Missing Aruba Teen Reward Upped
Family Offers $200K For Natalee Holloway's Safe Return, $100K For Info
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Play CBS Video Video DNA Tests In Aruba Case Police in Aruba are now testing DNA from three young men who were with Alabama teen Natalee Holloway the night she disappeared. She has been missing for nearly two months.
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Video Natalee's Mom Ups Reward In Aruba, the family of missing student Natalee Holloway is hoping that a larger reward will help in the search for the teenager. CBS News' Randall Pinkston reports.
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Beth Holloway Twitty, missing teen Natalee Holloway's mother. (AP)
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Natalee Holloway (AP)
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Joran van der Sloot (AP)
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Interactive Out Of Sight: Missing Kids Get the facts on kidnappings, learn predator profiles and check out resources for locating missing children.
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Fast Facts Aruba Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Interactive Paradise Lost Star student Natalee Holloway disappears during a senior trip to Aruba.
There is now a $200,000 reward for her safe return and $100,000 for information that helps authorities solve the mystery surrounding her disappearance, the teen's mother, Beth Holloway Twitty, said at a news conference.
Holloway, 18, disappeared May 30, hours before she was to catch a return flight to Mountain Brook, Ala., at the end of high school graduation trip to the Dutch Caribbean island. Extensive searches by Dutch marines, Aruban police, and some 2,000 volunteers have found no trace of her.
"By offering the substantial cash rewards, a plea is made to everyone with any useful information to please call the tip line," Twitty said.
Previously, the family had posted a reward of $175,000 for Holloway's safe return while donors offered more than $50,000 for information on the teen's whereabouts.
The teen's family has also hired a private investigator to help in the search, said Vinda de Sousa, a lawyer for Twitty.
"That does not mean that they have no confidence in the local authorities," de Sousa said.
Holloway was last seen in public leaving a nightclub with Joran van der Sloot, a 17-year-old son of a judge in training on the island, and two Surinamese brothers, Satish, 18, and Deepak Kalpoe, 21. All three were arrested on June 9 but only van der Sloot remains in custody. No one has been charged.
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