Reports have it that Joran van der Sloot, a Dutch man currently serving a 28-year prison sentence for killing the young Peruvian Stephany Tatiana Flores Ramírez, has managed to get a woman (supposedly his girlfriend) pregnant while behind bars in a Lima jail. The Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf confirmed the pregnancy rumors during a telephone interview with van der Sloot on Saturday - the pregnant woman-in-question is allegedly already past three months along.
"A test has proved" the pregnancy, De Telegraaf quotes van der Sloot as saying. Such reports have been confirmed by van der Sloot's lawyer Maximo Altez.
De Telegraaf identifies van der Sloot's jail-time lover simply as "Leidi" who supposedly became pregnant during an unsupervised visit with 24-year-old van der Sloot. In the alleged report, van der Sloot claims that "Leidi" was supposed to be on birth control, but had apparently forgotten to take it and would not have an abortion due to her Catholic faith. A woman identified as Leydi Figueroa Uceda in Peru media last year was said to be van der Sloot's girlfriend who had already conceived a son with the imprisoned Dutch man (which she later denied). It is unknown whether this Leydi is indeed the reports actual "Leidi."
Van der Sloot claims he doesn't have DNA proof to prove that the unborn child is his, but he believes it to be.
Van der Sloot, a self-described liar, was convicted of robbing and killing Flores in 2010 and later on confessed to the crime in Peruvian prison. He attempted to retract his confession, claiming that he had been intimidated by the National Police of Peru and framed by the FBI, but a Peruvian judge deemed the confession as valid. While van der Sloot is set to serve a 28-year prison sentence in Peru, he is also wanted in the U.S. in connection with the disappearance of teenager Natalee Holloway in Aruba in 2005. Peru's Supreme Court approved van deer Sloot's extradition to the U.S. for Holloway's case (which includes charges of extortion against Holloway's mother), but only after he serves out his sentence in Lima.
Van der Sloot could serve less than ten years in Peru for good behavior and could even resist extradition to the U.S. by applying for Peruvian citizenship - something which would be fairly easy to do if he had a Peruvian-born child (or married a Peruvian citizen).
© 2025 Mstars News, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.