Joran van der Sloot extortion case nearing an end? Plea, sentencing hearing set
The extortion case against Joran van der Sloot could be nearing an end.
According to federal documents made public Friday, a plea and sentencing is set for van der Sloot at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 18, in Birmingham.
No additional information is being released at this time, and an order filed in connection with the case Friday has not yet been made public.
He has previously sought and been granted two extensions on deadlines while he decided how to proceed.
Although van der Sloot, now 35, has long been suspected in the disappearance and death of the Mountain Brook High School graduate Natalee Holloway while she was visiting Aruba in 2005, he has never been charged in connection to her death.
However, federal authorities in Alabama contend that in 2010 van der Sloot exploited the fear of Holloway’s mother, Beth, that she would never find her daughter’s body or know what happened to her unless she paid him $250,000.
A federal grand jury in Birmingham indicted van der Sloot on June 30, 2010, on charges of wire fraud and extortion.
Van der Sloot remains held in the Shelby County Jail.
Read full coverage of the case here
Van der Sloot on June 8 was extradited from Peru, where he is serving 28 years for the 2010 murder of college student Stephany Flores, to Alabama. The following day, he made his initial appearance in court and pleaded not guilty to the wire fraud and extortion charges.
The case is being prosecuted by Lloyd Peeples, chief of the U.S. Attorney’s Criminal Division, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Catherine Crosby.
Prosecutors contend that van der Sloot told Holloway for an initial payment of $25,000, he would take the Holloway’s representative to the location of Natalee’s body. Once the body was recovered and confirmed to be Natalee, he said, he would then collect the remaining $225,000.
The affidavit said Natalee Holloway died after Joran van der Sloot threw her to the ground when she attempted to stop him from leaving her.
The affidavit also says that his late father, Paulus van der Sloot, then helped him dispose of her body.
Van der Sloot told a representative for Beth Holloway that his father buried her remains in the gravel under the foundation of the single-story house.
He later admitted to the representative that he lied about the location of Natalee’s remains
Joran van der Sloot has been granted an extension on pretrial deadlines, including whether or not he will plead guilty or move forward through the court process.