Mall (TV movie) - Writer (story) (teleplay)  1998  51,018  3.9  154
 
Soldier of Fortune, Inc. (TV series) - Writer (creator)  1997  13,194    
New Eden (TV movie) - Writer (written by)  1994  44,157  4.0  123
 
Nowhere to Hide (TV movie) - Writer (written by)  1994  39,571  5.7  109
Taking the Heat (TV movie) - Writer (screenplay)  1993  68,839  5.6  65
Highlander (TV series) - Writer (writer)  1992  2,259    
 
Gulag (TV movie) - Writer (also story), Executive Producer  1985  33,909  6.6  184
Highway to Heaven (TV series) - Writer (writer), Executive Story Editor, Director  1984  5,385    

 
Appearing as Himself (1 title) Year MOVIE
Meter User
Rating User
Votes
 
Intimate Portrait: Linda Gray (TV documentary) - Himself  2003  143,487    

 
Awards: 2 wins  more »
Credited Years: 1975 - 2006

Trivia
•  Father of
Zaki Gordon
•  Founded the Zaki Gordon Institute, a prestigious film school in Sedona, Arizona, USA.

Where Are They Now?
2005  •  Part-time teacher at the Zaki Gordon Institute in Sedona, Arizona, USA.

Trivia
Father of
Zaki Gordon

Founded the Zaki Gordon Institute, a prestigious film school in Sedona, Arizona, USA.

USC Scripter Award
2000
• 
Won, USC Scripter Award
for
The Hurricane (1999)
Shared With:
Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter (author: The 16th Round), Sam Chaiton (author: Lazarus and the Hurricane), Terry Swinton (author: Lazarus and the Hurricane), Armyan Bernstein (screenwriter)


Western Writers of America
1995
• 
Won, Spur Award
Best Drama Script for Wyatt Earp (1994)
Shared With:
Lawrence Kasdan


Larry Garrison and Larry King (April 11th, 2006)
 

Dave Holloway and Larry King (April 11th, 2006)

Click Here To   Check out "Amazon.com: The Newsbreaker: A Behind the Scenes Look at the News Media and Never Before Told Details about Some of the Decade's Biggest Stories: Books: Larry Garrison"

Click here to go to this book on Amazon.com

Congratulations to our client Co-Author Larry Garrison for his book :


"ARUBA THE TRAGIC UNTOLD STORY OF NATALEE HOLLOWAY AND CORRUPTION IN PARADISE"

Available everywhere including AMAZON.COM and Barnes & Noble


A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this book goes to the Natalee Holloway Foundation for missing persons.



Dave Holloway, R. Stephaine Good and Larry Garrison


Media line up dates:

Dave Holloway will be on "Good Morning America" with Barbara Walters today April 10th and on Greta/Fox News in the evening on our book.
ALSO THIS WEEK:

April 13
MSNBC Abrams Report:  Dave Holloway interview.
COURT TV - CATHERINE CRIER REPORT: Dave Holloway interview.

April 12
FOX NEWS LIVE/FOX NEWS CHANNEL:  Dave Holloway interview.
MSNBC Rita Cosby: Dave Holloway interview.

April 11
CNN/ LARRY KING LIVE: Interview segment with Dr. Holloway.

April 10
PEOPLE MAGAZINE: On Stands now in their Picks and Pans section.

FOX NEWS CHANNEL/ GRETA: Confirmed for an interview APRIL 1OTH segment with Dave Holloway.

GOOD MORNING AMERICA: APRIL 17TH will interview Dave Holloway in-studio - will also be broadcast on XM radio, which includes 6 million subscribers, and also ABC Radio, which has hundreds of top-rated affiliates around the country

Edward Lozzi & Associates PR
9454 Wilshire Blvd.  Suite 600
Beverly Hills, CA  90212
310-922-1200

http://www.lozzipr.com

Natalee Holloway's Father Hopes for the Best

He Says the Whole Story Has Yet to Be Told

April 10, 2006— It has been almost a year since Natalee Holloway vanished from her spring break trip in Aruba. Since then, her parents, Beth Twitty and Dave Holloway, have struggled to keep her name in the news.

Holloway has released a book called "Aruba: The Tragic Untold Story of Natalee Holloway and Corruption in Paradise."

He said that when he first arrived on the island, he stopped at two police stations to inquire about his daughter's disappearance and was asked for money.

"The detective in charge, the first question he asked me was how much money I had," he said. "I was in a state of shock. We finally gathered ourselves together and met with him and decided that we probably would be doing this search on our own."

Natalee Holloway was captured on video last May at an Aruban casino, sitting and drinking with a group of young people, including Joran van der Sloot. Van der Sloot, a Dutch teen, told ABC News he left the casino with Natalee that night and spent time alone with her on the beach.

When Natalee wasn't on the flight home, her mother flew to Aruba to search for her. In the next few months, Aruban police took a number of men into custody, including van der Sloot and his father, Paulus van der Sloot. All were eventually released because of a lack of evidence.

A Hopeful Parent

Last October, Dave Holloway journeyed to Aruba to search the waters offshore, but found nothing. He said that unraveling the mystery of his daughter's disappearance was like trying to figure out a crossword puzzle.

"I have a lot of information in this book. Hopefully someone will read it and get some answers," he said.

Holloway's ex-wife, Beth Twitty, has said that she has accepted the fact that her daughter has died, but Holloway has not been able to come to that place.

"As a parent, you hold out hope that maybe — look at this investigation and you look how it has gone, maybe they are wrong," he said. "You really have to look at what the FBI has said. They told us about the 10th day in that Natalee was probably not with us."

