The extradition of Joran van der Sloot, the prime suspect in Natalee Holloway’s disappearance, is more than a decade in the making.
www.wbrc.com
He continued, “He will stay here until he is tried, and once he is convicted, which I believe he will be, he will stay here until he is sentenced. The moment he is sentenced though, he is sent back to Peru to serve out the remainder of his murder sentence down there, which if he is not paroled or released early, that is 2040. When he is released from the Peruvian prison, he is then extradited back to the United States, to a Bureau of Prisons facility.”
If convicted of both charges, van der Sloot faces a maximum sentence of 50 years.
“He’s going to be an old man when he leaves Peru and then he still has federal US time to face. So, any sentence he could get, is going to be a very close to a life sentence for Joran van der Sloot,” said Town, adding that after serving time in the United States, van der Sloot, “still has Hell to look forward to.”
Town calls this extradition “so important” because it shows justice can be served, even if it takes 18 years.
“This is about one, a mother, to a daughter who was lost, who never gave up, and really it’s about the hope of every crime victim’s family that justice, whether it’s tomorrow, or 18 years after the homicide, that justice can still be served. Whether it’s the state of Alabama or the Department of Justice, that we don’t leave our fight in the dressing room and we will continue to seek justice.
[..]
So it’s important for victims of crime, and the family members of victims of crime understand that yes, the process, it takes longer times sometimes, but it doesn’t have to end with an empty phone call, it can end with the perpetrator in court for something, in this case its extortion and wire fraud, but they are in court and they are facing the federal justice system where there is no sanctuary of parole.”