Netflix has dropped a new three-part true crime documentary series, among other offerings in the genre, delving into the puzzling disappearance of Natalee Holloway back in 2005. That May, a group of high school graduates from a small Alabama town jetted off to Aruba to mark their milestone.
But one pupil, Natalee Holloway, failed to board the flight back home, and her vanishing triggered a sweeping island-wide hunt that yielded no answers until 2023.
For the first time, her mum, Beth Holloway, shares the complete account of the case that has "haunted her for the past 20 years", featuring a "dramatic confession two decades later".
The three-episode Netflix series chronicles the distressing tale through the perspective of those who knew the well-liked student best, uncovering "forgotten moments, previously unreported elements in the case, and its lasting impact". Audiences will hear from detectives and view footage that's never been broadcast before.
The documentary also reveals previously unheard audio from Natalee's loved ones as it "dives into the tragic story that dominated national news and a mother's unrelenting search for truth and justice".
Behind the eagerly awaited project are directors Dani Sloane (The Menendez Brothers, Girl in the Picture) and Matthew Galkin (Murder in Big Horn, One Night In Idaho: The College Murders). An official launch date has not yet been confirmed.
Natalee was an 18 year old American high-school graduate from Mountain Brook, Alabama, who vanished during her holiday in Aruba. She was last spotted outside Carlos'n Charlie's, a restaurant and nightclub in Oranjestad, getting into a car with a group of locals.
When the three men were interrogated, they claimed to have dropped her off at her hotel and denied any knowledge of her whereabouts. In December 2007, Aruban prosecutors declared that the case would be closed without any charges being filed.
At her father's request, Natalee was legally declared dead in January 2012, but a shocking revelation in 2023 turned the entire investigation upside down.
The main suspect in the case was Dutch national Joran van der Sloot, who had shared a car with Natalee along with brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe. Van der Sloot was arrested twice on suspicion of involvement in her disappearance, and the Kalpoe brothers were each arrested three times.
However, due to insufficient evidence, all suspects were released without charges.
Van der Sloot was later seen in a video claiming that Natalee died on the morning she disappeared, and that a friend had disposed of her body.
He later alleged that he had sold her into sexual slavery, only to retract his statement later. In January 2012, he was found guilty of the 2010 murder of business student Stephany Flores Ramírez in Peru.
She was the daughter of Ricardo Flores, a former president of the Peruvian Automobile Club.
Then, in June 2023, van der Sloot was sent to the US to face trial for extortion and wire fraud, both charges connected to Natalee's disappearance.
On 18 October of that year, he pleaded guilty to the extortion charges and confessed to murdering Natalee by blunt force trauma after she spurned his sexual advances.
He later went back to Peru to carry on serving his sentence for Stephany's murder. He is currently imprisoned at Establecimiento Penitenciario Ancón.