I saw lurker


31 October 2007
The Sun
Clodagh Hartley in Praia Da Luz and Antonella Lazzeri

Nanny tells of man in bushes outside Maddie flat

A nanny has told investigators she saw a man lurking in bushes outside the holiday apartment where Madeleine McCann disappeared.

The woman was babysitting a boy of six in apartment 5A of the Ocean Club in Praia da Luz MONTHS before the McCanns stayed there.

But her description appears to MATCH that given by a friend holidaying with the family who is convinced she saw sleeping Madeleine being carried away.
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Fury of Tapas 7; McCann friends hit back


30 October 2007 
The Sun
Antonella Lazzeri 
Pals: There is NO pact

The Tapas Seven pals of Gerry and Kate McCann yesterday denied sharing a "pact of silence" over what happened the night Madeleine went missing.

And they angrily insisted there was no "secret" between them.
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Susie Boniface: Articles re: McCann case


SHE WAS SNATCHED TO ORDER...
28 October 2007
Sunday Mirror
Susie Boniface in Praia da Luz

PRIVATE investigators hired by Kate and Gerry McCann believe Madeleine was snatched "to order" and has been smuggled to Africa.

The detectives - who have solved several missing child mysteries - are trawling through lists of Portuguese paedophiles who may have stolen Madeleine for a wealthy client and taken her to Morocco - where a blonde girl fetches a high price.

They are NOT looking for UK sex offenders.

Kate and Gerry hired Spanish detection agency, Metodo 3, last week and asked the firm to probe all possible explanations for the four-year-old's disappearance.

The Barcelona-based experts believe a rich North African commissioned a Portuguese sex offender to kidnap Madeleine on the night of May 3 while her parents were at dinner.

They suspect an insider at the Ocean Club resort, where the McCanns were staying, tipped off the paedophile ring after realising they left their children alone at certain times in the evenings.

A source said:
"When people think private detectives they think retired coppers sitting in a grotty office above a pub.

"Metodo 3 are the very opposite of that. They are proper operators.

"In terms of finding Madeleine, they are looking at known Portuguese paedophiles - not Spanish, French or UK sex offenders. The main line of investigation centres on the belief that Madeleine is most probably being held against her will somewhere in the north of Morocco.

"A blonde girl is a valuable commodity in a place like north Africa. If she has been bought, she is alive. We cannot offer any information on who that client is at this stage, but we suspect the person who took her did so with the help of someone connected to the Ocean Club.

"That person would have been able to build up a picture of the McCanns' movements over the week before the disappearance."

The probe coincides with a massive pounds 80,000 ad campaign in southern Spain - the area which the detectives think Madeleine's kidnapper would have travelled.

The Spanish port of Tarifa is just a 35-minute fast ferry ride from Tangiers in Morocco and is a known people-smuggling route.

Portuguese police on its border with Spain were not told of Madeleine's disappearance until May 4, the day after she went missing, leaving the crossings open.

ANYONE with any information about Madeleine McCann can call the Metodo 3 hotline on 0034 902300213 or email maddie@metodo3.es

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SUNDAY MIRROR - TWO VERSIONS OF FOLLOWING ARTICLE / PAPER EDITION & ONLINE EDITION


I SAW HIM TAKE MADELEINE
Grant Hodgson and Susie Boniface In Praia da Luz
Sunday Mirror
28 October 2007

Image:Jane Tanner

EXCLUSIVE THE SEARCH FOR MADELEINE DAY 178


'It was 9.15pm and he looked a bit odd' 'But I never imagined girl was Maddie'

A friend of Kate and Gerry McCann has described for the first time the moment she believes she saw Madeleine being snatched.

Jane Tanner is haunted by the image of a man "striding urgently" away from the McCanns' apartment with a barefooted child slumped in his arms.

She admits thinking he "looked a bit odd" but says she never imagined the youngster he was carrying could be four-year-old Madeleine...until the alarm was raised 45 minutes later that she was missing. And by then it was too late.

Jane was dining with Kate and Gerry on the night Madeleine disappeared. She saw the man when she went to check on her own daughter. It was her description which led to an artist's impression of a man carrying a child released earlier this week. Jane, 36, told a friend:
"I never in a million years would have imagined that it was Maddie being carried away.

"The first thing that raced into my head after finding out she was missing was this person I'd seen."

As Kate and Gerry began a frantic hunt for their daughter, horrified Jane twice told police about the dark-haired man she'd seen walking off carrying a child. The first time was at 11.15pm, then again at 3am. She was astonished that detectives failed to release the information to appeal for witnesses for another 22 days.

Jane and partner Russell O'Brien, also 36, from Exeter, Devon, were among seven friends who were holidaying with the McCanns in Praia da Luz. All nine were dining together at a tapas restaurant on the night Madeleine disappeared.

Gerry McCann had gone to check on Madeleine and her twin brother and sister at about 9.05pm. Ten minutes later, Jane left the tapas bar and was on her way back to her apartment to check on her own daughter when she saw the man heading away from the McCanns' apartment, down the hill.

Jane's friend said:
"It was about 9.15pm when Jane saw the man. She said that although he looked a bit odd and the child he was carrying had bare feet on a cold night, she never in a million years thought it could have been Maddie. You see a lot of people taking children to and from a nearby creche around there.

"Jane also had just passed Gerry and another man, Jeremy Wilkins, talking in the street, so she assumed that Madeleine had just been checked on.

"Suddenly this man scoots across in front of her with the child, which she thinks is a bit strange because the child was in pyjamas and had no shoes or socks on. He wasn't running, he wasn't walking, but he was striding. It was like an urgent walk.

"Jane knows it was a child from the size of the person being carried. It was obviously a small child. There was no doubt in her mind. There have been reports the child was held in a blanket. But Jane says that is not true."

Jane arrived at her apartment, checked on her daughter and then returned to the tapas bar. Soon after, Jane says that another friend Matthew Oldfield, 37, and her partner Russell headed off to make their checks on the kids. But Jane's daughter had become ill and Matthew came back to fetch her.

On his way back - between 9.30pm and 9.45pm - he stopped and listened at the door of the McCanns' apartment but did not enter.

"Jane finished her meal and went up to the apartment straight away to see her daughter," the friend said. "Around 10 or 15 minutes later, Kate discovered that Madeleine was gone.

"Jane heard shouting outside and came out and saw Matthew's wife Rachel, who told her Maddie was missing.

"The first thing that came into Jane's head was this person she'd seen. She felt complete horror. Kate was screaming 'She's gone, she's gone' and there was a huge panic."

The local civilian police force arrived to carry out door-to- door inquiries, knocking on Jane's door at 11.15pm. "She told police about the man as soon as they arrived in her apartment," the friend said. "She also then told detectives during her interview with them in the early hours of the morning of May 4 and Gerry was present at that interview.

"Jane did feel that her sighting was taken seriously but it was frustrating that the police didn't realise a description of the man immediately."

The height of the man - aged around 35 with black hair, wearing a maroon shirt, camel-coloured trousers and black or brown shoes - was also miscalculated by cops when they converted feet into metres.

Jane says the person she saw was 5ft 9ins rather than 5ft 8ins as previously reported. She is also adamant the child was not wrapped in a blanket.

Jane will be asked to recount what she saw over the coming weeks when she and the other friends are re-interviewed by Portuguese police in the UK.

Last night it emerged that Kate and Gerry might have to wait a YEAR to see police files on them explaining why they are suspects.

Portuguese newspaper 24 Horas reported that prosecutors have applied to judge Pedro Frias to extend the deadline by giving the case "special complexity" status.

The paper said Madeleine's parents were told yesterday they might have to wait until August 2008 to see police papers outlining the case against them. They deny any involvement in her disappearance.

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HORROR AS I REALISED.. IT WAS HIM
28 October 2007
Sunday Mirror
Grant Hodgson and Susie Boniface in Praia da Luz

EXCLUSIVE THE SEARCH FOR MADELEINE DAY 178
'It was 9.15pm and he looked a bit odd' 'But I never imagined girl was Maddie'

A FRIEND of Kate and Gerry McCann has described for the first time the moment she believes she saw Madeleine being snatched.

Jane Tanner is haunted by the image of a man "striding urgently" away from the McCanns' apartment with a barefooted child slumped in his arms.

She admits thinking he "looked a bit odd" but says she never imagined the youngster he was carrying could be four-year-old Madeleine...until the alarm was raised 45 minutes later that she was missing. And by then it was too late.

Jane was dining with Kate and Gerry on the night Madeleine disappeared. She saw the man when she went to check on her own daughter. It was her description which led to an artist's impression of a man carrying a child released earlier this week. Jane, 36, told a friend:
"I never in a million years would have imagined that it was Maddie being carried away.

"The first thing that raced into my head after finding out she was missing was this person I'd seen."
As Kate and Gerry began a frantic hunt for their daughter, horrified Jane twice told police about the dark-haired man she'd seen walking off carrying a child. The first time was at 11.15pm, then again at 3am. She was astonished that detectives failed to release the information to appeal for witnesses for another 22 days.

Jane and partner Russell O'Brien, also 36, from Exeter, Devon, were among seven friends who were holidaying with the McCanns in Praia da Luz. All nine were dining together at a tapas restaurant on the night Madeleine disappeared.

Gerry McCann had gone to check on Madeleine and her twin brother and sister at about 9.05pm. Ten minutes later, Jane left the tapas bar and was on her way back to her apartment to check on her own daughter when she saw the man heading away from the McCanns' apartment, down the hill.

