ABC
'G.V.C.' Patrolled Holiday
Inn's Beach
April 17, 2006 —
Joran van der
Sloot, the Dutch teen long suspected of being involved in Natalee Holloway's
disappearance, does not know the 19-year-old arrested over the weekend in the
case, his lawyer says.
Over the weekend,
Aruban authorities announced that they had made a new arrest in Holloway's
disappearance.
Holloway has been
missing since she disappeared on May 30, 2005, while on a class trip to Aruba.
Authorities would not release the name of the person who was arrested and would
not say whether he was considered a suspect. They only said that he was 19
years old and had the initials G.V.C. Sources told ABC News that the young
man's name was Geoffrey van Cromvoirt.
On Sunday, some
media reports said van der Sloot and van Cromvoirt were acquaintances. Joseph
Tacopina, an attorney representing van der Sloot, who was arrested in
Holloway's disappearance last year but released because of a lack of evidence,
said those reports were wrong. His client, he said, knows nothing about van
Cromvoirt.
"I am
absolutely convinced he doesn't know him, doesn't hang out with, or socialize
with him, did not know his name," Tacopina said. "This somehow
brought Joran back into the picture. He knows nothing about him, has never spoken
of him, and certainly did not discuss the case with him."
Connections to a
Security Company
Van Cromvoirt
worked for a private security company that patrols beaches outside Aruba's
hotels. Holloway was last seen leaving an Aruba bar with van der Sloot and
Surinamese brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe, who were held for 25 days before
being released. Van der Sloot has said he left Holloway on a beach near her
hotel after they had kissed.
Van Cromvoirt's
family runs the security company, according to Tacopina. The company provides
security for the Aruban government and private companies, including the Holiday
Inn, where Holloway was staying, he said. The company installed the security
camera and patrols the beach. Van Cromvoirt was part of the team that patrolled
the Holiday Inn's beach in the early hours of the morning, according to
Tacopina.
"This is a
positive step as far as we are concerned in this investigation because we have
always maintained [van der Sloot] is innocent of harming in any way, shape or
form," Tacopina said.
Van der Sloot has
repeatedly denied being involved in Holloway's disappearance. He regretted one
thing in his encounter with her.
"I think what
I did wrong is leaving her there at the beach. I should have brought her back
to her hotel or I should have made sure I left her with someone, one of her
friends," van der Sloot told ABC's "Primetime."
Reenactment on TV
Last week, a Dutch
TV show similar to "America's Most Wanted" reenacted the Holloway
story in an episode that aired in Aruba last week. The show advertised a tip
line.
"I understand
they got approximately 60 tips," said Dave Holloway, Natalee's father.
"And maybe this is one of them they're following up on."
Tacopina said that
forensic evidence had been found on a T-shirt on the south side of the island,
and that there were lots of leads that hadn't been explored yet.
"When we
started getting our hands around the FBI reports and Aruban law enforcement
documents, I got so agitated in seeing the other leads not followed up on
simply because the name van der Sloot was not attached to it," Tacopina
said. "I think they came into possession of this young boy's name within
the last couple of weeks."