Saturday, September 30, 2006
Friday, September 29, 2006
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Friday, September 22, 2006
Beth Twitty. You are our hero. We will never forget Natalee !
Beth, You are a Hero to all mothers in search of the truth !
Mariah Carey - Hero <----Click on this link to listen. Great song !
Music Video Codes By Musicjesus.com
Mariah Carey - Hero <----Click on this link to listen. Great song !
Music Video Codes By Musicjesus.com
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Prayer, by Celine Dion~For Natalee & The world !
FOR Natalee her family & THE WORLD. WE ALL NEED A PRAYER THESE DAYS. ENJOY !
Music Video Codes By Musicjesus.com
Music Video Codes By Musicjesus.com
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Sunday, September 17, 2006
NATALEE HOLLOWAY~WE ARE WORKING HARD FOR THE TRUTH !
NATALEE HOLLOWAY~WE ARE WORKING HARD FOR THE TRUTH !
THIS CASE HAS BEEN HEARTBREAKING FOR SO MANY. WHY JORAN ?
YOU ARUBANS IN LAW UNENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENT MAKE ME SICK, YOUR GOVERNMENT SUX ! YOUR LAWS SUX !
THE LIES TOLD IN THIS CASE WERE SHOCKING
WHY CAN'T YOU TELL THE TRUTH?
NO NATALEE
NO TOURIST
SEEMS LIKE THE SAME
OLE SONG
AND DANCE THESE DAYS
SAME OLE CRAP
BLIND TO THE TRUTH
GARBAGE IN , GARBAGE OUT
BUSINESS AS USUAL
NOT AS MANY TOURIST THOUGH
NOT AS MUCH MONEY FOR ARUBA
JUSTICE FOR NATALEE NOW!
IN TIME JUSTICE WILL BE DONE
WHY DID ARUBA QUIT LOOKING, AFRAID THEY WOULD FIND HER BECAUSE THEY KNOW THE TRUTH ??
NATALEE, WE WILL NEVER GIVE UP !
THIS CASE HAS BEEN HEARTBREAKING FOR SO MANY. WHY JORAN ?
YOU ARUBANS IN LAW UNENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENT MAKE ME SICK, YOUR GOVERNMENT SUX ! YOUR LAWS SUX !
THE LIES TOLD IN THIS CASE WERE SHOCKING
WHY CAN'T YOU TELL THE TRUTH?
NO NATALEE
NO TOURIST
SEEMS LIKE THE SAME
OLE SONG
AND DANCE THESE DAYS
SAME OLE CRAP
BLIND TO THE TRUTH
GARBAGE IN , GARBAGE OUT
BUSINESS AS USUAL
NOT AS MANY TOURIST THOUGH
NOT AS MUCH MONEY FOR ARUBA
JUSTICE FOR NATALEE NOW!
IN TIME JUSTICE WILL BE DONE
WHY DID ARUBA QUIT LOOKING, AFRAID THEY WOULD FIND HER BECAUSE THEY KNOW THE TRUTH ??
NATALEE, WE WILL NEVER GIVE UP !
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
NATALEE'S LAST NIGHT, WHAT REALLY HAPPENED ?
Interesting link about the Natalee Holloway case . Check it out.
http://judicial-inc.biz/Joran_va_der_sloot.htm
Meanwhile do not forget to:
http://judicial-inc.biz/Joran_va_der_sloot.htm
Meanwhile do not forget to:
Monday, September 11, 2006
Wednesday, September 06, 2006
Joran does interview with ABC Good Morning America Sept.5-2006
AFTER JORAN READ OJ'S NEW BOOK HE WENT ON TV AGAIN TRYING TO CONVIENCE THE WORLD OF HIS INNOCENCE. YEAH RIGHT JORAN. READ MORE BELOW.
OKAY..SO JORAN IS NOW DOING MORE INTERVIEWS WITH ABC GOOD MORNING AMERICA. HIS FATHER TAUGHT HIM WELL HOW TO LIE AND STICK WITH THE LIE HE STILL CONTINUES TO TELL WHATEVER JORAN. YOU ARE THE ONE THAT HAS TO ANSWER FOR YOUR LIES, NOT US. WE WILL CONTINUE TO BLOG FOR NATALEE AND YOU WILL ALWAYS BE THE PRIME SUSPECT UNTIL PROVEN OTHERWISE. I THINK YOU AND OJ MUST HAVE GOTTON TOGETHER AND HE HELPED YOU AS WELL . HA ! WHAT A SCUMBAG YOU ARE ! TRANSCRIPT OF INTERVIEW BELOW.
Van der Sloot Revisits Aruba Beach, Says Nightmare Doesn't End
Former Chief Suspect in Natalee Holloway Case Speaks to ABC News
Sept. 5, 2006 — It's been more than 15 months since Alabama teen Natalee Holloway disappeared on the island of Aruba during a high school graduation trip.
In that time there have been frantic searches, dwindling hopes, and serious missteps in the investigation.
Much of the attention about what happened to Holloway has been focused on one young man, Joran van der Sloot, a Dutch native of Aruba who, according to his own words, was the last known person to be with Holloway.
ABC News' Chris Cuomo recently traveled to Aruba for an exclusive interview with van der Sloot, who said he had not harmed Holloway.
Since that time, investigators have proven nothing different.
Now 19, van der Sloot says that, in a way, the night he met Holloway has never ended.
"All the time, all the time it's going around my head," he told Cuomo.
Still Being Punished
While he is no longer being detained, van der Sloot is still a prisoner of the speculation surrounding the student's disappearance.
"I think for a lot of parts I've been unfairly treated, because I had nothing to do with this, and a lot of people seem to think I do," he said.