Jane's friend said:
"It was about 9.15pm when Jane saw the man. She said that although he looked a bit odd and the child he was carrying had bare feet on a cold night, she never in a million years thought it could have been Maddie. You see a lot of people taking children to and from a nearby creche around there.

"Jane also had just passed Gerry and another man, Jeremy Wilkins, talking in the street, so she assumed that Madeleine had just been checked on.

"Suddenly this man scoots across in front of her with the child, which she thinks is a bit strange because the child was in pyjamas and had no shoes or socks on. He wasn't running, he wasn't walking, but he was striding. It was like an urgent walk.

"Jane knows it was a child from the size of the person being carried. It was obviously a small child. There was no doubt in her mind. There have been reports the child was held in a blanket. But Jane says that is not true."

Jane arrived at her apartment, checked on her daughter and then returned to the tapas bar. Soon after, Jane says that another friend Matthew Oldfield, 37, and her partner Russell headed off to make their checks on the kids. But Jane's daughter had become ill and Matthew came back to fetch her.

On his way back - between 9.30pm and 9.45pm - he stopped and listened at the door of the McCanns' apartment but did not enter.

"Jane finished her meal and went up to the apartment straight away to see her daughter," the friend said. "Around 10 or 15 minutes later, Kate discovered that Madeleine was gone.

"Jane heard shouting outside and came out and saw Matthew's wife Rachel, who told her Maddie was missing.

"The first thing that came into Jane's head was this person she'd seen. She felt complete horror. Kate was screaming 'She's gone, she's gone' and there was a huge panic."

The local civilian police force arrived to carry out door-to-door inquiries, knocking on Jane's door at 11.15pm.
"She told police about the man as soon as they arrived in her apartment," the friend said. "She also then told detectives during her interview with them in the early hours of the morning of May 4 and Gerry was present at that interview.

"Jane did feel that her sighting was taken seriously but it was frustrating that the police didn't realise a description of the man immediately."

The height of the man - aged around 35 with black hair, wearing a maroon shirt, camel-coloured trousers and black or brown shoes - was also miscalculated by cops when they converted feet into metres.

Jane says the person she saw was 5ft 9ins rather than 5ft 8ins as previously reported. She is also adamant the child was not wrapped in a blanket.

Jane will be asked to recount what she saw over the coming weeks when she and the other friends are re-interviewed by Portuguese police in the UK.

Last night it emerged that Kate and Gerry might have to wait a YEAR to see police files on them explaining why they are suspects.

Portuguese newspaper 24 Horas reported that prosecutors have applied to judge Pedro Frias to extend the deadline by giving the case "special complexity" status.

The paper said Madeleine's parents were told yesterday they might have to wait until August 2008 to see police papers outlining the case against them. They deny any involvement in her disappearance.

The paper said the request came because Portuguese police are still waiting for full DNA results from a UK lab and the chance to quiz the Tapas Nine - the McCanns and their holiday friends - on British soil. Yesterday it was also reported that detectives are still waiting for the couple's UK phone operators to send a list of their calls the night Madeleine disappeared.

An insider said:
"Portuguese police say it is hampering their investigation. But you have to question why they've been so quick to jump on the McCanns when they've yet to see something as basic as their phone records."
Meanwhile Kate and Gerry are having panic buttons installed at home as police step down the round-the-clock vigil outside their house.

The couple have had a constant police guard since arriving back from Portugal seven weeks ago.

Heart specialist Gerry, 39, is returning to work on Thursday. He took twins Sean and Amelie to a park near his home in Rothley, Leics, yesterday.
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'Poker face' Kate to sue


27 October 2007
The Sun
Clodagh Hartley and Antonella Lazzeri
Fury over 'interview act' slur


ANGRY Kate and Gerry McCann may sue over claims this week's emotional TV interview was "staged like theatre".

Kate, 39, was blasted as being like a "poker player" -and her heartfelt tears were called "part of the act" by a psychiatrist.

And Gerry, 39, "controlled" Kate in the Spanish TV broadcast, Jose Cabrera claimed.
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POLICE WANT ANSWERS TO 14 QUESTIONS


MADELEINE - POLICE WANT ANSWERS TO 14 QUESTIONS
From Padraic Flanagan in Praia da Luz
25 October 2007
The Daily Express


What detectives demand to know

POLICE chiefs have drawn up a dossier of new questions for Kate and Gerry McCann about the night their daughter disappeared, it was revealed yesterday.

Detectives are travelling from the Algarve with an official request to interview Madeleine's parents and the seven friends with whom they were on holiday in Praia da Luz.

They will table 14 key questions in an attempt to break the deadlock in the stalled investigation.

The news came on the day Kate broke down and sobbed during a TV appearance in which she and Gerry spoke of their belief that Madeleine is still alive.

Investigators believe that members of the party – dubbed the Tapas Nine after the Spanishthemed restaurant they were in when Madeleine disappeared – may have been involved in the crime.

Gerry and Kate will be interviewed for the second time as official suspects but it will be the first interrogation in Britain.

The outcome of the interviews, to be held within days, could lead to Portuguese police naming other members of the group as official suspects. Under Portuguese law, detectives would have to declare them "arguidos" in order to ask them key questions about events leading up to the night of May 3 when Madeleine vanished.

Three detectives are now set to fly to Britain bearing a legal letter signed by a Portuguese judge, asking their counterparts in the UK to table the series of questions on their behalf.

It is likely the interviews will be conducted by officers from Leicestershire Police who have already been helping the investigation.

But Portuguese officers are hoping to be present during the interrogations, which will be the first to take place since the days immediately after Madeleine disappeared from the McCanns' holiday apartment at the Ocean Club resort.

The couple were dining at the restaurant on the complex with seven friends, Rachael Oldfield, 36, Matthew Oldfield, 37, Jane Tanner, 36, Russell O'Brien, 36, Fiona Payne, 34, David Payne, 41, and Dianne Webster, Fiona Payne's mother.

The interviews will be confined to questions covered in the formal request from the Portuguese judge.

Algarve detectives may ask for followup questions to be put to the group but it is only at the discretion of British police carrying out the interviews.

A source within the Policia Judiciaria said: "The presence of our investigators in the interrogation room is important because they can analyse the gestures and facial expressions of those who are interviewed.

"This is an important part of a criminal investigation. It is what they call behavioural analysis." The key questions reveal how Portuguese detectives are sticking to the theory that the McCanns, and possibly their friends, are involved in Madeleine's disappearance.

Her parents, and the family friends, have strenuously denied any involvement in Madeleine's disappearance and insist she was abducted. They also deny any wrongdoing.

Last night a friend of the McCanns said: "Kate and Gerry's friends are expecting to be interviewed again at some point and are happy to cooperate and do anything they can to help find Madeleine." One member of the group, Jane Tanner, has already told police how she saw a man carrying a child wrapped in a blanket near the Ocean Club complex on the night Madeleine disappeared. Miss Tanner told police that the man was heading towards the home of Robert Murat – the British expat who was named as the first official suspect.

Murat, 33, was also placed in the frame by three other members of the McCanns' party.

Miss Tanner's hospital consultant partner Dr Russell O'Brien, Dr Fiona Payne and doctor's wife Rachael Oldfield, all claimed they saw Murat near the McCanns' apartment on the night Madeleine disappeared.

In July those three friends flew back to Portugal to confront Murat over his alibi during a tense five-hour grilling.

Murat – now set to be cleared – insisted he did not leave home that night and went to bed early after dining with his mother Jenny, 71.

Dr Payne's medical researcher husband David is said to have been one of the last people to see Madeleine.

He joined Kate and her children at the McCanns' apartment at 6.30pm on May 3 after Gerry asked him to check on them while he was having a tennis lesson.

Members of the party have told police they took it in turns to check on the children during the evening.

Police are said to be concerned at inconsistencies in the statements of the McCanns and their friends of the events that took place that night.
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How could police drop ash on clues?


22 October 2007
The Sun
Clodagh Hartley In Praia Da Luz and Antonella Lazzeri
Maddie parents' fury at evidence contamination


ANGRY Kate and Gerry McCann were "horrified" yesterday that cops' CIGARETTE ASH could have contaminated evidence about daughter Maddie's disappearance.

The blunder by careless Portuguese cops was discovered by forensic experts studying samples from the McCanns' apartment in Praia da Luz.

Yesterday a close friend of the McCanns, both 39, said: "It is outrageous to think that messy cops could have ruined vital evidence about Maddie's abductor."

The ash was dropped by at least three detectives who trampled in and out of the apartment on May 4, the day after Maddie, four, vanished.
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How could police drop ash on clues?


22 October 2007
The Sun
Clodagh Hartley In Praia Da Luz and Antonella Lazzeri
Maddie parents' fury at evidence contamination


Angry Kate and Gerry McCann were "horrified" yesterday that cops' CIGARETTE ASH could have contaminated evidence about daughter Maddie's disappearance.

The blunder by careless Portuguese cops was discovered by forensic experts studying samples from the McCanns' apartment in Praia da Luz.

Yesterday a close friend of the McCanns, both 39, said: "It is outrageous to think that messy cops could have ruined vital evidence about Maddie's abductor."
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McCann friends face new probe


McCann friends face new probe
22 October 2007
Daily Express
David Pilditch in Praia da Luz


Portuguese police chief wants holiday couples interrogated

FRIENDS of Kate and Gerry McCann face new interrogations by detectives about the night their daughter disappeared, it was revealed last night.