Holloway said there had been no substantial developments in the case except that the police and Dutch authorities had cleared the sand dunes to look for new evidence. The FBI is also requestioning Natalee's classmates from Alabama.

The case has reverberated across the United States and the world. More schools and parents are taking more care when it comes to children on vacations.

"You have to stop and think you are leaving the United States and the protection of this government," he said. "I want more than just a plane ticket. What I want is more protection from the U.S. government."

Van der Sloot maintains that he did not harm Natalee or see her in distress. Holloway said that he was sure that van der Sloot, who has since moved to Holland, was lying about something.

"We have seen him lie over and over and over again," Holloway said. "So, you know, it is just another set of lies that we have seen all over again. I think he's guilty of something."

Natalee's disappearance will be featured on a Dutch television program, and Holloway hopes it will help shed light on what happened.

"Maybe it will give the Dutch people more confidence to call in for tips and leads whereas they have not in the past," he said.

Book Excerpt: Natalee Holloway's Father Speaks Out

Dave Holloway Describes His Struggle to Find His Missing Daughter

April 7, 2006 — Alabama teen Natalee Holloway disappeared 11 months ago during a high school graduation trip to Aruba with her classmates. Since then, local police have been unable to find enough evidence to convict anyone on charges related her disappearance.

Dutch youth Joran van Der Sloot and two friends were questioned and detained by Aruban police, but all three were eventually released. Natalee's family continues to believe that Van Der Sloot has information about her disappearance, and the family has filed a civil suit against the youth and his father, Paulus, in New York.

Alabama teen Natalee Holloway has been missing since May 30.

Nobody has been charged, and Natalee Holloway remains missing.

Natalee's father, Dave Holloway, has written a book called "ARUBA" in which he describes the family's turmoil as the search for clues about Natalee's disappearance continues. Following is an excerpt from "ARUBA."

Be sure to tune in to "Good Morning America" on Monday, April 17 for an exclusive interview with Natalee's father.

"ARUBA, THE TRAGIC UNTOLD STORY OF NATALEE HOLLOWAY AND CORRUPTION IN PARADISE"

I CANNOT TELL YOU HOW MUCH IT HURTS TO LOSE A child. There are no words to describe the feelings that choke a parent who outlives a daughter. It is not supposed to happen this way. I was never prepared for this kind of pain, this type of emptiness. My heart has an insurmountable void that used to be filled with Natalee's presence.

I watched as she received her high school diploma, and I took pictures of her at her graduation ceremony. I planned to be there when she graduated from college and then medical school. My pride would have enveloped us both. I had long imagined the day when I would see my Natalee in her beautiful white wedding gown. We would meet in the back of the church for her last moment as "daddy's little girl" and, as she encircled my arm with hers, I would lean down and whisper the words that all fathers must say to their daughters on that very special day, "I love you." I would walk her down the aisle and proudly offer her hand to her fiancé, and I would return to my seat knowing that my girl had accomplished all that a father could desire. At that moment, it would be clear that the first tier of her life with me had come to an end and that the man she would now look to for approval and love would be her husband. But she would always be my little Natalee . . . always.

When Natalee and her brother Matt were young, we lived in Clinton, Mississippi. We had been building some very special memories, but lately it has been difficult to recall them without a lot of pain. I try to picture Natalee riding her bike around the neighborhood, or envision the excited expression on her face when she woke up on Christmas morning and spotted the toys we had stayed up half the night putting together. I remember how she loved climbing up onto my back as I crawled along the floor on my hands and knees and how when she wanted to show off her dancing, she jumped up on her miniature table to do a routine and it tipped over, throwing her off and breaking her arm. I think back to her first days of kindergarten when she was only five and how I drove her up to school every morning and walked her to class to show her around and get her used to it. I can still see her sad little face during the second week when I told her it was time to go in on her own. She still wanted Daddy to walk her to class. I keep thinking back because I'm so afraid that if I don't, the memories will begin to fade. And, for now, that is all I have of her to hold on to.

Natalee was seven and Matt was five when their mother, Beth, and I divorced in 1993. After I remarried in 1995, my wife, Robin, and I lived in Jackson, Mississippi, but we relocated back to Clinton in 1996 to be close to Natalee and Matt. When Beth remarried in 2000, she and her husband, Jug, moved to Mountain Brook, Alabama, and Robin and I moved to Meridian, Mississippi, where our two daughters, Brooke and Kaitlyn, were born. Natalee and Matt live in Mountain Brook with Beth and Jug and visit us in Mississippi as often as their schedules allow. Prior to Natalee's sixteenth birthday and obtaining her driver's license, she and Matt had been coming to our home every other weekend and more frequently during their summer vacations from school. But, during Natalee's senior year in high school, her visits were a bit less frequent due to her many extracurricular activities. So Robin and I made it our business to visit her and watch her dance at football games with her dance team, the Dorians.

Robin and I have maintained a close, loving relationship with Natalee throughout her childhood and teenage years. We have tried to instill certain values and traits in all of our children that would enable them to succeed in life. Those values include honesty, integrity, morality, and a deep faith in God. We believe that Natalee has a solid foundation in those values. Robin and I have our own set of faith-based values that guide us in our daily lives. At this time of upheaval, we have gained strength from our reliance upon those values. We have felt God's presence every step of the way, and that is what has sustained us in these, our darkest hours of need.

Natalee is missing.

I desperately want her back.

From the moment that she was born on October 21, 1986, she has always been an exceptional human being. A father could not ask for more from a child. Her younger sisters lovingly call her Sissy, and she is a sensitive, loving, and articulate young woman. She is blessed with being beautiful both inside and out.

