The hotel worker who stumbled upon Stephanie Flores Ramirez' bludgeoned corpse told police the murder victim was still bleeding from the nose, days after her murder.
In a world exclusive, RadarOnline.com has exclusively obtained the witness statement -- or 'manifestacion' -- of Adeli Esmeralda Abad Marchena.
EXCLUSIVE DOCUMENT: Read The Witness's Statement In Spanish & English
She is a receptionist at the Tac Hotel in the Peruvian capital of Lima.
Joran van der Sloot admitted to killing the 21-year-old college student on May 30, but then later retracted his confession.
The documents describe in chilling detail the moment of shock and panic when the staffer discovered Flores Ramirez' lifeless body.
Inadvertently, it was a telephone call for van der Sloot from a mystery woman who sparked a search for the 22-year-old Dutchman, she said.
"I transferred the call to this room," Adeli recounted to police investigators in her native Spanish.
"Since nobody answered, I told the woman he must be resting because his key was not at the front desk -- and I hang off the phone."
Adeli said she then realized van der Sloot was behind on his room payments.
She added, "So I went up to his room to knock the door and insisted several times, because I could hear the television or radio volume high.
"I listened outside of the room and thought that Mr. Joran must have been resting.
"I went back to the front desk and communicated this to the manager, Iris, who told me to go upstairs again with a key to open the room.
"I went and opened the door... and when I walked in I noticed the room’s light was on, the television had regular volume, there was a pair fabric slippers, the bed was a mess, all the bed-cloths and a pile of clothes were on the floor.
"I turned my head right and I saw a person in the floor, which scared me and at first, I thought it was Joran."
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At that point, Adeli admitted fear was running through her mind.
"I approached and I observed that the person [had] long hair," she told Peru's homicide squad.
"As I got closer, I realized it was a dead woman -- and her nose was bleeding, she was dressed in a dark t-shirt and red underwear.
"She was covered with a white sheet, but I did not manage to see anything else, because I panicked."
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With that, Adeli said she hastily turned off the television and the room’s light and "left the room running" to raise the alarm to the hotel manager.
Shocked at the bloody discovery, Adeli rang her husband, who a short time later, showed up to comfort her.
The witness statement also provides a window into van der Sloot's life in the weeks before the brutal murder.
She said he first checked into the hotel on May 14, 2010.
Police asked Adeli to recall the last time she saw van der Sloot, who is also the prime suspect in the murder of American teenager Natalee Holloway, who vanished in Aruba back in 2005.
In a chance and chilling confrontation just moments after the murder, the hotel worker revealed she passed van der Sloot in the street outside the hotel, completely unaware to what had occurred earlier.
Adeli said, "I passed him... he was carrying in both hands two cups of coffee and chocolate, which he had apparently bought at the the store next to the hotel."
On his return, van der Sloot reportedly enjoyed a cup of coffee and drugs as he sat next to the Peruvian woman he allegedly slayed.
Joran Van Der Sloot Retracts Confession, Claims He Was "Tricked"
Van der Sloot this week retracted his confession, claiming he was tricked into the admission by authorities in Peru.
He is still likely to be charged with premeditated aggravated homicide, which carries a maximum jail sentence of 35 years.
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