Whose Bone Was Found During The Aruba Search For Natalee Holloway? A bone fragment found on Aruba earlier this year during filming of a TV series about Natalee Holloway has been ruled out as a match to the missing Alabama teen, adding another layer of mystery to the 12-year investigation. "What we know about the bone today is that it is a single individual whom we believe there is a Caucasian European ethnicity attached, but it's not Natalee," Jason Kolowski, a former forensic laboratory director of the D.C. Department of Forensic Sciences, told HuffPost. While the results come as little surprise in a case that has been ripe with false confessions and deadend leads, what is unexpected is that no one seems to be trying to determine who the bone belongs to, especially since at least three other Americans are still missing on the Caribbean island. "I have had no contact with the authorities," said Kolowski, who added that he is unable to determine the age or gender of the individual.
Oxygen Media Private investigator T.J. Ward, left, and Dave Holloway, the father of Natalee, appeared on an Oxygen program about her disappearance in 2005 while she was on a high school graduation trip. Dave Holloway, the missing teen's father, announced that bone fragments had been found in Aruba when he went on national TV on Aug. 18. The announcement was made just three days before the premiere of "The Disappearance of Natalee Holloway" on Oxygen. "When we determined these remains were human, I was shocked," Holloway said on the "Today" show.