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To: Andy'smom; sarasota; cyborg; kcvl; maggief; Fritzy; No Surrender No Retreat; grizzfan; ...
Texas volunteers to return to Aruba to look for missing teen

By The Associated Press

(7/21/05 - ORANJESTAD, Aruba) — Volunteers with a search group from Texas plan to return to Aruba with high-tech equipment as they help look for a missing Alabama teen.

Authorities this week took DNA samples from a jailed Dutch youth and two of his friends as officials concentrate on physical evidence in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway.

The 18-year-old has been missing since late May during a high school graduation trip.

Also, DNA tests will be done on blond hair attached to duct tape that was found along Aruba's northeastern coast.

Members of Dickinson-based Texas Equusearch pulled out of the island over the weekend after their efforts turned up no sign of Holloway.

Now organizers say they'll dispatch three people to the Caribbean island on July 28th with ground-penetrating radar.

902 posted on 07/21/2005 9:01:30 AM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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Possible Break In Holloway Case?

ORANJESTAD, Aruba, July 21, 2005

Authorities told defense attorneys the DNA would be compared to material found by investigators but did not disclose what would be used in the comparison.

(CBS/AP) Police in Aruba are now testing DNA from three young men who were with Natalee Holloway the night she disappeared. She's been missing nearly two months.

The samples were taken Tuesday, a day after investigators said they would conduct DNA tests on blond hair attached to duct tape that was found along Aruba's northeastern coast, in a possible break to the six-week-old disappearance of Natalee Holloway.

Beth Holloway Twitty, Natalee Holloway's mother, told The Early Show she is hoping for the best.

"I'm so grateful to the individual, the park ranger that made that discovery," she said, "How observant of him, because, you know, I think it could be a critical piece of evidence."

Dutch youth, Joran van der Sloot, 17, was taken to a hospital and submitted a saliva sample for the genetic testing sought by prosecutors, his attorney Richie Kock said.

Two Surinamese brothers, Satish Kalpoe, 18, and Deepak Kalpoe, 21, who were detained earlier in the case but released, also submitted saliva samples the same day, said Ruud Offringa, an attorney for the older brother.

Authorities told defense attorneys the DNA would be compared to material found by investigators, but did not disclose what would be used in the comparison, Offringa and Kock said.

Van der Sloot and the brothers were the last people known to have seen Holloway before she vanished May 30. They have not been charged and all three maintain their innocence.

They were arrested June 9, but a judge ordered the Kalpoe brothers released July 4 for lack of evidence. The judge ordered van der Sloot to remain in custody until Sept. 4, when prosecutors must present arguments again if they want to prolong the detention.

The saliva specimens will be sent to the Netherlands, and it could take a week or two for the findings to be disclosed, Offringa said. The test to determine if the hair came from Holloway also will take place in the Netherlands.

Aruba, a Dutch protectorate, doesn't have a lab to conduct the genetic testing.

A spokesman for the Aruban government, Ruben Trapenberg, declined to comment Wednesday on the investigation, and the prosecutor could not be reached.

The FBI, which has been advising in the investigation, has said it would conduct separate genetic testing on the hair.

A park ranger found the duct tape while collecting trash Sunday on the opposite side of the island from where the 18-year-old honors student was last seen in public.

Holloway disappeared on the last day of a vacation with 124 classmates to celebrate their high school graduation. Extensive searches by Dutch marines, Aruban police, and some 2,000 volunteers have found no trace of her.

A volunteer search organization from Dickinson, Texas, that pulled its team from the island on Sunday said it planned to dispatch three people to the Caribbean island on July 28 with ground-penetrating radar.

903 posted on 07/21/2005 9:09:10 AM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: TexKat

Thanks for the ping, TexKat.

I have a lot of cathing up to do later this afternoon.

Again, thanks. Much appreciated.


907 posted on 07/21/2005 9:21:47 AM PDT by TAquinas (Demographics has consequences: Tom Tancredo for President 2008/2012.)
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To: TexKat; Gene Vidocq

I wonder why they haven't called in the Vidocq Society? I'm reading a true-crime book called Trail of Blood by Jim Dunn. He was in basically the same situation as Natalee's parents, but it was a U.S. situation:
No body
Suspects (more than 1)
The only difference is that there WAS lots of blood.
He called in the Vidocq Society, and they used their forensic and psychological profiling skills to prosecute the murderers. They basically proved that the guy's girlfriend was a psychopath.
I wonder if Natalee's parents have contacted the Vidocq Society?


910 posted on 07/21/2005 9:36:47 AM PDT by hispanarepublicana (There will be no bad talk or loud talk in this place. CB Stubblefield.)
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