As Natalee completed her senior year, we were all excited about her next stepping stone in life. She was prepared to go off to the University of Alabama on a full scholarship to major in premed after graduating with honors and a 4.15 grade point average from Mountain Brook High School. She participated in numerous extracurricular activities, including the dance team and the Bible Club, and she was a member of both the math and Spanish honor societies. She had a part-time job at a health food store and performed volunteer work. She has some great friends, is well-traveled, and has always looked toward the future. She never showed any interest in drugs or alcohol, and she kept close ties with her siblings and classmates who all care for her very much.

In February 2005, Natalee called me and asked for permission to go on a trip to Aruba with her graduating class. This is apparently a rite of passage for teenagers all over the country. They convince their parents to allow this one-time privilege as a gift for all of their hard work, and parents often agree, even when their instincts tell them otherwise. I was apprehensive about Natalee taking this type of trip, and I tried to talk her out of it. I did not like the idea of her traveling that far away with so many other students and so few chaperones.

When I received the trip brochure I saw that the cost was approximately $985. Robin and I are from the old school, and we felt that was a bit extravagant for a high school graduation trip. After a few days of consideration, I told Natalee that we could not approve of the trip for two reasons: it was too extravagant, and we did not think it was appropriate. However, I told her that I would give her a graduation gift of half the amount of the cost of the trip for her to do with as she pleased. Since Natalee's stepbrother had been to Aruba with his class two years earlier, and her twin cousins were graduating with her class and were going along with her this year, Beth felt comfortable allowing Natalee to make the trip.

The months passed, and upon receiving the invitation to Natalee's graduation, she advised us that the school had opted to hold the ceremony at a local university theater hall. Due to the limited amount of seating, each graduate was allocated only eight tickets. We were to have three of them for my wife, Robin, Natalee's grandmother, and me. That left her two sisters out. Due to the distance, I asked Natalee if she could get two more tickets for her sisters otherwise Robin might have had to stay behind to care for them. As graduation weekend drew near, Natalee and I spoke again of the tickets, and she assured me that she would call all three hundred of her classmates if she had to in order to come up with them. On Monday, May 23, we heard from Natalee, and, in a hoarse voice, she told us that after calling nearly every student, she was finally able to get us the tickets. She said that she was just not going to give up on us. I praised her determination.

On graduation day, we arrived at Natalee's home expecting to rush up to the door, grab the tickets, and leave. Instead, she insisted that her two sisters come in to see her room. Natalee's grandparents, Beth's mother and mine, also wanted to catch up, so Robin and I and the family spent about forty-five minutes in my ex-wife's home. The situation was very unusual for us and somewhat awkward for me, but it was Natalee's big day. Looking back, I think that God had a hand in putting us all together on that very special day, the last day that we may be sharing a momentous occasion with Natalee.

As we were about to leave, Natalee informed us that she and her friends would be going somewhere after the graduation ceremonies, so she might not see us later on.

There were approximately three thousand people in attendance at graduation. When the ceremony ended, I realized that I hadn't given Natalee the gift we had brought, so we tried to locate her. Everyone had headed outside to a reception, but there were so many people, all wearing the same graduation gown, I just assumed that we would not see her again that day. I thought she might have already hooked up with her friends and left. We headed for the car, but Robin insisted that we go back to try to find her. Suddenly Natalee called my cell phone and said she wanted to see us. We communicated back and forth until we were able to locate each other. I gave her our graduation present, a check for $500. She was thrilled and thanked us. We hugged, and I took some photos. I mentioned the trip to Aruba and asked her to be careful. We all said our good-byes and left. Later that evening, she called to thank us again.

The day before Natalee was to leave for Aruba, she called and spoke to Robin. She told her how excited she was about the trip, and Robin once again strongly cautioned her to be careful. The next day, Natalee left with approximately 125 students and 7 chaperones. We heard that, upon their arrival in Aruba, the chaperones scheduled daily meetings with the students and collected their passports before distributing their room keys. Every day the students were to check in with the chaperones at a specific time.

On Monday, May 30, Natalee's trip came to an end, and she was due to fly home to Alabama. But late in the afternoon, I received a call from Matt telling me that Natalee had missed her flight and that Beth was getting on a plane to Aruba. She had told him to call me, but had no details yet. I attempted to get in touch with Beth. No answer. I googled hotels in Aruba and found a number for the Holiday Inn where the kids had been staying. I called and was able to talk to one of the trip chaperones who had stayed behind in Natalee's room. He filled me in about Natalee missing her flight. At the time, there was not much to go on. Someone from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency was there on vacation, and he made a few calls to the police. Apparently, they have the same rule that we have in the United States about waiting twenty-four hours before taking a report on a missing person. I would later find out that it is one of the very few rules or laws that the United States and Aruba have in common.

Beth had flown out of Birmingham on a friend's private jet as soon as she learned that Natalee had missed her flight. I contacted a commercial airline and booked the next flight out for 5:30 a.m. the following morning. I immediately started a checklist and packed my bags. I stayed in contact with Matt, and by around 10:00 p.m., some of the Mountain Brook kids who had arrived back in Birmingham indicated to him that Natalee left a bar with a nice kid who played soccer and was visiting Aruba from Holland. Some of the Mountain Brook boys said they sat with him around the poker table in a casino on the previous evening.

