Dutch citizen
Joran Van der Sloot was sentenced to 28 years in prison by a Peruvian
court on Friday for killing a woman in Lima in 2010, exactly five years
since 18-year-old Alabama native Natalee Holloway disappeared after
spending time with him.
He had accepted homicide and
theft charges filed against him in his trial and apologized on Wednesday
for killing 21-year-old business student Stephany Flores after meeting
her in a casino in Peru's capital.
Van
der Sloot, 24, fidgeted nervously and sweated profusely during
sentencing and was ordered to pay 200,000 soles ($74,074) to the Flores
family. He shook his head afterwards, sighed and was escorted out of the
courtroom by guards. He did not say if he would appeal the ruling.
He could conceivably spend less than a decade behind bars because Peru often releases prisoners for good behavior after serving a third of their terms.
Peruvian
police said Flores, a highly skilled poker player and the daughter of a
wealthy businessman, was robbed and killed on May 30, 2010, five years
to the day after U.S. citizen Holloway vanished during a high school
graduation trip to the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba.
Van
der Sloot has told police he strangled, beat and suffocated Flores
after he found her looking at his laptop computer in his hotel room. The
laptop contained emails about Holloway's death.
He fled to Chile after Flores' death but was arrested there and returned to Peru for questioning.
The
Flores murder probe brought renewed attention to the case of Holloway,
who vanished during a high school graduation trip to Aruba, where Van
der Sloot was living.
Van der Sloot
was arrested twice in the Holloway case but he was never charged due to
a lack of evidence as they never found her body. An Alabama judge
declared her dead on Thursday.
Holloway's family has criticized Dutch authorities for not making more progress in the case.
Source: reuters.com