Natalee Holloway’s killer, Joran van der Sloot, has been having sex with three women while held in a Peruvian prison.
Van der Sloot, 36, confessed in October to the 2005 murder of Natalee Holloway, 18, a high school senior, as part of a plea deal for a different murder.
A spokesperson for the National Penitentiary Institute of Peru told the New York Post that the Dutch murderer “was approved for conjugal visits.”
“He has the same rights as any other prisoner,” they added. According to Peruvian law, prisoners can have private visits to have sexual relations with their partners.
A friend of his, Cas Arends, called van der Sloot a “player” to whom “women have always been attracted.”
The convicted murderer admitted to killing Holloway, years after she disappeared, sparking an unsolved international mystery after she rejected his advances by kneeing him in the crotch outside a bar in Aruba more than 15 years ago.
Convicted murderer Joran van der Sloot, 36, had sexual relations with three women while he was held in Peru’s National Penitentiary Institute.
Van der Sloot confessed to the murder of 18-year-old Natalee Holloway, who disappeared in 2005 during a high school graduation trip to the Caribbean island of Aruba with friends.
The convicted murderer admitted to killing Holloway after she rejected his advances by kneeing him in the crotch outside a bar in Aruba more than 15 years ago.
Van der Sloot was sentenced to 28 years in prison for beating, strangling and suffocating Stephany Flores in 2010 in Peru. That sentence began in 2012.
Flores, a business student, met van der Sloot at a casino in Lima, Peru, before he killed her in a fit of rage.
Flores was found murdered at the Tac Miraflores Hotel in Lima, Peru, in April 2010. Van der Sloot was arrested shortly after and, according to police, confessed to the murder.
The Peruvian court also ordered him to pay $75,000 in reparations to Ms. Flores’ family.
He confessed to murdering Holloway as part of a plea deal for another murder he committed in 2010. Stephany Flores, 21, was found murdered at the Tac Miraflores Hotel in Lima, Peru, in April 2010, after the two They met in a casino.
In 2023, van der Sloot was extradited to the United States on charges of wire fraud and extortion related to the Holloway case. He pleaded guilty in that case and provided details about the killing of the Alabama teen.
A judge sentenced him to 20 years in prison to run concurrently with the sentence in Peru. Van der Sloot was then allowed to return to prison in Peru.
DailyMail.com previously reported that the killer is unlikely to ever be prosecuted for Holloway’s murder in the US thanks to a plea deal with prosecutors.
Holloway, a teenager from Clinton, Mississippi, disappeared in 2005 during a high school graduation trip to the Caribbean island of Aruba, a territory of the Netherlands.
Eyewitnesses said she was last seen leaving a bar in a car with van der Sloot on the night of her disappearance. While her remains were never found, an Alabama judge declared her legally dead in 2012.
Natalee, pictured left, was celebrating her high school graduation in Aruba when she met Van der Sloot at a bar. Eyewitnesses said they saw her leave with van der Sloot the night she disappeared.
Paulus Van der Sloot and his wife Anita, pictured here with Joran, met with Beth Holloway in the midst of her search for answers about her daughter’s disappearance. Beth said her parents bragged about her son’s sex life in the awkward conversation.
He later admitted that he killed Holloway and disposed of Holloway’s remains.
U.S. authorities did not have jurisdiction to prosecute Van der Sloot for the 2005 murder on a beach in Aruba, where the statute of limitations for murder has expired.
But the revelations from his guilty plea have provided long-sought answers for Holloway’s relatives.
Following her daughter’s disappearance, Holloway’s mother, Beth, traveled to van der Sloot’s family home in Aruba and said she had an awkward meeting with his parents as they boasted about her son’s sex life.
Beth said her parents Anita and Paulus “raised a murderer” while her mother “sobbed uncontrollably” and told her explicit details of alleged sexual encounters between her son and Natalee, which he had told her about.
Max NewsGreta Van Susteren, who traveled with Beth to the family home, described how van der Sloot’s mother was “sobbing and telling the most graphic things about the things she claimed Joran had done sexually to Natalee, things that I mean, horribly graphic.” ‘
Beth also recalled how Van der Sloot’s father Paulus would sweat so much that his wife had to use a dish towel to wipe puddles off the floor.
Beth said her parents Anita and Paulus ‘raised a murderer’ while her mother ‘sobbed uncontrollably’ and told her explicit details of alleged sexual encounters between her son and Natalee, which he had told her about.
A spokesperson for the Peruvian prison stated that van der Sloot “has the same rights as any other prisoner” and therefore can have conjugal visits.
After he was finally convicted for her daughter’s death, Beth (center) told the New York Times that van der Sloot’s “control” over her disappeared. The mother is seen outside the courthouse after van der Sloot confessed to killing her daughter.
“I was sweating so much that I was trying not to gag. The sweat was forming in these pools and all the pools came together and made one big lake. I felt nauseous,” he recalled.
Paulus, van der Sloot’s father, said that, looking back, the reason he was sweating so much was probably because he knew his son had done wrong and had a guilty conscience.
Beth agreed and said, “Well, he raised a murderer” and of her mother added, “she helped him in every way.”
After he was finally convicted for his daughter’s death, Beth told the New York Times that van der Sloot’s “control” over her disappeared.
“It took us 18 years to switch roles to the point where now I feel like I was the victor over him,” Beth said.