Later that night, Matt called again to tell me that Natalee's flight had been rebooked, and she would be coming home the next day. Someone from Delta Airlines had confirmed that a female had called and changed the flight. Matt felt that Natalee had simply missed her plane and rebooked it. I cancelled my flight, but I was still concerned because no one had heard from Natalee. The next morning, I started making more calls. I could not reach Beth, and I was unable to get a member of the Aruban police force to talk to me on the phone about Natalee. I called the Holiday Inn again, but nobody answered the phone in Natalee's room. By noon I learned that Natalee was not getting on the plane. I found out that it had been a chaperone from Natalee's group who had changed her flight in the hopes that she would reappear. It was then that I knew something tragic must have happened. I feared the worst, but prayed for a miracle. I hung up the phone and broke down. My mind was racing with so many "what ifs." Once I was able to regain my composure, I called my brothers, Phil, Steve, and Todd, and my brother-in-law, Michael. Phil, Michael, and I all tried to book flights out right away but could not get any until the next day. I tried to discourage my youngest brother, Todd, from coming. He was in bankruptcy and couldn't afford the trip. But he said he had to come, and he stayed behind to sell two of his vehicles just to get the money for the plane ticket. Steve, a fireman, had to make arrangements to get coverage for his job, so he also came in a little later on.

My pastor heard the news and called from out of town to pray with me over the phone. I can still hear his comforting words, "God, please give Dave and his family the strength to get through this." Our family is very strong, and we were determined to find out what happened to Natalee and bring her home.

My world was turned upside-down, and my emotions ran wild. I could barely function. I had to keep myself together in order to help Natalee. She needed me to find her. The search-and-rescue planning began immediately.

We left Meridian, Mississippi, on the evening of May 31, 2005. The flight to Aruba was long, and I was in a panic. On one hand, I was traveling there to bring Natalee home. On the other hand, I was afraid of the worst.

When I arrived in Aruba with my family, we hit the island running. We rented a car and immediately headed out to find a police station. There were only four on the island and I was amazed to find that the first two we entered knew nothing about Natalee's disappearance. We were then directed to a third one, the Noord Police Station. I walked in and said, "I'm Dave Holloway, and I need to talk to you about my daughter who is missing." A man in the back stood up and said, "How much money do you have?" That was how I first met Detective Dennis Jacobs, the investigator who was assigned to handle Natalee's case after Beth made a report to him upon her arrival on the island. I thought his comment about money was odd, but I ignored it and just tried to talk to him about finding Natalee.

Jacobs painted a scenario that questioned all of the beliefs and values that we had instilled in Natalee. He insinuated that she had met someone and fallen in love. "This happens all the time. She will probably show up in a few days," he theorized. "She was just partying hard," he added. "Don't worry. Just go down to Carlos'n Charlie's and have a beer." It was June 1, 2005, our first evening in Aruba, my daughter was missing and a detective was telling us to go to a local bar and have a beer. I couldn't believe what I was hearing. He said it was the hot spot for vacationing kids. "Maybe she will show up." In fact, he was so confident that she was just partying it up or on drugs that he told us this particular bar would be the best place to find her. However, he did warn us to watch our drinks very carefully, adding that sometimes people put drugs into them. When I talked about searching for Natalee, he questioned why we would want to do that.

He told us to go to Carlos'n Charlie's rather than the crack houses where he said that Beth's husband, Jug, and his friends had gone the night before. They went there due to information received from the police that a lot of the kids do drugs and party and that Natalee was probably with them. Jacobs told us that he had received reports that Jug's people were busting up the drug houses?he didn't want us going there and stirring things up too. He said we should leave any searching to the police, and if we had reason to believe that Natalee was in a crack house, we should call him and he would check it out. He then told us that the government controlled the crack houses in order to keep the drug addicts off the streets and away from where tourists shop and dine.

Jacobs also told us that the day before we arrived, he had interviewed the boys who eventually became the three main suspects in Natalee's disappearance, Joran van der Sloot, Deepak Kalpoe, and his brother Satish. Beth had informed him of them after receiving information about videotapes taken from the security cameras outside of the Holiday Inn and in the hotel's casino. It had been determined that they were the last people to be seen with her. Jacobs considered the boys' statements to be consistent in that they had all said that they dropped Natalee off at the hotel. However, I did not realize at the time that Beth had already told him that the tapes did not show Natalee returning to the Holiday Inn that night.

We left the police station in a state of shock. We couldn't believe the attitude of the detective. Just the fact that he asked how much money I had took me by surprise. What kind of question is that to ask the father of a missing child? It seemed as if he was not at all concerned about our daughter. But, since he was in charge of the investigation, we followed his instructions and traveled to Carlos'n Charlie's hoping to find out what had happened to Natalee. We arrived there at about 10:30 p.m. and what I found was not like anything I had envisioned. While customers must pass by a bouncer at the door, there was no indication that he was stopping anyone from entering. The bar was packed with teenagers doing Jell-O shots and sleazy-looking island boys preying on the beautiful young female tourists. The place has more than one bar, and people were dancing and singing in every corner of the bi-level establishment. It was an unbelievable scene, one that I wish I had known about before Natalee left on her trip. I did not want to stay inside, so we hung out around the street corners. In less than two hours, we probably experienced at least ten to fifteen offers from various drug dealers who wanted us to buy from them. Some government control, I thought. Out of curiosity, my brother asked one of them what he had. "Whatever you need," he answered. "I have it or I can get it." We managed to strike up conversations with some of them who confided that the "higher ups" wanted them to always remember one thing: while peddling their drugs, they were never to commit a crime against a tourist, especially any American around the cruise dock areas. Later that evening, we went back to the hotel and planned our next strategy.

The following day, we began searching the beaches and mountain areas in the morning; in the evening, we returned to the street corners looking for leads about Natalee. After several nights there, we were confronted by some of the stray drug addicts who had come into the tourist area with tips about Natalee. Apparently, Jug's friends had started handing out money for information about Natalee's whereabouts. We had heard that Beth and the people who were searching with her were handing out hundred dollar bills. Due to the information that we were receiving about drug use on the island, Beth's side of the family was pursuing the possibility of a drug-related kidnapping, and they were going into drug houses and driving around town.

