14 Facts About Beth Holloway

1.

Elizabeth Ann Holloway is an American speech pathologist and motivational speaker.

2.

Beth Holloway became widely known in the international media after her teenage daughter, Natalee, disappeared while she was on a high school graduation trip to Aruba in 2005.

3.

Beth Holloway received her bachelor's degree in speech pathology with a minor in special education from University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

4.

Beth Holloway continued her studies at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, where she received a master's degree in speech pathology.

5.

Beth Reynolds married college classmate David Holloway and settled in Jackson, Mississippi.

6.

In 2000, Beth Holloway married George "Jug" Twitty, an Alabama businessman, and moved with her children to Mountain Brook, Alabama.

7.

Beth Holloway was last seen by her classmates outside Carlos'n Charlie's, a Caribbean restaurant and nightclub in Oranjestad, in a car with locals Joran van der Sloot and brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe.

8.

Immediately after receiving word about Natalee's missed flight, Jug and Beth Holloway Twitty flew to Aruba with friends by private jet.

9.

The lawsuit alleged personal injury against Natalee Beth Holloway and alleged that Van der Sloot's father created a permissive environment.

10.

Beth Holloway told the New York Post that her daughter would still be alive if Van der Sloot had called for help.

11.

Twitty alleged that the person who van der Sloot supposedly called that evening was his father Paul, who according to Beth Holloway "orchestrated what to do next".

12.

Beth Holloway recounts her anger at what she felt was a lack of cooperation from local officials such as the Aruban police, including the failure to obtain a warrant to search the home of Van der Sloot.

13.

Beth Holloway was shocked that the FBI did not promptly file extortion charges against Van der Sloot, allowing him to leave freely with the money to Bogota, Colombia, on his way to Lima, Peru.

14.

Beth Holloway stated that if necessary, former federal agents with specific knowledge of a country could be dispatched there.