Portuguese police have drawn up an official request for the group who holidayed with the couple to be formally interviewed.

Investigators believe members of the party - dubbed the Tapas Nine - may have helped the couple dispose of their daughter's body and covered up the crime.

Moves could be made to name members of the group as official suspects.

Under Portuguese law detectives would have to declare them "arguidos" in order to ask them key questions.

A team of high-ranking detectives and Portuguese public prosecutor Jose Cunha de Magalhaes e Meneses are now preparing to fly to Britain this week.

They will present a legal letter to their British counterparts signed by a Portuguese judge.

It is likely the interviews will be conducted by officers from Leicestershire Police who have been helping in the investigation.

Portuguese officers will ask to be present during the interrogations - the first to take place since the days after Madeleine disappeared from the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz on May 3.

The McCanns were dining with the seven friends at a tapas restaurant in the Ocean Club complex when Madeleine vanished.

Last night a friend of the McCanns said:
"Kate and Gerry's friends are expecting to be interviewed again at some point and are happy to co-operate and do anything they can to help find Madeleine."
The development was revealed yesterday by Portugal's most senior police officer Alipio Ribeiro.

Mr Ribeiro is head of the Policia Judiciaria which is carrying out the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance 172 days ago.

Yesterday, Mr Ribeiro told how he was now "optimistic" the case would be solved.

He also insisted that detectives had made dramatic progress in the inquiry and were close to a breakthrough.

He spoke out after appointing his deputy Paulo Rebelo to take over the investigation based at police headquarters in nearby Portimao.

Mr Rebelo has opened new lines of inquiry and has ordered a series of fresh searches. He is continuing to treat Kate and Gerry, both 39, as chief suspects.

In an interview with Spanish newspaper El Pais, Mr Ribeiro said:
"I am convinced that sooner or later we are going to have a result. I cannot say when. But I am optimistic.

"Many similar cases have lasted longer and were resolved in the end.

I think this will also happen in our case. We have an idea of what happened.

"We've performed a huge job analysing and discounting hundreds of leads and pieces of evidence. In every investigation there is a key moment, a click that clarifies everything and helps you to reach the end."

Of the plans to interview the McCanns' friends, he said:
"Formal letters of request are ready and will be sent in a few days with a police team and Portimao's public prosecutor."

One member of the group, Jane Tanner, 36, told police she saw a man carrying a child wrapped in a blanket near the Ocean Club complex on the night Madeleine disappeared. Miss Tanner told police the man was heading towards the home of Robert Murat - the British expat who was named as the first official suspect.

Murat, 33, was also placed in the frame by three other members of the McCanns' party.

Miss Tanner's hospital consultant partner Dr Russell O'Brien, 36, Dr Fiona Payne, 34, and doctor's wife Rachael Oldfield, 36, all claimed they saw Murat near the McCanns apartment on the night Madeleine disappeared.

In July the three friends flew back to Portugal to confront Murat over his alibi during a tense five-hour grilling.

Murat - now set to be cleared - insisted he did not leave home that night and went to bed early after dining with his mother Jenny, 71.

The face-to-face showdown was set up by detectives to discover whose story was true.

Dr Payne's medical researcher husband David, 41, is said to have been one of the last people to see Madeleine. He joined Kate and her children at the McCanns' apartment at 6.30pm on May 3 after Gerry asked him to check on them while he was having a tennis lesson.

Members of the party took it in turns to check on the children during the evening.

Police are said to be concerned at inconsistencies in the statements of the McCanns and their friends of the events that took place that night.

The McCanns' friends consistently deny any wrongdoing.

Police believe part-time GP Kate played a part in Madeleine's death in an accident in the couple's apartment.

They are working on the theory that she enlisted consultant cardiologist Gerry to help cover up the crime and dispose of her body.

Kate and Gerry categorically deny the claims, insisting they have been victims of a "black propaganda" campaign in the Portuguese press fuelled by leaks from detectives.
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Inept.. Incompetent.. I'm incandescent


Inept.. Incompetent.. I'm incandescent
21 October 2007
People
Stewart Whittingham


EXCLUSIVE MADDIE: SHOCK NEW CLAIMS AGAINST POLICE

Gerry 's rage over claim cops didn't check evidence Key papers 'scattered all over the floor ' Weeks behind in putting records on crime computer

HORRIFIED

Kate and Gerry McCann were incandescent with rage last night after cops were accused of a catalogue of incompetence in the hunt for their missing daughter Madeleine.

Insiders claim vital evidence was ditched by boozy officers and crucial documents were ignored.

And weeks were wasted clearing up the mess to get the search for four-year-old Maddie back on track.

The appalling extent of the shambles came to light when Goncalo Amaral, the police chief leading the five month investigation into Maddie's disappearance, was fired.

Sources said replacement Paulo Rebelo, 45, arrived in the resort of Praia da Luz to find:

CRUCIAL papers scattered over the floor of police offices;

A HUGE backlog of files that took two weeks to put on computer; and

BIASED officers who were convinced Kate and Gerry had killed Maddie.

The findings came as beleaguered police faced unrelated accusations of corruption and failing to crack down on a major paedophile ring.

Rebelo immediately SACKED 60 of the 100 cops involved in the search for Maddie.

A source admitted: "There was important material lying all over the place that hadn't been considered by investigators and a lot of key information was discarded.

"Putting all the papers in order has been a massive job."

A source close to Kate and Gerry revealed the 39-year-old couple's fury at the police failings - but welcomed Rebelo's clear-out.

The source said: "They are livid - they cannot believe how badly this has been mishandled.

"Not putting vital information on computer file is so amateurish. But at least the new man seems to know what he is doing."

And spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We'd be very concerned to hear all the information in the police's hands has not been properly or effectively co-ordinated or collated.

"If Mr Rebelo is strengthening their system that's all to the good."

Rebelo was put in place after Amaral was fired for alleged incompetence - and for being too fixated on his belief Kate and Gerry had killed Madeleine.

Experts said cops FAILED to seal off the McCanns' holiday apartment for 24 hours after Madeleine vanished - meaning key forensic evidence was lost.

Staff at the holiday complex were NOT quizzed for 60 hours, NO roadblocks were set up and cops in neighbouring Spain were NOT alerted for 12 hours.

Rebelo was also told his predecessor had regular threehour boozy lunches when he accused Kate and Gerry of drugging and killing their daughter.
Rebelo confronted Amaral's team at a heated meeting and accused them of having "closed minds". He then fired 60 of them.

Mr Mitchell said: "When Mr Rebelo came in, Kate and Gerry were pleased because it meant a fresh attitude and approach to the case. If the new inquiry is moving in a new direction then that's good."

Rebelo has drafted in specialist murder detectives to join his team, who are almost certain Maddie was killed rather than snatched.

Mr Mitchell said: "Kate and Gerry still believe there is a possibility she's alive.

"But they are realistic enough to know there is a possibility she might be dead.

"If that is the case, any officer with expertise in that sort of inquiry would be welcomed."

Maddie vanished from the holiday apartment 171 days ago as her parents dined with friends nearby.

GP Kate and surgeon Gerry are said to believe she was grabbed by a paedophile - and they launched aworldwide campaign to find her.

But the couple, from Rothley, Leics, were named as official suspects in September.

Insiders say police now admit they have NO evidence against the McCanns.

Meanwhile, a Portuguese court has heard how a top cop allegedly helped a woman run a prostitution racket from a bar. She is said to have given him sex in return.

And the country is bracing itself for a court case about a worldwide paedophile ring which has preyed on more than 100 kids.
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Maddie's final gift for gran


20 October 2007
The Sun
Antonella Lazzeri and Clodagh Hartley

Hand print on plate

THIS is the poignant last gift from Madeleine McCann to her gran -given just days before she vanished.

The heart-shaped plate bears Maddie's little handprints and the touching message, "I love you Grandma and Grandad, From Madeleine 2007."

Maddie's devastated gran Susan Healy showed off the plate yesterday and said: "This is so special I feel like locking it in a safe.
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Maddie was still alive


Maddie was still alive
Exclusive New evidence gives fresh hope to McCanns
Ross Hall in Praia Da Luz
14 October 2007
The News of the World



TODAY the News of the World reveals key new evidence that PROVES Maddie McCann was abducted ALIVE.

The latest piece of the jigsaw centres on the moment mum Kate returned to their Portuguese holiday apartment and discovered her daughter gone.

Police have been told Kate KNEW instantly little Madeleine had been snatched because the bedclothes were in exactly the same position, raised above the mattress as if they were still lying over the child.

Supporters of the McCanns are adamant this meant she must have been carefully removed from the bed while asleep and taken, rather than just getting up and wandering off, which would have ruffled the bedclothes.

Those close to Kate and Gerry-still official suspects in the 164-day mystery are convinced the revelation should clear the couple and switch the investigation back to finding their four-year-old.

A Portuguese source told us:

"People keep asking how did Kate know so quickly that Madeleine had been taken and not just walked out.

"But it's obvious. When she put Maddie to bed the child was all tucked up around the shoulders, and when Kate realised she was gone all the sheets were still neatly in place.

Suspect 


"A child of that age wouldn't have been able to get out of bed without moving a thing. Someone had clearly been in and carefully lifted her out. Kate realised that right away.

"This evidence must now refocus the police attention. Kate and Gerry should be released from their suspect status."

Another vital clue pointing to kidnap came two months ago when the News of the World revealed how Maddie's treasured Cuddle Cat toy had been found on a high ledge in the room, out of her reach.