One particular drug addict gave us a tip that Natalee was in a specific drug house operated by "Tanya and Jim." He said there was an escape door in the back of the house, and if we entered, she might be whisked away into a secret room. My brother Phil knew this was just a hoax as we had several others trying to get money from us for the same type of tip. The drug addicts were only interested in getting more money, and when word got out among them that the family was paying for tips, all of them wanted in on the action. Some asked us for $10, and when my brother began asking more questions without paying, the price dropped to $5. Phil started to walk off, and one man kept following him. He wanted money, any amount, and he finally yelled out, "Isn't she worth at least two bucks?" Phil was just about ready to bust him with a right-hand fist when an off-duty police officer walked by. The drug addict knew him by name and asked if he was on duty. He said no and kept walking. The drug addict then turned and walked off.

Meanwhile, I did some investigating and found out more about the locals Natalee met who had been hanging out with the students from her hometown. Apparently, the boys had been throwing around lies about where they were staying. We heard that one of them, Joran van der Sloot, the son of a Dutch justice official, did not reveal that he lived on the island, but instead led the girls to believe that he was a vacationing student from Holland staying at the Holiday Inn. He was the boy Matt had told me about and one of the three that Dennis Jacobs had questioned.

From what we had learned, on what was to be her last night in Aruba, witnesses saw Natalee leave Carlos'n Charlie's with the three locals, Joran van der Sloot, the Dutch boy, and Surinamese-born brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe. After that, she disappeared. When the boys were initially brought in for questioning, they all admitted having been with Natalee on the night of her disappearance, saying that they were at the bar but left there with her around 1:30 a.m. to take a fifteen-minute drive out to the lighthouse because she wanted to see it. They claimed to have brought her right back to the Holiday Inn where she was staying, and to have left her there with security guards who helped her inside because she was supposedly very intoxicated.

According to what we found out from the Mountain Brook students, Natalee had met Joran van der Sloot in a casino the day before she disappeared. It's inconceivable that Natalee would have gone off with any of those boys so late at night and voluntarily. Everything about their story was unsettling. I know my Natalee. She must have been forced or drugged to go with them, if she really did. And, if she did go with them, then the last men to see her alive were walking around free. That gave them more than enough time to get rid of any evidence that Natalee might have left behind with them.

Incredibly, the police did not feel there was a need to search for Natalee. My daughter was missing without a trace, and the police considered the situation a kid's prank, something that responsible children just go off and do on a whim. No way. I disagreed with their theory of what happened. I know my daughter. She would never worry her family like that, and there was no way that she would get involved with three strangers unless she did not know what she was doing.

There I was in Aruba, a strange place, searching for my little girl, not knowing where she was, how she was, or what had happened to her. As I reflected on what the police had told me, I realized that they were trying to use the most innocent details to create a motive for Natalee to have voluntarily disappeared. For instance, they had somehow seen the quote that she had put in her high-school yearbook. It was from Lynyrd Skynyrd's song "Freebird":

If I leave here tomorrow
Would you still remember me?
For I must be traveling on now,
'Cause there's too many places I've got to see.

They wanted us to believe that those words were an indication that our daughter had been planning to leave of her own free will and that she needed to get away. Natalee had disappeared, leaving every one of her possessions, including her passport, behind in a hotel room. Their hypothesis simply does not make sense. She is not the type of person to be so irresponsible as to deliberately miss a plane flight home without a word. Not my Natalee!

From my first day on the island, I realized that I could not rely on the police to find my daughter. If they refused to search, we would organize and do it ourselves. We were able to obtain enough information to learn the route the boys had taken with Natalee. We decided to start the search at the California Lighthouse on the northwestern tip of the island and work our way back to the Holiday Inn. I enlisted about fifty tourists to help. We searched the ground area but did not do any type of digging at that time. Incredibly, a publicity agent named Carla, from a New York City firm that handles publicity for tourism in Aruba, tried to stop us from searching near the California Lighthouse, a tourist attraction, saying that it would be harmful to the island and bring too much negative media attention. She said she had even discussed it with Beth and that she had agreed. But I advised her that the search would go forward, no matter what kind of attention it brought. Natalee made a statement when giving us those graduation tickets: "I wasn't going to give up on you." And my statement to her now was, "I'm not going to give up on you either!"

While I was frustrated by the complete lack of police involvement, the process of an investigation wasn't completely foreign to me. My employment background includes sixteen years of investigation into auto accidents. Some of the cases I have dealt with involved lawsuits, and as a manager I had the opportunity to work closely with many attorneys. In fact, I managed a claim unit that supervised the litigation process prior to becoming an agent. During those years, I learned that in order to do a thorough investigation, whether in a criminal or civil case, a top priority while gathering evidence is patience. However, I also know that the first few days are always the most critical because, as time goes by, the evidence is increasingly difficult to obtain or is lost. Witnesses forget details or confuse them; important facts may be overlooked that could end up making or breaking the case. If the police were going to let those crucial days pass by without searching, then I was thankful that I was able to use my years of experience and knowledge in the investigation to do my own search for our daughter Natalee.