That's due in large part to his initial statements about the night the 18-year-old went missing.
At first, van der Sloot and two friends said that they had dropped Holloway off at her hotel at the end of the evening, but later van der Sloot said that he had taken the American teen to the beach.
The lie landed him in jail, but after three months, police could not tie him to any crime.
He was released in September and talked to ABC News in February to explain his deception.
"I didn't want anyone to know. I didn't want anyone to know I left her at the beach," he said.
That explanation hasn't stopped the media scrutiny.
"It's goes too far, definitely in the American media," van der Sloot said. "I was here with my girlfriend on vacation, and some tourists filmed us. … And they called me a predator on the beach again, going after a girl, American girl, an American tourist. And I was there on the beach with my girlfriend that I had been with for six months now."
'I Would Have Done a Lot of Things Differently'
Van der Sloot, a Dutch citizen, returned to Holland for college, abandoning his onetime dream of attending school in the United States.
He says life is normal enough there.
He's meeting girls, and making friends is not a problem.
When he comes back to Aruba, though, the past still haunts him.
"Of course it doesn't feel good when like, you saw, people putting the cameras out and screaming, 'Where is she? What did you do with her?' And that doesn't feel good. It doesn't make you feel good," he said.
Van der Sloot says he often thinks about how different life would be if he had gone home earlier that night and had never taken Holloway to the beach.
"And I say, 'Yeah, what if? What if?' But I can't change all those things anymore," he said. "Of course if I would have known all this would have happened, I would have done a lot of things differently."
His concern now is for his future, and van der Sloot says he wants the killer to be caught so he can close that chapter of his life for good.
"That's the worst part, because there's always the 'if' question. What if? You know? You were the last person with her, all these things."
"And if no one knows or no one comes forward or tells or yeah, they don't solve the case, you're always gonna have people saying, you were the last person with her."
OKAY..SO JORAN IS NOW DOING MORE INTERVIEWS WITH ABC GOOD MORNING AMERICA. HIS FATHER TAUGHT HIM WELL HOW TO LIE AND STICK WITH THE LIE HE STILL CONTINUES TO TELL WHATEVER JORAN. YOU ARE THE ONE THAT HAS TO ANSWER FOR YOUR LIES, NOT US. WE WILL CONTINUE TO BLOG FOR NATALEE AND YOU WILL ALWAYS BE THE PRIME SUSPECT UNTIL PROVEN OTHERWISE. I THINK YOU AND OJ MUST HAVE GOTTON TOGETHER AND HE HELPED YOU AS WELL . HA ! WHAT A SCUMBAG YOU ARE ! TRANSCRIPT OF INTERVIEW BELOW.
Van der Sloot Revisits Aruba Beach, Says Nightmare Doesn't End
Former Chief Suspect in Natalee Holloway Case Speaks to ABC News
Sept. 5, 2006 — It's been more than 15 months since Alabama teen Natalee Holloway disappeared on the island of Aruba during a high school graduation trip.
In that time there have been frantic searches, dwindling hopes, and serious missteps in the investigation.
Much of the attention about what happened to Holloway has been focused on one young man, Joran van der Sloot, a Dutch native of Aruba who, according to his own words, was the last known person to be with Holloway.
ABC News' Chris Cuomo recently traveled to Aruba for an exclusive interview with van der Sloot, who said he had not harmed Holloway.
Since that time, investigators have proven nothing different.
Now 19, van der Sloot says that, in a way, the night he met Holloway has never ended.
"All the time, all the time it's going around my head," he told Cuomo.
Still Being Punished
While he is no longer being detained, van der Sloot is still a prisoner of the speculation surrounding the student's disappearance.
"I think for a lot of parts I've been unfairly treated, because I had nothing to do with this, and a lot of people seem to think I do," he said.
That's due in large part to his initial statements about the night the 18-year-old went missing.
At first, van der Sloot and two friends said that they had dropped Holloway off at her hotel at the end of the evening, but later van der Sloot said that he had taken the American teen to the beach.
The lie landed him in jail, but after three months, police could not tie him to any crime.
He was released in September and talked to ABC News in February to explain his deception.
"I didn't want anyone to know. I didn't want anyone to know I left her at the beach," he said.
That explanation hasn't stopped the media scrutiny.
"It's goes too far, definitely in the American media," van der Sloot said. "I was here with my girlfriend on vacation, and some tourists filmed us. … And they called me a predator on the beach again, going after a girl, American girl, an American tourist. And I was there on the beach with my girlfriend that I had been with for six months now."
'I Would Have Done a Lot of Things Differently'
Van der Sloot, a Dutch citizen, returned to Holland for college, abandoning his onetime dream of attending school in the United States.
He says life is normal enough there.
He's meeting girls, and making friends is not a problem.
When he comes back to Aruba, though, the past still haunts him.
"Of course it doesn't feel good when like, you saw, people putting the cameras out and screaming, 'Where is she? What did you do with her?' And that doesn't feel good. It doesn't make you feel good," he said.
Van der Sloot says he often thinks about how different life would be if he had gone home earlier that night and had never taken Holloway to the beach.
"And I say, 'Yeah, what if? What if?' But I can't change all those things anymore," he said. "Of course if I would have known all this would have happened, I would have done a lot of things differently."
His concern now is for his future, and van der Sloot says he wants the killer to be caught so he can close that chapter of his life for good.
"That's the worst part, because there's always the 'if' question. What if? You know? You were the last person with her, all these things."
"And if no one knows or no one comes forward or tells or yeah, they don't solve the case, you're always gonna have people saying, you were the last person with her."