NEW
YORK AP- The mother of
Natalee Holloway, the Alabama teen who vanished in
Aruba, heard arguments in court for the first time Wednesday about whether the
trial of her lawsuit over her daughter's disappearance should be held in New
York.
Holloway, of Mountain Brook, Ala., was 18
when she went missing in May 2005 during a high school graduation trip to the
Dutch Caribbean island with classmates. In February,
her parents, Elizabeth Twitty, of Alabama, and Dave Holloway, of Mississippi,
sued Joran van der Sloot, who was questioned about the teen's disappearance,
and his father, Paulus.
The parents' lawsuit, which seeks
unspecified damages, accuses Joran van der Sloot, 18, of imprisoning and
sexually assaulting their daughter and causing her disappearance. It also says
his father had enabled his delinquent behavior, including the Dutch youth's
underage drinking.
A lawyer for the van der Sloots, Joseph
Tacopina, told the court the case should be dismissed or sent to Aruba. He
argued that the parties, the witnesses, the physical evidence and the events
that led to the lawsuit have no connection to New York. "It would be
impossible to try this case and defend this case in New York," Tacopina
told state Supreme Court Justice Barbara Kapnick. "This state, you honor, has
absolutely no interest in this matter."
A lawyer for Twitty and Holloway, Scott
Balber, served the van der Sloots with the lawsuit when they arrived in New
York from Holland for an interview with ABC News. In that interview, Joran van
der Sloot denied involvement in Natalee Holloway's disappearance.
Balber told the judge the case should be
heard in New York in part because the law gives "deference to the
plaintiff's choice of forum." No site is perfect, Balber said, not New
York, Aruba, Alabama or Mississippi. "This is their last chance for
justice, to find out what happened to their daughter," Balber told the
judge. Balber said it was up to the defendants to prove that a New York trial
would be so inconvenient and burdensome that it would not serve the interests
of justice.
The arguments in Manhattan's state Supreme
Court lasted about 25 minutes and basically reiterated points the lawyers had
made previously in court papers. The judge said she would notify the lawyers
when she reached a decision.
Twitty entered the courthouse minutes before
the proceeding and said nothing to waiting news reporters. After the hearing,
she and her lawyers left the courthouse immediately without commenting.