While Beth's side was taking care of most of the public areas, such as visiting schools, putting out posters in shops and public places, and riding around in vehicles at night chasing leads, my team focused on the ground search. The terrain on Aruba is unforgiving. The island is volcanic, and most of the land is uneven, jagged, pitted, rock formations. In some areas, if you fall without protection, you will cut yourself to shreds on the rocks. Almost all of the vegetation involves some sort of thorns, stickers, or cacti, including the trees and bushes. Due to the heat and rough terrain, it was similar to being in the desert. We searched through caves and other treacherous areas, and we came in every evening, sweaty, sunburned, cut up by thorns, briars, and most anything else we touched. It was an ordeal, but if we could find Natalee, it did not matter what we had to endure.

One day, while searching in a rocky area on the south side of the island, we surprised some mountain goats that were lazily sleeping in their safe cave hideout in a secluded inland mountain rock ridge overhang. I was probably the first human being that a couple of those baby goats had ever seen. Their parents trotted off out of the opposite end of the open cave while the young ones curiously watched as I sat on a rock and allowed myself to briefly let go. Tears ran down my face. I was worn out, and I was having one of those moments that I suppose was perfectly normal, under the circumstances. I still could not believe what was happening. How was it possible that I was in a foreign country searching for my missing daughter?

After a few minutes of much-needed rest, I regrouped, and we continued to clear the area. When we felt that we had exhausted our search there, we moved down to the beach and discussed our next plan of action. We searched by foot one day, by four-wheeler the next, and alternated with a four-wheel drive and walkers. We worked in groups of two each, for a total of four people, my brother, brother-in-law, and me. The other person was Patrick Murphy. He was from the Cayman Islands, and when he first saw Natalee's story break, he decided he would come to Aruba to help out. He joined in and assisted us for about two weeks. He said he was a little surprised when he found out that the three of us were conducting the search. The way we worked it was that two people would be let out of the vehicle. The second two would drive the vehicle approximately half a mile down the road at the southeast beach. They would get out and move forward. The other two would work toward the vehicle, then get in and drive past the other two and park the vehicle and continue to move forward. We each had radios to communicate.

During our daylight searches throughout the island, our group came across many abandoned houses where drug addicts had left razors and other drug paraphernalia. Some were filled with foul smelling odors, feces, urine, cardboard boxes they used as blankets or beds, and general trash. One of those houses was located right next to a fine restaurant near the hotel area and a McDonald's.

In a conversation with some locals, I was told that the island was a major shipment area and that drugs were abundant. After what I saw, I couldn't disagree. Several times, people came into the hotel to meet with other locals and an apparent drug deal was taking place. The person would come in to scope out the area prior to doing the deal. I witnessed a number of twenty-to-thirty-year-old couples entering the hotel after a hard night of partying, and it was obvious that their intoxicated state was from something other than alcohol. Where else could you go and have a weekend of crack or cocaine and return home without having to worry about being arrested for buying or using drugs? You certainly couldn't risk doing it that freely in the United States!

The days passed with no real leads and nothing to indicate whether Natalee was still alive. Hundreds of calls came in with tips that led nowhere and suggestions of crazy schemes that would try anyone's patience. We kept searching and praying. It was all we could do for Natalee, and we hoped it would be enough.

Aruba, being a Dutch protectorate, falls within the jurisdiction of the Dutch government, so I was told to arrive at the Coast Guard headquarters at 7:00 a.m. on Sunday, June 5, 2005, to meet with the captain of the Dutch Marines, along with some people from the police department. When everyone had assembled, I asked them what the plan was. They stared blankly at me and said that they were just told to show up and I would be in charge. I couldn't believe that I was expected to run the show, as though I knew their island better than they did, and well enough to tell them where to start looking. What an unbelievable situation! I wondered if they were either too incompetent to conduct a search on their own or whether they were trying to cover up a crime and hoping to appease me with the offer to look for Natalee wherever I suggested. Either way, it was incredibly frustrating, and it made me feel somewhat helpless. But I had brought a huge map with me that my team had been following and had crossed out where we had already searched. I showed them all where I thought they should begin. My brother and I arranged for the Dutch Marines to help search at the south end of the island in the sand dunes while we were going to search the area just south of the Holiday Inn in four-wheelers. We all agreed to meet back at the Holiday Inn at 11:00 a.m. to discuss our next move, then we left for our assigned areas. Phil rode in a police helicopter while Patrick and I split up and searched the beach.

Everything came to a sudden halt when the Dutch Marines found a bloody mattress in a shack on the beach. The media immediately swarmed the area. I went back to my hotel to notify everyone of the find. Thankfully, the blood turned out to be from a dog.

Not even a full week had passed, and I had become so engrossed in my daughter's disappearance that I was hardly aware of what was going on in the rest of the world. I had absolutely no idea that Natalee's situation had sparked widespread news coverage until I phoned home and heard about it from Robin. The only news channel that we were able to view in the hotel by the time we got back to our room late at night was CNN, and to hear from Robin that Natalee's picture was being broadcast all over the world was unbelievable. And it brought home the message that everyone, not just her family, took her situation seriously. I was glad to see that our plight had gained so much support in such a short time.

Natalee had become everybody's child.


LMS NEWSWIRE   Los Angeles   New York     Washington D.C.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

VETERAN PRODUCER OF SILVERCREEK ENTERTAINMENT PROCURES RIGHTS TO NATALEE HOLLOWAY STORY

Aruba: The Tragic Untold Story of Natalee Holloway and Corruption in Paradise - Nelson Current Publishing
 Book to be Released on April 11th


Larry Garrison, President of Los Angeles based SilverCreek Entertainment is an executive producer, author, journalist and actor, and has procured the rights to the Natalee Holloway Story from her father Dave Holloway. Garrison, along with Dave Holloway and R. Stephanie Good, authored a book for an April 11, 2006 release through Nelson Current Publishing entitled “Aruba: The Tragic Untold Story of Natalee Holloway and Corruption in Paradise.”  Garrison states, “Natalee Holloway has become the symbol of Everybody’s Child, and that is why it propelled to be number one story of 2005 and 2006.” He also is on the board of directors of the Natalee Holloway Foundation dedicated to aiding missing persons, and continuing the search for Natalee. Garrison recently brought the van der Sloot family to New York for a “PrimeTime” and  “Good Morning America”/ABC news interview, along with the Fox news/“Greta” interview. 