Portuguese police are aware of the new evidence but continue to point the finger at Madeleine's anguished parents.

Close friends of the McCanns have always known about the clue but have been unable to make it public because of strict Portuguese privacy laws.

Alarmingly, the News of the World has also discovered that other holidaymakers and neighbours in the same Praia da Luz apartment block have never been asked for DNA samples-even though many helped with the search on the night Maddie went missing.

Pamela Fenn lives in the apartment directly above the one rented by the McCanns and came into close contact with the couple that night.

She told us: "I've not been required to give a sample or provide fingerprints."

Another apartment owner said he was surprised not to have been checked out.

"I'd have thought it was important for us to give DNA samples, so we could be ruled out if nothing else," he said.

"There were lots of us helping out that night and you'd think our DNA would be all over the place."

The McCanns have always vehemently denied all allegations and are now putting together a defence case they are convinced will clear their names.

They are hoping the appointment of Paulo Rebelo, Portugal's second most senior cop, to head up the case will help shift the focus away from them. Rebelo replaces Goncalo Amaral, sacked after he accused British police of being manipulated by the McCanns.


Pounds 1.5 m reward for Maddie's safe return: details at notw.co.uk
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Kicking sailor 'clue' to body


Kicking sailor 'clue' to body
Exclusive Missing Madeleine Day 164
The Sunday Mirror
14 October 2007
Lori Campbell


Portuguese police are becoming increasingly convinced Madeleine McCann's body was dumped at sea.

Officers drafted in to revitalise the investigation will reinterview a key witness who saw a sailor acting suspiciously after the tot disappeared.

Nanny Charlotte Pennington told last night how the man was kicking at something in the hull of his vessel in Praia da Luz, where the family had been staying, two days after Madeleine vanished.

Charlotte, who was working at the Mark Warner holiday complex where their apartment was, ran to get a friend to see what was happening but by the time they returned the boat - and the sailor in yellow fluorescent jacket - had gone.

The next day Charlotte spotted the man, wearing what she thought was the same jacket, and contacted police.

Charlotte, 20, said at her home in Leatherhead, Surrey: "I'm really pleased they are taking this seriously because it means they aren't just looking at the McCanns as suspects."

Her sighting of the sailor - and his possible involvement - was described by a police source as "credible".

Local council leader Manuel Borba reckoned the chances of finding Madeleine in the area were now virtually nil.

Mr Borba, who spent two weeks searching, said: "I personally looked in 40 wells. I'm not going to say that it's impossible the body has been hidden here but I don't believe that it has."

Police will finally receive results from DNA samples taken from the McCanns' hire car and their apartment in the next few days.

The Portuguese hope they will provide a breakthrough - and possibly back their theory that Madeleine's parents helped dispose of her body after she died accidentally.

In a sign of increasing desperation, detectives are studying a map sketched by Chilean mystic Isabel Avila of an area where she claims Madeleine can be found. It suggests she is near a bridge and masts.

 
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Cops probe nanny's dumped at sea claim


Cops probe nanny's dumped at sea claim
Exclusive Missing Madeleine Day 164
The Sunday Mirror
14 October 2007
Lori Campbell and Grant Hodgson

Key witness quizzed again 

Police dig into parents' uni days

Portuguese police are becoming increasingly convinced Madeleine McCann's body was dumped at sea.

Last night officers drafted in to revitalise the investigation were planning to re-interview a key witness who saw a sailor acting suspiciously after the tot disappeared.

And British police are to delve into the student pasts of Madeleine's parents Kate and Gerry.

Last night nanny Charlotte Pennington told how she saw a sailor kicking at something in the hull of his vessel in Praia da Luz, where the McCanns had been staying, two days after their daughter vanished.

Charlotte, who was working at the Mark Warner holiday complex where their apartment was, ran to get a friend to see what was happening but by the time they returned the boat - and the sailor in yellow fluorescent jacket - had gone.

The next day Charlotte spotted the man, wearing what she thought was the same jacket, and contacted police.

Charlotte, 20, back home in Leatherhead, Surrey, said: "I'm really pleased they are taking this seriously because it means they aren't just looking at the McCanns as suspects."

Her sighting of the sailor - and his possible involvement - was last night described by one police source as "credible".

The officer added: "Whoever had the expertise to make Madeleine disappear from the flat also had the expertise to throw her into the sea."

Police believe Madeleine was killed on May 3 and her body dumped in the Atlantic. They fear she may never be found.

Local council leader Manuel Borba reckoned the chances of finding Madeleine in the area were now virtually nil.

Mr Borba, who spent two weeks searching, insisted: "I personally looked in 40 wells. I'm not going to say that it's impossible the body has been hidden here but I don't believe that it has." Several new officers, including two murder squad detectives based in Lisbon, started work on the case yesterday under the command of Paulo Rebelo.

He replaced controversial Goncalo Amaral, 48, taken off the case after his criticism of British police. Mr Rebelo is reported to be receiving long-awaited results from DNA samples taken from the McCanns' hire car and apartment in the next few days. The test results, produced by the Forensic Science Service in Birmingham, are being sent in sealed envelopes via the British embassy.

The Portuguese hope they will provide a breakthrough - and possibly back their theory that Madeleine's parents helped dispose of her body after she died accidentally.

Detectives in Britain are to dig into the couple's backgrounds as far back as their university days 20 years ago.

Strathclyde Police have been asked to contact former friends and colleagues to establish if there is anything in either's past which may shed light on the case.

Kate and Gerry, both 39, from Rothley, Leics, met as junior doctors in Glasgow's Western Infirmary in 1992 after finishing their medical degrees.

The couple, who attended the Church of the Sacred Heart near their home yesterday with two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, have had no contact from Portuguese police since they returned to the UK. They deny any involvement in Madeleine's disappearance.

A friend said: "They've not heard a word. Not only are they unaware what is happening regarding their status as suspects but they fear nothing is being done to look for Madeleine."

Their spokesman Clarence Mitchell said they would stay in Leicestershire for the twins' sake but would return to Portugal if asked.

In an increasing sign of desperation, Portuguese police were last night studying a map sketched by Chilean mystic Isabel Avila of an area where she claims Madeleine can be found. It suggests she is near a bridge and tall antennas.

Desperate cops to study map drawn up by a psychic


  
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I'M MADDIE'S FATHER..100%


12 October 2007
The Sun
With Clodagh Hartley/Antonella Lazzeri in Rothley
Angry Gerry slams cop rumours


The parents of Maddie McCann reacted with fury yesterday after reports in Portugal claimed Gerry was not the tot's natural father. Police sources say IVF baby Maddie, four, has a different biological dad. They claim it means that if DNA evidence said to have been found in the couple's hire car is proved to be Maddie's, it cannot be explained away as being the twins'.

But a close family friend said the claim had left Kate and Gerry "horrified and distressed". The friend said: "Gerry IS the father. And he damn well knew, because of the IVF process, that he was 100 per cent the father."
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Portuguese put top cop in charge of the search


Portuguese put top cop in charge of the search
9 October 2007
Evening Herald


ONE of Portugal's most senior detectives today took charge of the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.

Paulo Rebelo, a senior criminal investigation co-ordinator at national police headquarters in Lisbon, will now lead the inquiry.

Mr Rebelo was expected to move to southern Portugal, where Madeleine vanished 159 days ago on May 3, a Portuguese police spokeswoman said.

The detective, who will start work later this week, has investigated several high-profile cases including claims of a child sex ring at a state-run children's home.

Portuguese police chiefs will want the new leader to bring fresh momentum and stability to the troubled and controversial inquiry.

Goncalo Amaral (above) was removed from the investigation last week after criticising British police in a newspaper interview.

The officer claimed detectives were being misled by the girl's parents, Gerry and Kate McCann, who are suspects in the case.

Mr Amaral, who headed the regional Policia Judiciaria in Portimao, also accused the McCanns of releasing new information each day in a bid to confuse the inquiry.

After the move, another senior officer, Chief Inspector Tavares Almeida, asked for an extended leave of absence.

Goncalo Amaral was taken off the case following his claim that Kate and Gerry McCann had been calling the shots by identifying lines of enquiry for Leicestershire officers.

The detective, who heads the regional Policia Judiciaria in Portimao, was also said to have engaged in three hour boozy lunches at the height of the investigation into Maddie's disappearance.

 
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I traced Maddie DNA to the sea


I traced Maddie DNA to the sea
'The Locator' gives fresh hope to the McCanns
7 October 2007
News of the World
Lucy Panton


RENOWNED international manhunt expert, dubbed The Locator, sensationally revealed he has uncovered a telltale DNA trail left by snatched toddler Maddie McCann.

In a shock new twist, ex-cop Danie Krugel tracked a "forensic route" he believed her kidnapper took from her family's Portuguese holiday apartment through alleyways, roads and paths down to a nearby beach.

There the trail goes cold-crucially supporting the theory that Madeleine was then taken out to sea in a boat after being abducted on May 3.

And the McCanns are convinced Krugel's evidence means four-year-old Maddie was taken ALIVE and gives them hope she can still be found.

The experienced investigator told us:

"I spent four nights in July carrying out my searches.

"I've been able to trace where Madeleine was in the resort and have drawn a map which has been given to the police.

"I can't reveal details as I don't want to alert anyone who might try to disturb the scene. But I believe I've traced where she was taken that night and now it's down to police to use their search experts to do the rest. The area to which my investigation led me is a difficult one to search."

"We tried to contact the family at the very beginning to offer our help, but unfortunately we didn't get called in until a couple of months after Madeleine went missing."

