Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Natalee Ann Holloway


The case of the disappearance of Natalee Holloway has been one of the most hotly covered cases of the past decade. Due to unreliable evidence, silent witnesses, and inept law enforcement in Aruba, the case has made slow progress and circled on itself many times. This case is unique because it is wavering between being open or closed. Every once in a while, new evidence will surface or old evidence will be re-evaluated. The case has just recently been declared "cold" because the victim has not been seen nor heard from in a considerable length of time: in Natalee's case, three years.

In the early morning hours of May 30, 2005, Natalee Holloway, of Mountain Brook, Alabama, disappeared. She was last seen leaving Carlos 'n' Charlie's Nightclub on the island of Aruba in the town of Oranjestad with three young men, later identified as Joran Van der Sloot and brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe. Natalee was first reported missing the next morning when she failed to show up for her flight home from Aruba. She was on a post-graduation trip with her high school's graduating class. Her bags and passport were later discovered in her hotel room. She never left.

After months of squabbling and valuable time lost, Aruban authorities finally arrested van der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers. There are many speculations as to what happened to Holloway, from her being raped, drowned, murdered, or spirited out of the country, among other things. Investigators on the Aruban end of the case met an unfavorable amount of obstruction at the highest levels of law investigation, being blocked by everything from local police to the FBI in their attempts to solve the Holloway case. Holloway's mother, Beth Twitty, expressly forbid any investigation into the Holloway family and any interviewing of Natalee's fellow classmates to try and determine the kind of girl she was. Holloway's father, Dave Holloway, has since written a book on his daughter's disappearance, blaming Aruba for the loss of his daughter and ignoring the possibility that she could have willingly participated in illicit activities. Twitty and Holloway, backed by the governor of Alabama, called for a travel boycott of Aruba and the entire Kingdom of the Netherlands, saying that Americans faced a valid threat.

There have been many attempts to "pin the tail on the donkey," so to speak. Many suspects have been arrested and released, some being re-arrested later. Confusion of evidence has limited the credibility of said attempts, most notably the Skeeters video. Journalist Jamie Skeeters secretly taped an interview with Deepak Kalpoe, where he spoke of Holloway and the night of her disappearance. The tape was given to the TV show Dr. Phil and was aired on an episode. On the Dr. Phil tape, when asked if all three men had sex with Holloway, Kalpoe is heard to answer "She did. You'd be surprised how easy it was." This created an outrage among the Kalpoe family, leading them to file a libel and slander suit against the Holloway family and Dr. Phil. Further investigation of the original tapes by the FBI and Dutch authorities have determined the Dr. Phil tape to be fudged and that Kalpoe in fact says, "No, we didn't. You'd be surprised how simple it would've been."

The most recent developments in the case have led to van der Sloot's re-arrest in 2007. He has since been released and is now studying in Thailand. There are speculations as to his funding and guiding of a prostitution ring based in Thailand planning to export Thai prostitutes to Aruba as sex slaves. No matter how the case is looked at, investigators are dealing with a handful of shady characters, especially Holloway herself. Since she has been assumed dead and has not been heard from in three years either way, we cannot know what truly happened to her on May 30th. Future developments may prove a culprit or an innocent of van der Sloot and the Kalpoes.

Elizabeth Ann Short - The Black Dahlia


Possibly one of the most famous cold cases of the 20th century, the case of Elizabeth Ann Short has kept the American public fascinated for decades. The gruesome murder shocked an America emerging victorious from war and happily going about peace. The case remains unsolved by LAPD to this day.
On the morning of January 15, 1947, Elizabeth Ann Short's body was found in a vacant lot in San Francisco. She had been missing for a week. However, this was not just a normal police discovery: many things about her body were out of place in a murder. Firstly, she was nude. Secondly, she was perfectly clean. Thirdly, her entire body was drained of blood. Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the discovery was the state of her body: it was bisected and further mutilated, almost beyond recognition.
It is unclear where and when Short acquired the nickname "the Black Dahlia." She was beautiful and had a penchant for wearing black, and there was a popular movie released in 1946 titled "The Blue Dahlia." Some say that she was called the Black Dahlia by some peers starting in the summer of '46, but others say that the press invented the name in order to sensationalize the case. Short's mother, living in Massachusetts, was horrified to hear of her daughter's murder and of the turns the case was taking in the press. Journalists did all they could to draw attention to the case of a girl following her acting dream being destroyed by her alleged risky lifestyle. Reports from many men claimed that Short had led a very promiscuous sexual life, some saying that she was a prostitute and a "call girl," but coroner's and doctor's reports say otherwise. A sexual defect has been mentioned in all investigations of the case, making it impossible for Short to be sexually active at all, not to mention a prostitute.

Though there have been almost 60 confessors to the murder of Elizabeth Short, none of these people were ever charged as guilty. Men and women alike made false confessions for a variety of reasons, from getting their name in the press to finding long-lost relatives. There was nothing left with Short's body that would have provided a lead to police. All leads and confessions were exhausted within months of Short's murder. Nobody was ever convicted.

There have been many pop culture references to The Black Dahlia through the years. Numerous books and movies are based on the story of Elizabeth Short. There are multiple websites devoted solely to the case. http://www.bethshort.com/ is a good website to go to if you're looking for the basics of the case. http://www.blackdahliasolution.org/ has a slightly more confusing yet in-depth discussion of the case. Both have the original photos from when the body was found and the coroner's records, but bethshort.com does not display them as part of the website (there are links to the photos). They are clearly displayed on blackdahliasolution.org with no warning to the viewer, so if you do not have a strong stomach or do not want to see something absolutely disgusting, DO NOT VISIT THIS WEBSITE.