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The evidence against the Dutchman includes hotel security camera video showing Flores and Van der Sloot entering his hotel room together and the Dutchman leaving alone four hours later. Security camera video from the Atlantic City early on the morning of her death shows Flores arriving at a poker table where Van der Sloot is sitting with other players, shaking his hand as if they met before and then taking the seat next to him. The two later leave together. Van der Sloot confessed, police say, on his third full day in police custody and a full week after he fled into northern Chile. He was charged with extortion in the United States on June 2 -- the day of his arrest in Chile
-- in a case the commenced after Van der Sloot contacted John Kelly, a New York lawyer for Holloway's mother, Beth Twitty, in April, according to an affidavit. The Dutchman allegedly was seeking $250,000 in exchange for the location of the young woman's body, how she died and the identity of those involved. Van der Sloot's father died in February and he "wanted to come clean, but he also wanted money," said Bo Dietl, a private investigator who worked with Kelly on the case. After consulting with Twitty, Kelly contacted the FBI. It sent 10 to 12 agents to Aruba for a sting operation, he said, in which Kelly on May 10 gave Van der Sloot $10,000 in cash and another $15,000 was wired to a bank account. Van der Sloot was told he would get $225,000 once the body was found, Dietl said. According to the affidavit, Van der Sloot insisted that a written contract be signed between him and Twitty. Van der Sloot was secretly videotaped by the FBI in an Aruba hotel telling Kelly he pushed Holloway down, that she hit her head on a rock and died, the affidavit says. He said he then contacted his father, who helped him bury the body. Kelly and Van der Sloot went to where the Dutchman said he and his father had put Holloway
-- in the foundation of a house. No body has been found, however. And the affidavit says Van der Sloot admitted in a May 17 e-mail -- he was in Peru by then
-- that he had lied about the location of Holloway's remains. It was not the first time Van der Sloot has admitted to having lied about the case. Several times, he made confessions he later retracted. Van der Sloot was the last person seen with Holloway before the girl vanished on the last night of a high school graduation trip. He was arrested twice but released both times for a lack of evidence.
[Associated
Press;
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