Desperate

News of Krugel's findings came as the News of the World discovered that forensic tests on DNA found in the apartment and hire car are "inconclusive"-completely refuting Portuguese police claims that they incriminate to Maddie's distraught parents, still branded official suspects.

In their desperate bid to find Madeleine the McCanns called in South African Krugel after hearing of a string of remarkable successes in his homeland, where he earned his nickname The Locator.

Krugel's hi-tech methods are a closely guarded secret and he refuses to give details of his techniques.

But his method uses DNA fragments and Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite technology to find missing persons, alive and dead.

The McCanns gave him a sample of Maddie's hair found on a coat that had been left at home in Rothley, Leicestershire, to carry out his probe, with the full cooperation of the cops in Praia da Luz.

Krugel's starting point was the ground floor apartment in the Mark Warner complex where she vanished, just a short distance away from the tapas bar where Kate and Gerry were dining with seven friends.

Using his secret techniques Krugel began tracing and following a DNA trail on a 15-minute route to the sea.

Portuguese cops were then called in to examine his dossier of evidence and immediately decided to carry out searches based on the information. A source told us:

"In fact TWO searches were carried out although this has never been revealed.

"The police were worried that media in the area would see them but they managed to do it all without anyone finding out.

"They didn't find any trace of Madeleine but this did not mean Mr Krugel's information wasn't accurate. The investigations show the only option was for Madeleine to have been put on a boat and taken out to sea."

After police made inquiries around the nearby Lagos marina and other local boating communities there emerged the two theories that Madeleine's body was dumped at sea or she is still alive having been taken by boat abroad, possibly to Morocco.

Krugel's results also match a crucial eye-witness account on the evening of May 3 by Kate and Gerry's close friend Jane Tanner.

She said she saw a man carrying what appeared to be a child wrapped in a blanket close to their apartment.

In a witness statement to cops Miss Tanner said the child looked similar to Madeleine. The man has never been traced. Ironically for the McCanns, it was the work of Krugel that resulted in sniffer dogs being brought in and the couple being declared suspects.

Our source said:

"It was suggested to the Portuguese police that after they'd searched the beach they should then use the dogs from Britain. And it was the behaviour of the dogs that caused them to believe they'd found this so-called 'scent of death'.

"This in fact may not have been the case but the police became convinced Kate and Gerry were involved.

"They are ignoring all the statements to the contrary, the DNA evidence said to have been found in the hire car which can be easily explained, and also the work of Mr Krugel who has had many successes."

"The Locator" traced victims of infamous South African paedophile Gert van Rooyan in the late 1980s. Six girls, aged 11 to 13, had vanished and police were baffled.

Using hair from the missing girls he repeatedly pinpointed the same spot and when the area was excavated bone fragments of victims was found.

He also traced the body of missing five-year-old girl, Naledi Ntebele, in just 20 minutes.

The News of the World has learned Kate and Gerry could finally be cleared after new forensic tests carried out in the UK have proved "inconclusive".

DNA testing by the Forensic Science Service in Birmingham on samples of body fluids and blood have NOT provided a positive match to Madeleine.

An FSS source said that further "more complicated" tests were being carried out and denied claims they were holding back information from the Portuguese. Earlier British experts accused the Portuguese of overplaying early DNA evidence to put pressure on the McCanns.

In the days that followed it was alleged that Portuguese police had found fluids and hair from Madeleine in the hire car.

Leaked reports claimed bodily fluids and blonde hairs apparently belonging to Maddie had been found in the Renault, leading to speculation that they used the car to move her corpse weeks later.

Proven

But a source close to the forensic inquiry insisted yesterday:

"The testing carried out so far remains inconclusive. There are no complete DNA profiles that could implicate the McCanns.

"Tests are still underway and if they come to the same conclusion the case against the McCanns will collapse."

As the argument raged, investigator Krugel told us he had asked for no money or even expenses for his work on the case.
"I wanted to assist the McCanns and offered my services," he said.

"We tried to contact the family at the very beginning but unfortunately we didn't get called in until months after Madeleine went missing."

A source close to the McCanns said:

"The work of Mr Krugel should not be underestimated and gives great hope to Gerry and Kate.

"Many people have contacted the couple to try to help but while their hearts may be in the right place they just don't have the expertise to be of assistance. But Mr Krugel has a proven record of finding people and his methods are extremely credible.

"The results in Praia da Luz crucially match many other strands of the investigation which all point to Madeleine being abducted and still being alive on that night when she was taken.

"Kate and Gerry just want police to concentrate on this evidence and find Madeleine. It's so frustrating for them.

"It is important to mention Kate and Gerry used Mr Krugel with the full cooperation of Portuguese police. The fact they carried out searches as a result of his work prove his credibility with them.

"Yet sadly they seem to have decided to no longer follow this line of inquiry."
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Exclusive: Maddie was alive on beach


Exclusive: Maddie was alive on beach
The News of the World
Lucy Panton
7 October 2007


STARTLING new evidence from a world renowned manhunter last night

CONVINCED Gerry and Kate McCann that missing daughter Madeleine was snatched ALIVE.

Danie "The Locator" Krugel's hi-tech satellite probe tracked the child's DNA along a route from their Portuguese holiday apartment down to a nearby beach-and there the trail went cold, backing the theory she was taken away by boat.

A McCanns' source said: "This gives us great hope."

FULL STORY - Pages 4 & 5
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Warning over cop shambles


Warning over cop shambles
7 October 2007
The Sunday Mirror
Grant Hodgson

(Note: See PCC Complaint submitted by Leicestershire Constabulary below)

THE SEARCH FOR MADELEINE DAY 157

BRITISH crime chiefs told Portuguese police to "smarten up their act" during high-level talks last week that lead to the sacking of the cop leading the Madeleine inquiry.

British police chiefs and Government officials heaped pressure on the Portuguese as the shambolic investigation lay in tatters.

"Portuguese cops were told to sort it out," a police source told the Sunday Mirror, which last week exposed the long, boozy lunch breaks taken by Goncalo Amaral.

"It's not good enough when the man who was supposed to be running the world's biggest police inquiry was taking huge lunch breaks," the source said.

Leicestershire Police - the McCanns' local force - the Home Office and Foreign Office were all believed to have been involved in the talks.

The Sunday Mirror can also reveal how DNA evidence collected by officers in Praia da Luz is being considered "fatally flawed" and "useless".

A Leicestershire police source said: "There is a huge sense of embarrassment about the whole thing. Questions are now being asked along the lines of, 'Why have we been supporting such a bunch off incompetents?'

"Leicester police aren't happy about it at all."


   ****************************************************************

NOTE: 


Complainant Name:
Leicestershire Constabulary

Clauses Noted: 
1

Publication:  
Sunday Mirror

Complaint:

Leicestershire Constabulary complained that an article had quoted a ‘Leicestershire police source’ being critical of the Portuguese police (in relation to the investigation into Madeleine McCann’s disappearance) when that was not the official view of the Force. 

Resolution:

The matter was resolved when the newspaper agreed to place a note of the complaint in its archive files, which made clear that the quoted source was not speaking on behalf of the Force.
 
Report:
76
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Copper meant to find Maddie hunted down parents instead


Copper meant to find Maddie hunted down parents instead
Opinion
6 October 2007
The Sun
Lorraine Kelly


IT is a scandal that it has taken so long for the boozy, bumbling policeman in charge of the Madeleine McCann investigation to be given the boot.

Goncalo Amaral is thought to be almost single-handedly responsible for the public vilification of parents Kate and Gerry.

Instead of searching for Madeleine, he spent his time drip-feeding false information to the Portuguese press. They gorged themselves on increasingly absurd stories about Kate and Gerry drugging and killing Madeleine, storing her body in a fridge and then burying her in the local churchyard.

Now it's been revealed that another police officer who questioned Kate has asked to be taken off the case. It's a shambles.

Kate told movingly this week how she has cried every day since Madeleine disappeared, and that support from the public and taking care of her twins Sean and Amelie are the only things that keep her going.

So much for the picture of a cold-hearted killer that Amaral wanted to portray.

Kate is a grieving mother, and by accusing her of murder, Amaral has stuck a knife in her heart.

Crucified

The vile police leaks, which were a tissue of lies, crucified the McCanns and prompted lurid headlines.

The final straw was when Amaral attacked the British police for being "duped" by the couple and "shielding" them.

Portuguese top brass had no choice but to give him the elbow. If only Amaral had spent as much energy on doing his job instead of trying to cover his backside, perhaps Maddie would have been found by now.

We will never know, but it must burn away at her parents that their daughter's fate has been in such incompetent hands. Much has been made of Kate and Gerry being made "arguidos" or suspects in Portuguese law. But Amaral, the man who pointed the finger at them, is himself an arguido in a distressing case involving another little girl who disappeared three years ago.

He is under suspicion of helping to cover up an assault on the mother of the child, who was later jailed for her murder.

No body has ever been found and the mother claims a confession was beaten out of her and that she is innocent.

If she is telling the truth, this could mean that there is a monster in the area abducting and possibly harming little girls.

You would have thought that finding a sick and dangerous criminal would be at the very top of any copper's agenda.

Instead, Amaral went on long booze-filled lunches and felt peeved that the McCanns had their own high-profile campaign to find their daughter.

In a display of petulance, this mean-spirited little man turned against them.

Hiding behind Portugal's secrecy laws, he heaped abuse and suspicion on the McCanns, to the extent that many had a little worm of doubt in their minds.

