Volgens mij hebben ze bij C& C gezegd we brengen je wel even naar het Hotel ,zeer hoffelijk .Als je wat gedronken hebt loop je niet graag naar huis .
daarna zijn ze volgens mij of naar een drugsparty gegaan of naar een illegaal strand feest cq party boot
Daarna hebben ze zich aan haar vergrepen en ze is in coma geraaakt van de party drugs
,je kan daarvan zelfs 3 uur in coma raken !
Hij heeft of een vriendje gebeld om dr in zee te dumpen of (!) verstopt in een boot bijv onder een dekzeil
En de volgende dag op zee gedumpt , s'nachts valt dat mijns inziens veel te veel op
motor geluid en kustwacht ed
hieronder een verslag van CNN
BRON CNN :
The high-rise hotel district where Natalee stayed, along the coast to the lighthouse, the possible route Natalee took with three young men now being held in connection with her disappearance. Beyond that, miles of soft sand dunes.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It's not the first time that they have found bodies in the dunes here in (INAUDIBLE). But it has to do with people getting lost.
PENHAUL (on camera): When was the last time they found bodies in the dunes?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I think on some island five years ago.
PENHAUL: And how long did it actually take to find the body?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I think it was -- he was missing for probably about five years before that.
PENHAUL (voice-over): Teams have hunted here for signs of Natalee, but the wind and sand quickly obscure traces of anything that may be buried.
Beyond that, the sea stretches to the horizon. It's 690 miles due west to Panama. Any object that drifts off Aruba's west coast will eventually end up in Panama. We head out on the search and rescue boat to Manchebo Point, notorious because this is where two powerful ocean currents collide.
EFRAIN BOEKHUODT, SEARCH & RESCUE TEAM: Once you reach a certain point, really you'll get yourself in the current. And here is where most of the problems happen. Once you get in the current, you're going to drift about two miles an hour on a slow day.
PENHAUL: Any closer to shore, he says, and the surf could drag an object back to the beach. But here, with more than a mile and a half off Aruba's west coast, the water is more than 60 feet deep. We're going to test those currents.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Three, two, one. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: OK. Man overboard.
PENHAUL: Here, you can feel a menacing undertow and a strong swell. Boekhuodt tells me if they leave me in the water long enough, I'll drift northwest a few miles, then due west out into open ocean.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: OK.
PENHAUL: But he says it would not be easy to sail a boat out this far at night to dump something.
BOEKHUODT: If you put your foot in the water at night, you're on radar.
PENHAUL: Back in the air, Aruba's north coast looks much more rugged, but the tides are predictable.
BOEKHUODT: Everything you throw here in the water in the north shore will always get back to the north shore. It will always get back to land.
PENHAUL (on camera): Where would you hide an object? Would you dump it in the sea or would you hide it on land?
BOEKHUODT: I would hide it on land.
PENHAUL: Unlike in the sand dunes, Croes (ph) says it would take several hours to dig a hole in the hard earth amid the rocks and cacti. You can, though, just make out the entrances to a handful of old gold mine shafts abandoned more than 100 years ago and now partly flooded with sea water.
(on camera): What kind of equipment would you need to get down into those? Would you need ropes?
BOEKHUODT: Ropes and somebody who will dare to go in there.
PENHAUL (voice-over): It's been three weeks to the day since Natalee vanished, and never finding out what happened to her is a possibility few dare to mention.
Karl Penhaul, CNN, Aruba.