The Welland Tribune

Mother sues over fake doc

Suit alleges show’s producers knew bone fragments didn’t belong to Natalee Holoway

- Jay Reeves

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The mother of Natalee Holloway, a U. S. teenager who vanished during her senior trip to Aruba in 2005, is seeking at least $ 35 million from the producers of what she contends was a fake TV documentar­y about the case.

Beth Holloway said in a federal lawsuit filed Friday that the deception surroundin­g The Disappeara­nce of Natalee Holloway was so complete she was even tricked into providing a DNA sample to match against what producers claimed were remains that could be those of her long- missing daughter.

The whole show was a ruse that subjected Beth Holloway to “agonizing weeks” of uncertaint­y and waiting that “completely and utterly destroyed” her, according to the suit filed in Birmingham.

Holloway, a schoolteac­her in north Alabama, is seeking $ 10 million in compensati­on and $ 25 million in punitive damages against Oxygen Media, an arm of NBCUnivers­al Cable Entertainm­ent, and the Los Angeles- based Brian Graden Media.

Neither company responded to emails sent Monday seeking comment on the lawsuit. Court records show attorneys have not filed documents answering the allegation­s.

The website TMZ first reported the lawsuit.

Natalee Holloway, who lived in suburban Birmingham, was 18 when she was last seen during a trip with classmates to Aruba. Her mysterious disappeara­nce after a night with friends at a nightclub sparked years of news coverage, particular­ly in the tabloid and true- crime media.

No remains were ever found, and the Dutch teen suspected in her death, Joran van der Sloot, is now imprisoned for the slaying of another young woman killed in 2010.

The six- episode series aired last year by Oxygen included the discovery of what were supposedly remains that could be those of Natalee. But the lawsuit claims producers knew that bone fragments featured in the production weren’t linked to Natalee before supposed testing produced inconclusi­ve results.

Rather than being a documentar­y or true investigat­ion, the show was a “scripted, preplanned farce calculated to give the impression of real- time events,” the suit contends.

Natalee’s father Dave Holloway participat­ed in the program and contacted Beth Holloway seeking a DNA sample for use in testing, the complaint said. Dave Holloway isn’t listed among the defendants, and he did not respond to an email seeking comment.

A judge acting on Dave Holloway’s request declared Natalee Holloway legally dead six years ago.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Beth Holloway, the mother of Natalee Holloway claims in the federal lawsuit that the deception surroundin­g The Disappeara­nce of Natalee Holloway was so complete she was even tricked her into providing a DNA sample to match against what producers...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Beth Holloway, the mother of Natalee Holloway claims in the federal lawsuit that the deception surroundin­g The Disappeara­nce of Natalee Holloway was so complete she was even tricked her into providing a DNA sample to match against what producers...

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