I have always been convinced of their innocence and I believe they have been brutally let down by the authorities in Portugal.


 
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Truth about the Madeleine police


Truth about the Madeleine police
6 October 2007
The Daily Express
David Pilditch in Praia da Luz and Rachel Porter


In the week that the top detective was sacked and his deputy quit, we reveal the lies, boozy lunches and alleged incompetence of a farcical investigation

ANOTHER day, another casual stroll through the sunny streets of Portimao from his office to that little bistro round the corner, where the seafood is fresh and everybody knows his name.

When the Madeleine McCann case landed on the desk of chief inspector Gonçalo Amaral this summer, this daily ritual might, quite reasonably, have fallen to the bottom of his list of priorities. As the world's press set up camp on the police station doorstep and demanded regular progress reports, surely Amaral had quite enough on his plate without having to snap open another lobster.

But dressed in his trademark baggy jeans and crumpled shirt barely big enough to cover his belly, he refused to let a little matter like a missing girl come between him and the fish platters at Carvi, a popular local eatery.

So, for instance, on the day that Kate and Gerry McCann flew to Berlin as part of their own desperate campaign to keep their daughter's image in the public eye, Amaral could be found at his usual table where he and his colleagues spent two hours eating, smoking and knocking back the booze. A fellow diner said the men laughed and joked as the McCanns appeared on a TV news broadcast.

"They asked for the Portuguese TV news to be switched on and sat watching it, " he recalls. "Madeleine's parents had given a press conference and the police were laughing while it was on. They seemed to be sharing some sort of joke. I thought that laughing like that – in public – was in really poor taste."

Just last week – after almost five months leading the country's biggest missing child inquiry and with no sign of a breakthrough – he still saw no reason why he shouldn't spend more than two hours a day getting his fill at his favourite restaurant. Meanwhile, as many as 250 potential leads are said to have piled up on his desk.


ON WEDNESDAY he and Guilhermino Encarnacao, deputy head of the Judicial Police, spent hours there over a bottle of white wine and two heaving seafood platters. He returned the next day, not once but twice, for an £84 lunch with a female companion and later for a drink or two, while he watched the TV news and presumably caught up on the latest developments in the case. On Friday, after less than three hours at his desk, he collected his daughter from school and took her to lunch with another colleague for a further three hours.

No doubt this week he was looking forward to more of the same but on Tuesday – his 48th birthday – he was told that enough was enough. A fax from his boss in Lisbon said he had been "transferred to Faro for convenience of the service". His lazy ways may have been an embarrassment to the investigation but they were the least serious of his many mistakes.

His sacking came after an astonishing attack on the British police and their methods in which he claimed they "have only been working on what the McCann couple want them to and what suits them most". He was also overheard telling Portugal's exFormula One star Pedro Lamy that he was sure the girl was dead, despite apparently having no proof to support that theory. He said he believed the McCanns accidentally gave Madeleine an overdose of drugs intended to keep her quiet.

"We are sure the parents killed Madeleine, " Amaral said. "They are both doctors and know about drugs. We are confident in our case."

With politicians anxious to avoid a diplomatic crisis with Britain, the at times farcical investigation needed a new figurehead. So Amaral was ordered to clear his desk at police headquarters in Portimao, was demoted to the rank of inspector, stripped of his role as regional head of the Policia Judiciaria and removed from the case.

Although the McCanns refuse to openly celebrate his departure, they say they hope his successor will refocus the investigation on the hunt for Madeleine rather than try to pin the blame on them. Friends believe they only became suspects in the case when Portimao's desperate detectives ran out of other ideas.

Sources have said Amaral was largely responsible for a string of leaks to the Portuguese press which led to a devastating propaganda campaign against them. And last month the Portuguese police spokesman in the inquiry, chief inspector Olegario Sousa, quit, allegedly over the way the McCanns have been treated.

Sousa is reported to have been unhappy after he was misled about key events in the investigation. On several occasions, police bypassed Sousa in informing sections of the Portuguese press of developments, then instructed him to issue denials.

The McCanns have been unable to defend themselves against the slew of slurs against them as Amaral and his colleagues repeatedly warned that they could be jailed for speaking out.

The McCanns believe Portugal's strict secrecy laws, which Amaral himself fell foul of last week – as well as the well-documented incompetence of officers in the first vital hours after Madeleine's disappearance – have seriously hampered the case.

Long before they were named as suspects, the McCanns had good reason to fear that Amaral was not the best man for the job. For, despite 26 years experience with the force, he had investigated only two child murders before – including the notorious Joana Cipriano case. Astonishingly, he is an official suspect in a criminal investigation connected to that case.

In September 2004, eight-year-old Joana Cipriano disappeared from her home in Figuera, about seven miles from Praia da Luz. Her mother Leonor Cipriano is serving 16 years for murder after making a confession which helped secure a conviction. But she has insisted her confession was extracted through torture.

She withdrew her statement a day after making it, claiming she had been forced to kneel on glass ashtrays with a bag over her head as police repeatedly beat her during almost 48 hours of non-stop interrogation. Shocking photographs of Mrs Cipriano show the extent of her horrific facial injuries. And while detectives insist they were caused after she fell down the police station stairs, Amaral is accused of helping to cover up a vicious assault on her. In a chilling parallel to the Madeleine investigation, the case was treated as an abduction until Amaral became convinced of the mother's guilt.

PORTUGUESE newspaper Expresso reported: "Gonçalo Amaral convinced himself that the child's mother was involved in the crime when he saw her on a TV programme, mourning and speaking of her daughter in the past tense. Joana's mother and uncle are arrested and accused of the little girl's murder. But the body is never found." The paper also reported that he left the case during the final phases of the investigation after a public row with another high-ranking police officer.

Roy Ramm, a former Scotland Yard commander, said: "It is extraordinary that a man accused of an unresolved, serious complaint such as this is still handling a high-profile inquiry. You would expect him at best to be in a desk job." The twice-married father of three had a reputation as a tough street cop who worked his way to the top. He served in posts across Portugal before specialising in drug-busting operations, starting out on dangerous undercover work. He was appointed head of the Policia Judiciaria in the Algarve district of Portimao in 2001.

The third of four sons from a middle-class Lisbon family, he complied with his parents' wishes and studied engineering but soon switched to law which allowed him to pursue a police career. He shot up the ladder within the force, serving in Lisbon, Faro, the Azores and on secondment in Madrid. During this time he gained further qualifications in criminology, psychiatry, psychology, sociology and law. Despite his professional ambition, this week he shrugged off the significance of his dismissal from the case, saying: "A policeman does not limit himself to one case. There is plenty of work still to be done." His successor was widely tipped to be chief inspector Tavares Almeida, 48, who played a large part in the interrogation of Kate McCann. Described as the McCanns' chief tormentor, he is thought to have offered Kate McCann the plea bargain of a short sentence in return for a confession.

But Almeida shocked his superiors by requesting an extended leave of absence days before Amaral's sacking.

A police source told Portuguese newspaper 24 Horas: "It is very unlikely to be denied. If that happened it would be the first time in the history of the Policia Judiciaria." Insiders say his departure signalled that the investigation was in free-fall.

With no leadership and no end to the case in sight, morale among the remaining investigators is low.

Carlos Anjos, president of the Portuguese police union, told 24 Horas: "The investigators in question have worked without a rest since the little girl disappeared and as is natural, that is not healthy. Nobody can think clearly if they are exhausted." According to Alipio Ribeiro, national director of the Judicial Police, finding a replacement for Amaral is "a priority".

And as things stand, Guilhermino Encarnacao – Amaral's lunch companion – is the favourite to step in.

In contrast to his colleague "he is very charming and polite", says one source. "He is a very good operator – he always gets his man." Lisbon-based Luis Neves, 41 – who is famed for solving the high-profile kidnapping of an ex-president of top football club Sporting Lisbon – is the only other name in the frame at present.

In these tense times, if there is one thing that British investigators and their Portuguese counterparts can agree on, it has to be this – someone must step into the breach before the search for the truth descends irretrievably into chaos.

   
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Good riddance


Good riddance
4 October 2007
The Sun
Sharon Hendry


He was boozy, incompetent and convinced the McCanns killed Maddie...so we say to sacked police chief Amaral:

HE'S the crumpled copper who looks like a seedy character from a bad detective movie.

But to Madeleine McCann's family, tubby, hard-drinking police chief Goncalo Amaral is a real-life villain.

While supposedly hunting for a child-snatcher, the hapless plod was working as few as four-and-a-half hours a day.

It seems he spent most of that time conjuring up countless malicious explanations for Madeleine's disappearance.

His theory is that she died at the hands of parents Gerry and Kate.

The couple, from Rothley, Leics, will no doubt find a grim satisfaction in the news that Amaral has been removed from the case.

Most of all, they will hope his successor -when the Portuguese do get round to appointing one -can rally a demoralised force, break the case and find their daughter.

Amaral has been demoted a rank -down to inspector -and stripped of his role as regional head of the Policia Judiciaria (PJ).

The shock announcement came on his 48th birthday, after he accused British police of shielding the McCanns.

He had become an embarrassment to his government and once source said of his latest wild claim: "It was the straw that broke the camel's back."

Finding Madeleine alive was never a priority for Amaral after he became obsessed by the notion that Gerry and Kate had disposed of her body.

Amaral, in charge of a squad of 30 detectives, consistently refused to comment on his theories which still make the McCanns official suspects "arguidos" in the case.

