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Dutch court shown video of famed crime reporter's killing and alleged messages by suspects: "Everybody screamed"

A phone found in the suspected getaway car of two men charged in a famed Dutch crime reporter's brazen slaying last year contained text messages that prosecutors say link them to the killing, which triggered a national outpouring of grief and government pledges to crack down on Amsterdam's increasingly violent drugs underworld. The court on Tuesday also saw footage of the attack on Peter R. de Vries

Prosecutors suspect a 21-year-old Dutchman identified only as Delano G. of shooting de Vries at close range in a downtown Amsterdam street on July 6. The campaigning reporter and television personality died nine days later of his injuries. If convicted, the suspect faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

Netherlands Journalist Shot
In this Thursday Jan. 31, 2008 file photo, Dutch crime reporter Peter R. de Vries reacts prior to attending a live TV show in Amsterdam, Netherlands.  Peter Dejong / AP

Judges confronted the defendants with close-circuit television images taken from various locations in the city, including a nearby cafe, showing the two men walking around the area shortly before de Vries was shot.

The court then saw images at a distance of de Vries crossing the street, a figure running behind him and then the moment when the journalist was shot and fell to the ground.

De Vries' daughter Kelly asked to leave the courtroom as the footage was shown.

After the video was shown, a judge in Tuesday's hearing directly asked G. if he shot De Vries, to which the suspect replied: "I make use of my right to silence," according to footage recorded by Dutch broadcaster NOS. The other suspect said, "I did not kill that man."

Prosecutors say the two suspects were arrested less than an hour after the shooting in a getaway car on a highway near The Hague with the weapon used to shoot De Vries in the car.

Also in the car was a mobile phone, that prosecutors say contained messages alluding to the killing. One of the judges in the case read out the messages during Tuesday's hearing.

One exchange included two pictures of De Vries and the message: "You have to get this dog."

Later, a message from the phone found in the car read: "He's dead ... The bullet went right through his head. Everything spurted. Everybody screamed."

G. has refused to answer questions about his alleged involvement in the shooting. The alleged getaway driver, a Polish man, Kamil E., on Tuesday denied involvement in the shooting.

Prosecutors have not publicly identified a suspect they believe gave the order to kill De Vries, who was 64.

As part of the trial, De Vries' son and daughter made victim impact statements to the Amsterdam District Court.

"I'm convinced that if these suspects had asked my father for help that evening, he would have given it," De Vries' son Royce told the court, NOS reported. "Instead, they pulled the trigger."

Lawyers for the suspects are scheduled to speak at a separate hearing next week, Judges are scheduled to deliver verdicts July 14.

De Vries, who reportedly had the phrase "On bended knee is no way to be free" tattooed on his calf, made his name as a crime journalist who reported on and wrote a bestselling book about the 1983 kidnapping of beer magnate Freddy Heineken. Later in his career he campaigned tirelessly to resolve cold cases.

De Vries also won an Emmy in 2008 for his coverage of the disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway in Aruba.

Before his shooting, De Vries had been an adviser and confidant for a witness in the trial of the alleged leader and other members of a crime gang that police described as an "oiled killing machine."

The suspected gangland leader, Ridouan Taghi, was extradited to the Netherlands from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, in 2019 and is currently standing trial.

AFP contributed to this report.

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