Garrison just beat out major competition to procure the rights to “Leopold: The Teintsen Connection.” The project is in development for a film and book based on the true-life story of Madeline Shenkel and her father Marcel Leopold.  Leopold was the number one gunrunner in the world, and was assassinated in France with a blow dart gun.  The story encompasses her plight to find her estranged father and connect with her roots.

Garrison is best known for his EDGAR recipient book and film on the infamous Sante Kimes. The film starred Mary Tyler Moore for CBS. He executive produced it with his long time producing partner Scott Brazil.  Larry also authored “Breaking Into Acting for Dummies,” with Wally Wang. Ben Affleck was featured in “People” magazine with Garrison’s book.

Larry Garrison is best known for producing major news segments for top magazine shows. Garrison has been called “The NewsBreaker” for breaking sweeps stories with his memoirs due out in August of 2006 through Nelson Current Publishing. Garrison has worked on stories such as the Holloway Story, Robert Blake, Ellie Cook Juror #5 of the Michael Jackson case, the Oklahoma bombing, 9/11, Columbine, the Schiavo case and many other high visibility stories ranging from the White House to breaking news.

Larry has also been working with General Thomas P. Stafford on his true-life story. Stafford was the Commander of the Moon Landing and heads the space program for the White House.
         
Last but not least, Garrison has the diaries belonging to LeeBonny Bakely, Robert Blake’s murdered wife, and has developed a feature on her best friend Christina Scheier, entitled “The Confidant.” Scheier and Garrison were last seen on “Larry King Live.”   

Garrison says his “passion to tell the truth and not just spin a story, has propelled his company and himself into a being viable journalist with an eye for realism.” 

CONTACT:

Larry Garrison
SILVERCREEK ENTERTAINMENT
805-370-3630


LMS Newswire is an independent news release distributor. For interviews and information please contact information listed in Contact area.
 


Natalee Case In 'Critical Last Phase'?
March 22, 2006

In an exclusive interview with 48 Hours correspondent Troy Roberts, the lead investigator in the Natalee Holloway case says he believes the teen's body is on Aruba. Police suspect it was moved to avoid detection and then re-buried.

(CBS) 

Gerold Dompig, deputy chief of police in Aruba and the man leading the investigation into the disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway, is breaking his silence on the case in an exclusive interview with 48 Hours correspondent Troy Roberts.

Dompig tells Roberts that investigators believe Holloway's body is on the island, but suspects it was moved to avoid detection and then re-buried. Dompig says the probe to determine what happened to the 18-year-old is in the "critical last phase."

Dompig's remarks will be broadcast this Saturday, March 25, at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

Dompig tells Roberts that investigators have credible information on a possible location of the body and will be employing ground radar and cadaver dogs in their search. Dompig says a critical new witness has surfaced: "He [the witness] wanted to talk about the fact that he knew more about the whereabouts of Natalee... concerning a specific burial location... The information that this person gave was too specific to just be a story that was just made up by someone."


Based on the new information, investigators will begin a new search on the northern tip of the island in the sand dunes near the lighthouse. The authorities' new theory is that someone took the time to carefully hide Holloway’s body, perhaps twice.

Police say Holloway vanished on May 30, 2005 at the end of a graduation trip to the Caribbean island after a night of drinking with friends.


Produced By Josh Gelman/Douglas Longhini © MMVI, CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Quote

"He [the witness] wanted to talk about the fact that he knew more about the whereabouts of Natalee...concerning a specific burial location... The information that this person gave was too specific to just be a story that was just made up by someone."

Attorney: Van Der Sloot, Kalpoes Could Go On Trial This Summer

POSTED: 9:42 am CST March 21, 2006
UPDATED: 10:33 am CST March 21, 2006
 
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Joran Van Der Sloot, Deepak Kalpoe and Satish Kalpoe, the three men last known to have seen missing Mountain Brook teenager Natalee Holloway, could go to trial for her death in Aruba this summer, the Kalpoes' attorney said in an MSNBC interview.

The Kalpoes' attorney, David Kock, told MSNBC that any or all of the men could face first-degree murder, manslaughter or accomplice charges.

"The (district attorney) can also present, let's say, the first instance, the heavier charge and then subsidiary. If that cannot be proven then, and if that cannot be proven, and then to lighter forms of crimes," Kock said.

Unlike in the justice system in the U.S., the three would not go before a jury but a panel of judges, and there is no possibility of a plea agreement.

Kock said the trial could happen in June or July.

"It's about three months away. When I met with the prosecutor in Aruba on one of my last trips there, I indicated to her I'd rather wait a little while and present a strong case rather than present this (with) little or insufficient evidence," said Dave Holloway, Natalee's father.

Kock said the evidence against his clients is all circumstantial.

"Sometimes, best friends lie for each other. Sometimes, no, I think a lot," Kock said.

Kock casts the blame on Van Der Sloot, who he said is still lying about what happened the night Natalee Holloway disappeared. Kock said his clients never came to get Van Der Sloot after he stayed at the beach with Natalee.

"They didn't pick him up, so that's a flagrant lie. If you say that, and he's saying that, and that's his story, and that he called Deepak and afterwards Satish came and he picked him up. That's a lie," Kock said.