He continually waved reporters away with a swing of his thick-set arm, citing Portugal's strict judicial secrecy rules for his silence.

"No speak! No speak!" was his standard riposte.

Nor would he discuss the 252 possible tip-offs about Madeleine's disappearance - many of which had allegedly not been followed.

His colourful conjecture could regularly be heard at coffee shops and restaurants near Amaral's office in the seaside town of Portimao, 20 minutes from Praia de Luz, where the McCanns stayed.

The moustached detective could usually be found chugging coffee and scoffing cakes at the Kalahary cafe or lingering over lunch at Carvi. He preferred these establishments to the stuffy confines of his HQ, where the McCanns were recently questioned for ten hours.

Most days would see him swagger up to his favourite Carvi table wearing a creased white shirt, unbuttoned to the chest, where a gleaming gold cross dangled.

On one occasion, the dad-of-three was overheard hammering home his theories to Portuguese racing driver Pedro Lamy. He told him: "The police case is we are sure the parents killed Madeleine.

Colourful

"They are both doctors and know about drugs. We are confident in our case."

On another occasion Amaral was at Carvi with the PJ spokesman Olegario Sousa. The McCanns were in Berlin and Amsterdam appealing for help in the hunt for Maddie and they were shown on the TV in the restaurant. The two men asked for the TV to be turned up before mocking the harried parents.

A booze-fuelled lunchtime, featuring white wine and his favourite Sagres lager, would often soon be followed by Amaral driving home in his blue Volvo.

Sources close to the investigation said his hackles were raised from the start by Mr and Mrs McCann's proactive approach to their daughter's disappearance.

One lawyer, who does not wish to be named, said: "Gerry is someone who clearly likes to get things done quickly and professionally.

"Amaral felt he was taking over, belittling him. It agitated him."

A PR war between the two camps erupted with Amaral leaking so-called "leads" to Portuguese newspapers. In particular, slurs on Kate McCann's character began to appear -she found her children "hyperactive" and hard to handle was a typical example.

Another source close to the investigation said: "It seems the main goal of the PJ now is to get a confession. It's like in the films, 'Aha, we have a confession, let's take them to court'. It's normal to want a confession when they don't have much else."

The McCanns fought back with their own public relations team.

Amaral has been a controversial figure during the search for Madeleine.

Astonishingly, he was put in charge of the day-to-day running of the inquiry despite himself being an "arguido" -after being accused of helping to cover-up an alleged assault on the mother of another missing girl.

Killing

He is to face a criminal hearing for allegedly concealing evidence that three colleagues tortured Leonor Cipriano to make her confess that she murdered her daughter Joana, nine, who went missing from Portimao three years ago.

Cipriano is serving 16 years for killing Joana, even though no body was ever found and she soon retracted her statement.

Amaral was not present at the time of her alleged beating but is accused of covering up for his colleagues, which he denies. He has reportedly investigated only two child murders -even though his police career spans 26 years.

He joined in 1981 after leaving an engineering course at university in Coimbra.

He did courses in sociology, psychology, psychiatry and criminal investigation at police school in Lisbon. Then he studied law.

He had only been in the police three years when he went to work in Madrid where he had his first contact with Spanish police and worked in Spain on several occasions.

He rose to the rank of chief inspector in 1998. Previous investigations include the case of a man who kicked his daughter to death in the Azores -and the infamous Joana case.

In 2005 he based himself in Seville to investigate the murder of a Portuguese policeman.

Like the McCanns, he is a Catholic and can regularly be found reading the bible.

He likes to quote it.

He will no doubt be seeking solace in those words this week as his career lies in tatters.
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New cop in charge ..New hope for us


New cop in charge ..New hope for us
4 October 2007
Mirror
Ryan Parry in Praia da Luz

THE HUNT FOR MADELEINE
McCanns pray for fresh start after chief ousted

KATE and Gerry McCann hope that bringing in a new police chief will give the hunt for Madeleine a new impetus.

And a source close to them said they were ready to fly back to Portugal to meet Goncalo Amaral's replacement if necessary.

They believe that the boozy chief inspector, kicked off the case after criticising them and British police, has hindered the hunt for their four-year-old daughter.

The source added: "We do hope that the change will re-energise and refocus the hunt for Madeleine.

"The new appointment will give the incoming police chief an opportunity to establish where the enquiry is and to move it on."

Amaral's replacement is expected to be appointed next week. He will be handpicked by Alipio Ribeiro, national director of the Judicial Police, and other senior officers.

It emerged last night that Amaral, 48, was sacked by Mr Ribeiro in a fax to his office. The curt message said: "Transferred to Faro for convenience of the service."

Justice minister Alberto Costa last night backed Amaral's removal.

He said: "It is an act of competence of the PJ national director of which I approve." A successor is not expected to be appointed this week because tomorrow is a public holiday in Portugal.

The McCanns' source said: "We would encourage the Portuguese authorities to fill the position as swiftly as possible, because Madeleine has still to be found"

A police spokeswoman explained: "The question of who is going to be head of the department is still unresolved. The national directors will nominate a candidate, and if that person agrees they will be made head of the department. We hope the decision-making process will be brief. There is no interview process, it is a case of the national directors choosing a candidate."

Amaral, who was third in command but ran the Madeleine inquiry on a day-to-day basis, yesterday reported for his new job at Faro police station.

The McCanns' supporters believe he hampered the case because he thinks Madeleine, missing since May 3, is dead. And he accused Gerry and Kate, both 39, of Rothley, Leics, of distracting the investigation and manipulating British police.

He said of Leicestershire detectives: "British police have only worked on what the McCanns want them to work on, and which is most convenient for them."

The McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell: "It's an absolutely ridiculous suggestion.

"It is a Portuguese-led inquiry and will remain so."

The McCanns believe that Amaral is behind many of the attacks on them in the Portuguese press.

But police union boss Carlos Anjos claimed Amaral had been made a scapegoat.

He said: "He was the victim of personal attacks by the British media which not only questioned his honour as a policeman, but also attacked him as a human being."

One police source told a local newspaper: "He was the first victim, and he served as a scapegoat for the English."

Amaral was in charge of 30 detectives. But he worked as little as four and a half hours a day, taking boozy three hour lunches.

He arrived prompt for his new job at 9am yesterday.

But he left at 12.30pm for a two hour lunch with deputy national police director Guilhermino Encarnacao, 59, who is working on the Madeleine case, and two colleagues.

Amaral yesterday shrugged off his dismissal.

He told a Portuguese newspaper: "A policeman does not limit himself to one case. There is plenty of work still to be done."

And Amaral, being investigated for allegedly helping cover up the police beating of a mother of a missing girl, said his comments were taken out of context.
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Madeleine detective kicked off case after blasting British police


Madeleine detective kicked off case after blasting British police
3 October 2007
The Daily Express
David Pilditch and Martin Evans in Praia da Luz

THE Portuguese detective leading the Madeleine McCann case was sacked last night.

Chief Inspector Goncalo Amaral was booted off the inquiry hours after launching an astonishing public attack on British police – claiming they had been duped by Kate and Gerry McCann.

Disgraced Amaral has been removed from the case, demoted to the rank of inspector, and stripped of his role as regional head of the Policia Judiciaria.

He was ordered to clear his desk at police headquarters in Portimao and will begin work in a new role at nearby Faro.

A Portuguese police spokesman said last night: "We cannot make any comment on the reasons for his dismissal.

"But we can confirm that he did not resign. He was removed from his post. The decision was taken by the national leadership of the Judicial Police." Amaral, who turned 48 yesterday, was taken off the case by his boss Alipio Ribeiro.

Last night a friend of the McCanns said: "The most important thing is that the inquiry is headed by someone who can do a professional job and help them find Madeleine." The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We are aware of what has happened and we simply cannot comment.

"However, Kate and Gerry have constantly said they are very willing to co-operate fully with the Portuguese authorities.

They will continue to do so regardless of who is in charge of the hunt for Madeleine." The bombshell came after Amaral accused British police of shielding the McCanns.

He claimed they were only pursuing leads that could help clear the couple, and were hampering his investigation into the four-year-old's disappearance from her family's holiday apartment in the the Algarve.

The explosive outburst led to the first intervention by the Portuguese government, in a very public reprimand by the Justice Minister Alberto Costa.

Last night a Portuguese police source described Amaral's remarks as "the straw that broke the camel's back".

He had breached Portuguese law and broken his silence over the Madeleine case, claiming:

"The British police have only been working on what the McCann couple want them to and what suits them most." The McCanns have been warned they face jail if they speak about the case – but Amaral appeared unconcerned by the secrecy laws as he sneered at a line of inquiry being followed by Leicestershire Police.

Amaral said a tip-off sent to Prince Charles's website that Madeleine may have been snatched by a former employee at the Ocean Club complex had "no credibility whatsoever".

He told Portuguese newspaper Diario de Noticias: "The Ocean Club is in Praia da Luz, not in London.

"That means that anything in respect to the complex and the employees – current or ex – has been or is being investigated by the Policia Judiciaria.

"It won't be an email, and an anonymous one at that, which will distract our line of investigation." He even claimed the tipoff was created by the McCanns.

The family live in Rothley, Leicestershire, and local officers have liaised with Portuguese police since their daughter disappeared on May 3. The force organised the DNA tests and brought in the sniffer dogs that allegedly identified the scent of a dead body – which was ironically the moment suspicion turned on Kate and Gerry.

But last week it was reported that the force's role in the inquiry was "hanging by a thread''. It is not known how the sacking will influence or change police thinking in Portimao.

