ORANJESTAD, Aruba (CNN) -- Steve Croes, a disc jockey who was arrested in connection with the disappearance of Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway, will be released Monday because of a lack of evidence against him, his attorney, Eleni Lotterhoman, said Sunday following a court hearing.
There was no word yet on how the judge may have ruled in the detention of the other four suspects.
Croes, 26, worked on a party boat on the island.
Sunday's hearing was postponed from Saturday because the judge being flown in from the nearby island of Curacao was delayed, said David Kock, defense attorney for 18-year-old Satish Kalpoe, one of the suspects.
Holloway, also 18, has been missing since early May 30.
The other suspects include Kalpoe's 21-year-old brother, Deepak Kalpoe; their 17-year-old friend, Joran Van Der Sloot; and his father, Paul Van Der Sloot, 53.
Kock said Sunday he feels the investigation is moving in the right direction, as police have scrutinized cell phone records and Internet traffic as part of the probe.
Those records, Kock said, show Joran Van Der Sloot called Deepak Kalpoe about 2:40 a.m. on the morning Holloway disappeared. In that call, according to Deepak Kalpoe's statements, Joran Van Der Sloot told him he had left Holloway on the beach and was walking home. About 40 minutes later, Kock said -- about the time it would take him to walk home -- Joran Van Der Sloot text-messaged Deepak Kalpoe to tell him he had arrived.
"I just think this goes to show that the story that Deepak and Satish are telling ... is substantiated by facts," Kock said.
Antonio Carlo, defense attorney for Joran Van Der Sloot, said Sunday prosecutors have asked the judge to extend his client's detention for eight more days. The judge has not yet ruled on that request, he said.
His client, he said, was in good spirits, but was "shocked and disturbed" by his father's arrest.
None of the suspects has been formally charged, and it was unclear when charges might be filed. Defense attorneys for the four younger defendants have said they are innocent; Paul Van Der Sloot's attorneys have not yet commented.
Also Sunday, a Texas-based search team was combing land and surrounding ocean for Holloway. Plans included using side-scan sonar on a dive boat, said Texas EquuSearch spokesman Joe Huston. The entire 27-member team, including eight divers and four dogs, arrived Saturday night.
The dogs, said Huston, will work most of the day -- skipping the middle of the day when their sense of smell is less acute.
He said the group would like more volunteers and hoped residents would donate drinking water and some meals.
The team searched a wetlands area Saturday, and also the northern tip of the island near a lighthouse, combing the beaches with the dog. After borrowing a boat, the team installed side-scanning sonar equipment and conducted a water search.
Paul Van Der Sloot, who is relatively new to the bench, was arrested Thursday, while the other four have been in custody longer. He has been denied access to his son since the teen was arrested. A judge is to be flown in from Curacao to avoid the appearance of impropriety and would consider continued detentions for the five in separate hearings.
Police Commissioner Jan Van Der Straten on Friday refused to say if Paul Van Der Sloot was being cooperative. His wife, Anita, dropped some towels and other items off at the jail Saturday, but was not allowed to see her husband.
Prosecution spokeswoman Mariaine Croes said charges -- if any -- will not be filed until the investigation is complete and evidence is reviewed by prosecutors.
Under Aruban law, authorities can arrest a suspect based on reasonable suspicion, unlike in the United States, where police must have probable cause. Prosecutors can ask judges to approve three eight-day extensions of detention, followed by two longer extensions. Croes has said suspects may be held up to 116 days -- and in rare cases, even longer -- before charges are filed, to allow evidence-gathering to continue. Defense attorneys for the original four have said their clients maintain their innocence.
Holloway, from the Birmingham, Alabama, suburb of Mountain Brook, was last seen about 1:30 a.m. May 30 as she left a nightclub with Joran Van Der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers. She was on a trip to Aruba with about 100 classmates and a few parent-chaperones to celebrate her high school graduation.
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