Joran van der Sloot left Peru to head to the United States, Thursday morning, to face justice in a trial that can hopefully shed some light on charges involving fraud and extortion after the mysterious disappearance of 18-year-old Alabama high school student Natalee Holloway.
The 36-year-old Dutch killer remains a primary suspect in the 2005 disappearance and suspected murder case that remains enshrouded in mystery and has dominated headlines for decades.
Eighteen years later, he faces extortion and wire fraud charges for allegedly attempting to sell information regarding Holloway's whereabouts to her mother for $250,000.
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"The murder of an American beauty – Natalee Holloway – will not go unavenged," Fox Nation's "Crime Stories" host Nancy Grace vowed. "Nobody wants the truth about Natalee to be found on that island [Aruba]. That's why it's so imperative that we get him [van der Sloot] here," she added.
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The Dutch national was being held in a Peruvian prison for the murder of 21-year-old Stephany Flores in 2010. Van der Sloot was originally sentenced to 28 years in prison for the killing, but more time was added because of a drug smuggling scandal he was involved in while in jail.
Peruvian officials agreed in May to temporarily transfer the Dutch national to the United States in order to face federal charges.
With a star-studded panel of crime experts, Grace dissected the extortion charges and the alleged cover-up that hints at Aruba's attempt to protect its tourism industry from negative publicity.
If van der Sloot ever faces justice for the alleged murder alone, the trial will have to take place in Aruba.
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Licensed clinical psychologist and author Dr. Chloe Carmichael joined Grace where she characterized van der Sloot as a "vicious sociopath" who "toyed with" the Holloway family by trying to pry hundreds of thousands from Natalee's mother, Beth.
"I agree that he appears likely to have done this murder and then essentially toy with the family by trying to extort for money," she said.
"I'm glad that they are extraditing him back [to the U.S.], so the family can at least have some shred of accountability with what appears to just be a really vicious sociopath."
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Matthew Mangino, former district attorney of Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, on the other hand, argued that the conclusion shouldn't be drawn so easily.
"We know that he's murdered one person," he said, pointing to van der Sloot's conviction for the 2010 death of Stephany Flores Ramirez. "You [Grace] believe he has murdered two people, but that hasn't been proven in the court of law, and we can't just say this is his MO [modus operandi]."
Art Harris, a CNN investigative correspondent, and esteemed forensics professor Joe Scott Morgan, also joined Grace's guest lineup, saying the facts could be convincing if woven together - but that proving the murder would still be an uphill battle.
"There is no corpus delicti. There is no body when it comes to the physical person," Morgan said. "In Aruba, that's going to be a very steep hill to climb… it's a tough road when you don't have a body because the basic things like the manner of death, cause of death… you can only speculate about that."
The full panel discussion into the van der Sloot extradition and the fraud and extortion charges he faces is available for streaming on Fox Nation.
Fox News' Adam Sabes and Armando Regil Velasco contributed to this report.