Under Amaral – who was in charge of running the case on a day-to-day basis – Portuguese police believed that the McCanns hid, then disposed of Madeleine's body after she died in an accident the night they said she had been abducted.

The latest theory leaked by police is that Madeleine fell down a flight of 10 steps leading from the patio to the street after being given sleeping pills.

She is said to have woken to find her parents missing, then stumbled when she went to find them – in a muddled state from the effects of the drugs.

The couple were dining with seven friends at a nearby tapas restaurant, although members of the group say they made regular checks on Madeleine and the two-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie.

Police apparently believe that despite the McCanns being under weeks of intense media scrutiny as the Find Madeleine campaign took off, they somehow moved her body in the Renault Scenic hire car they rented 25 days after her disappearance.

Forensic evidence allegedly showed Madeleine's DNA was found in the boot of the car after tests at a lab in Birmingham.

The McCanns deny having anything to do with their daughter's disappearance and have told friends they believe they are being framed by Portuguese police who have bungled the investigation.

Two days after being named as official suspects the McCanns flew back to their home leaving Portuguese police to rely on British officers to pursue inquiries in the UK.

Amaral, who headed the police force in Portimao for six years, has been at the centre of a series of controversies.

Just days ago it was revealed he has been spending as little as four-and-a-half hours a day on the case – while up to 250 potential leads have still not been checked out.

He regularly spends hours enjoying boozy lunches. Last week, while the eyes of the world were on an apparent sighting in Morocco, he spent two hours knocking back wine in his favourite fish restaurant.

Astonishingly, he was put in charge despite being an arguido [suspect] himself – after being accused of helping to cover-up an alleged assault on the mother of another missing girl.

Amaral is to face a criminal hearing for allegedly concealing evidence that three of his colleagues tortured Leonor Cipriano to extract a confession that she murdered her eightyear-old daughter Joana who went missing in September 2004.

 
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Lead detective taken off Madeleine case


Lead detective taken off Madeleine case
3 October 2007
The Journal


THE Portuguese detective in charge of the Madeleine McCann inquiry was removed from the case yesterday after accusing her parents of manipulating British police, it was reported last night.

Goncalo Amaral was reportedly taken off the case following his comments that Kate and Gerry McCann had been calling the shots by identifying lines of inquiry for Leicestershire officers.

The detective, who heads the regional Policia Judiciaria in Portimao, said yesterday that British police had overlooked the fact that the couple remain suspects.

And he accused the McCanns of releasing new information each day in a bid to distract and confuse the 152-day-old inquiry.

Police reportedly said in a statement that Mr Amaral had been taken off the case but gave no reason for the decision.

Portuguese Justice Minister Alberto Costa refused to comment on the case, saying in reports: "We have to concentrate on the work, not on making comments."

Clarence Mitchell, the family's spokesman, said last night: "We're aware of these reports and we simply can't comment.

"Gerry and Kate have consistently said that they are happy to co-operate fully with the Portuguese authorities and will continue to do so, no matter who is in charge of the Madeleine investigation."

Despite his previous media silence, Mr Amaral has been a controversial figure during the search for Madeleine.

Last month it emerged he is one of five men charged over an alleged attack on the mother of another missing girl.

The men are accused of "scenes of aggression" against Leonor Cipriano, whose nine-year-old daughter, Joana, vanished in September 2004.

The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao.

The men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case.

Mr Amaral's comments yesterday were the latest salvo from the Portuguese authorities in an increasingly bitter war of words over the case.

The head of Portugal's police federation said a claim by Mr McCann that Madeleine's abductor may have been hiding in her room was a "ridiculous episode".

Mr Amaral broke his silence after it was reported that an anonymous email sent to the Prince of Wales's website was being investigated by British police.

The message suggested a disgruntled employee working at the Ocean Club complex in Praia da Luz may have kidnapped the young girl.

Mr Amaral told Portuguese newspaper Diario de Noticias that all current and former employees at the resort have been investigated.

He said: "The British police have only worked on what the McCann couple want them to work on and what suits them."

Speaking about the email lead, he added: "This situation has no credibility whatsoever for the Portuguese police.

"(British police) have investigated tips and information worked on by the McCanns, forgetting that the couple are suspected of causing the death of their daughter Madeleine."

Earlier, Carlos Anjos, head of Portugal's police federation, accused Mr McCann of being negligent. His comments came after Mr McCann said he believed someone was hiding in Madeleine's room when he went back to check on the children on May 3.

Mr Anjos said: "If he was suspicious that there was a man in the apartment, and then he calmly went to dinner, then words cannot describe how negligent he is as a father."
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Top Portuguese detective 'axed' from case


Top Portuguese detective 'axed' from case
3 October 2007
Aberdeen Press & Journal


The Portuguese detective in charge of the Madeleine McCann inquiry was removed from the case yesterday after accusing her parents of manipulating British police, it was reported last night.

Goncalo Amaral was reportedly taken off the case following his comments that Kate and Gerry McCann had been calling the shots by identifying lines of inquiry for Leicestershire officers.

The detective, who heads the regional Policia Judiciaria in Portimao, said British police had overlooked the fact that the couple remained suspects.

And he accused the McCanns of releasing new information each day in a bid to distract and confuse the 152-day-old inquiry.

Police reportedly said in a statement yesterday that Mr Amaral had been taken off the case but gave no reason for the decision.

Portuguese Justice Minister Alberto Costa refused to comment, saying in reports: "We have to concentrate on the work, not on making comments."

Clarence Mitchell, the family's spokesman, said last night: "We're aware of these reports and we simply can't comment.

"Gerry and Kate have consistently said that they are happy to cooperate fully with the Portuguese authorities and will continue to do so no matter who is in charge of the Madeleine investigation."

Despite his previous media silence, Mr Amaral has been a controversial figure during the search for Madeleine.

Last month it emerged he is one of five men charged over an alleged attack on the mother of another missing girl.

The men are accused of "scenes of aggression" against Leonor Cipriano, whose nine-year-old daughter, Joana, vanished in September 2004.

The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a restaurant in Portimao.

The men were seen drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case.

Mr Amaral's comments yesterday were the latest salvo from the Portuguese authorities in an increasingly bitter war of words over the case.

The head of Portugal's police federation said a claim by Mr McCann that Madeleine's abductor may have been hiding in her room was a "ridiculous episode".

Mr Amaral broke his silence after it was reported that an anonymous e-mail sent to the Prince of Wales's website was being investigated by British police.

The message suggested a disgruntled employee working at the Ocean Club complex in Praia da Luz may have kidnapped the young girl.

Mr Amaral told a local newspaper all current and former employees at the resort have been investigated.

He said: "The British police have only worked on what the McCanns want them to work on and what suits them."

Speaking about the e-mail lead, he added: "This situation has no credibility whatsoever for the Portuguese police.

"British police have investigated tips and information worked on by the McCanns, forgetting that the couple are suspected of causing the death of their daughter Madeleine.

"This story about kidnapping for revenge is another fact worked on by the McCanns."

Earlier, Carlos Anjos, head of Portugal's police federation, accused Mr McCann of being negligent.

His comments came after Mr McCann said he believed someone was hiding in Madeleine's room when he went back to check on the children on May 3.

Mr Anjos said: "If he was suspicious that there was a man in the apartment, and then he calmly went to dinner, then words cannot describe how negligent he is."
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Police chief removed from missing Madeleine inquiry


Police chief removed from missing Madeleine inquiry
3 October 2007
Yorkshire Post


The Portuguese detective in charge of the Madeleine McCann inquiry was removed from the case after accusing her parents of manipulating British police, it was reported.

Goncalo Amaral was reportedly taken off the case following his comments that Kate and Gerry McCann had been identifying lines of inquiry for Leicestershire police officers.

The detective, who heads the regional Policia Judiciaria in Portimao, said yesterday British police had overlooked the fact that the couple remain suspects.

H accused the McCanns of releasing new information each day in a bid to distract and confuse the 152-day-old inquiry.

Police reportedly said in a statement that Mr Amaral had been taken off the case but gave no reason for the decision.

Portuguese Justice Minister Alberto Costa refused to comment on the case, saying in reports: "We have to concentrate on the work, not on making comments."

Family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said last night: "We're aware of these reports and we simply can't comment.

"Gerry and Kate have consistently said that they are happy to cooperate fully with the Portuguese authorities and will continue to do so no matter who is in charge of the Madeleine investigation."

Despite his previous media silence, Mr Amaral has been a controversial figure during the search for Madeleine. Last month it emerged he is one of five men charged over an alleged attack on the mother of another missing girl.

The men are accused of "scenes of aggression" against Leonor Cipriano, whose nine-year-old daughter, Joana, vanished in September 2004.

The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao. The men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky.

Mr Amaral's comments yesterday were the latest salvo from the Portuguese authorities in an increasingly bitter war of words over the case.

The head of Portugal's police federation said a claim by Mr McCann that Madeleine's abductor may have been hiding in her room was a "ridiculous episode".

Mr Amaral broke his silence after it was reported that an anonymous e-mail sent to the Prince of Wales's website was being investigated by British police.

The message suggested a disgruntled employee working at the Ocean Club complex in Praia da Luz may have kidnapped the young girl.

Mr Amaral told Portuguese newspaper Diario de Noticias yesterday: "The British police have only worked on what the McCann couple want them to work on and what suits them."

Speaking about the e-mail lead, he added: "This situation has no credibility whatsoever for the Portuguese police."
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