Kock doubts that first-degree murder charges would stick because that would mean premeditation.

"I don't think that would even apply theoretically, first-degree murder, you know, because you would have to have an intent to do something, and if you just look at the facts, even if you would want to construct something, I don't think you can even construct first-degree murder," Kock said.

Kock said his clients would not go back to jail before or during the trial unless there was some significant evidence that was brought forward.

News for
Greta Van Susteren


Holloway Case Pulls Big Ratings
3 March 2006 (StudioBriefing)

The Natalee Holloway case continues to attract viewers in massive numbers. According to an analysis of Nielsen ratings, last Thursdays Primetime Live, which featured an interview with Joran Van Der Sloot, the Dutch teenager who is the prime suspect in the case, drew its highest ratings in three years. And on Wednesday of this week, Greta Van Susteren's interview with Van Der Sloot on Fox News Chennel brought her the highest ratings among 25-54-year-olds than any cable news personality, including the usual champ, Bill O'Reilly.

EXCLUSIVE: 'I Think I'd Hate Her'
Joran van der Sloot told his side of the story about Natalee Holloway's disappearance in an exclusive interview with ABC News' 'Primetime' on Feb. 23, 2006. (ABC News) The Search for Natalee Holloway Suspect's Parents Exclusive: Van Der Sloot Home Videos ...

Updated:2006-02-22 23:07:36
Dutch teen says his story about missing Alabama woman is 'truth'
ap

NEW YORK (AP) - A Dutch teenager questioned in the disappearance of a young Mississippi native in Aruba says he had planned to take her to his house to have sex the night she was last seen, but instead left her alone on a beach.

In an interview with ABC News' "Primetime" to air Thursday, Joran van der Sloot, 18, says he did not have sex with Natalee Holloway because they didn't have a condom. He says they "cuddled for a while" and he last saw her "sitting on the sand by the ocean."

"I should have brought her back to her hotel or I should have made sure I left her with someone, one of her friends, but I just should have gotten her back to where she should have been," he told ABC.

Holloway, 18, was last seen May 30 leaving a bar with van der Sloot and Surinamese brothers Deepak Kalpoe, 21, and Satish Kalpoe, 18. No one has been charged in her disappearance.

Holloway was originally from Clinton but had moved to Alabama before her disappearance.

In papers filed for a lawsuit in a Manhattan court last week, Holloway's parents allege their intoxicated daughter, who was on a graduation trip with classmates, left a bar with van der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers at about 1:30 a.m.

Several of Holloway's friends saw her in a car with the youths and asked her to get out, court papers say, but she did not. The court papers go on to allege she was sexually assaulted.

Van der Sloot and the Kalpoes were arrested June 9 on suspicion of involvement in Holloway's disappearance. Van der Sloot acknowledged he was with Holloway but denied any wrongdoing. All were released.

Natalee Holloway Story: Many Just do not Get its Popularity, Including Aruba

For the longest time, many have scoffed at the fact that the Natalee Holloway Holloway3disappearance story has managed to stay in the media spot light. Many have criticized it, yet still managed to report, post and do articles only to capitalize on the stories popularity. The fact is that people want to know what happened, they are intrigued and they have a personal bond with the story.

The Natalee Holloway story is a “Perfect Storm” of a confluence of issues that have captured the attention, hearts and minds of many. The missing American teenage girl who could be anyone’s daughter, sister or cousin with her entire life ahead of her, an international element occurring on a vacation island in the Caribbean that is deemed a safe, and the perceived cover up and preferential treatment of a local boy who has lied more times about the events of that fateful evening than one cares to analyze. That coupled with a continued investigation that has been marred with errors, a lack of proper searches and an attitude of no sense of urgency. Just like in the “Perfect Storm”, the Andrea Gail could not get out of the storms path and neither can Aruba with the Natalee Holloway story.

Many have thought that people eventually would lose interest and go away, including many wishful individuals in Aruba. Ask ABC’s Prime Time if the story is waning? The other night when they interviewed Joran Van der Sloot they received their largest audience and highest rating in three years . The broadcast averaged 12.4 million total viewers.

The broadcast averaged 12.4 million total viewers. The news magazine’s 4.4 rating in the 18-49 demo beat CBS’s 3.8

Not only has the staying power of the Natalee Holloway story helped put pressure on Aruba to get to the bottom of the disappearance, it has also brought light on many other missing persons cases in the MSM. The media has understood that viewers are interested in missing persons cases and the media exposure putting out missing stories cases helps helps in the process. It can be a win-win, if none correctly.

The story is not going away unless it is solved and even then Natalee Holloway will have a legacy. This month Beth Twitty begins her “Stay Safe” program which kicks off at Natalee Holloway’s high school. It will reference her daughter missing in Aruba. In April Dave Holloway’s book, ‘Aruba : The Tragic Untold Story of Natalee Holloway and Corruption in Paradise’ will be released. At the end of May will be the one year anniversary of Natalee’s disappearance.

Going away? Viewers losing interest? Hardly. There is only one way that this story loses interest; justice and the prosecution of those responsible. The sooner the searches on tips and leads are done by the ALE. The sooner that Aruba prosecutes those responsible. The sooner this case will diminish.

However, the coverage of missing person cases by the media will never be the same.

New York Times Best Sellers List now 4 Weeks in a Row! Dated April 30th, May 7th, May 14th and May 21, 2006

  • Aruba (Nelson Current)
    by Dave Holloway, R. Stephanie Good, and Larry Garrison is #19 on the Hardcover Non-fiction list is listed on the New York Times Best Sellers List