#1
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Joran Just Can't Quit
Gets away with one and figures he'd get away with another. A prison in Peru will be fitting.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6516O920100602 |
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Quote:
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#3
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Uh. I'll wait for the DNA results. |
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There is a report out there that Vandersloot was found dead in Peru. No details or confirmation yet.
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#5
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We can only hope.
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#6
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That's a man! He did a Bonaducci....
__________________
“To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.” Thomas Jefferson |
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Thats terrible. This young woman was murdered by a scumbag and now she's being made fun of on DT.
__________________
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#8
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You think the mortician will whiten her teeth?
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#11
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Good effort mom.
On the other hand, his mother Anita Van Der Sloot is much shocked by the latest happenings with his son. She spoke to Joran last night on phone. But when the media asked her about the conversation, she maintained silence. Their lawyer said that Joran had not admitted killing Stephanie Flores. The lawyer further told that he was trying to reach Joran to ask him to find a suitable lawyer there who knows about the laws affecting foreigners in South America. |
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at least the mother knows what happened to all those missing pets Joran had growing up. 5 yrs. to the DAY! That's a sick man. Enjoy Peru without a view.
__________________
“To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.” Thomas Jefferson |
#13
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I really want to visit Peru in my life. Those mountain top villages look amazing.
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#14
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They will have the trial and put on a good show for the world and then he'll have maybe 1 year tops to live.
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#15
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they beat the hell outta him before he died.
__________________
"Always keep your heads up and act like champions." Coach Paul Bryant |
#16
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The plot thickens, and it gets worse. It seems the money he used to take the trip to Peru came from............ THE FBI!
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/interna...TnWzMPmKeAwrfL |
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#18
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Good luck
A 2009 U.S. State Department report on Peru's human rights record noted that while the South American country's government generally respects the human rights of its citizens, prison conditions were harsh for the country's 44,800 inmates - 17,297 of whom were awaiting sentencing as of December 2009, according to the report. Among the areas of serious concern highlighted were overcrowding, poor sanitation and inadequate nutrition and health care. The San Juan de Lurigancho men's prison held 9,874 prisoners in a facility designed for 3,204 and incidences of tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS were reportedly at near-epidemic levels, according to the report. "Prisoners with money had access to cell phones, illegal drugs and meals prepared outside the prison. Conditions were poor to extremely harsh in facilities for prisoners who lacked funds," the report said. "Inmates had intermittent access to running water, bathing facilities were inadequate, kitchen facilities were unhygienic, and prisoners slept in hallways and common areas for lack of cell space." Corruption and professional incompetence were also reported in some of the nation's 71 prisons, 56 of which are operated by The National Penitentiary Institute. The National Police of Peru has jurisdiction over the rest, according to the State Department report. "There were deaths of inmates in prisons, most attributed to fellow inmates, but some were due to negligence by guards. Guards received little or no training or supervision. Corruption was a serious problem, and some guards cooperated with criminal bosses who oversaw the smuggling of guns and drugs into prisons." Conditions are especially harsh in the country's maximum security prisons, which are extremely isolated geographically. One of them, the Challapalca Prison, is in the Andes near the Bolivian border, at an altitude of 15,000 feet above sea level, about 211 kilometers from the nearest city of Puno - a six-hour ride down a dirt road, depending on conditions, according to a 2003 report on the facility by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. There is no regular electricity or running water, and temperatures most of the year hover around 33 degrees Fahrenheit in the day and as low as 4 degrees below zero at night, the report said. |
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