Maddie hunt cash blown


NOV 30, 2009
MX

DODGY INVESTIGATOR
A private eye whose firm was paid $900,000 from a public fund to find Madeleine McCann squandered it on hopeless, bizarre schemes. Oakley International owner Kevin Halligen, who was arrested last week over an unrelated $2.35 million US fraud case, boasted of his peculiar tactics. He claimed to have hired an actor to play a ``drunken priest'' and seek confessions in the bars of Praia da Luz, where Maddie was lost in May 2007. He told colleagues a family with a look-alike daughter was paid to stay in a nearby resort to tempt potential kidnappers. But his firm did not screen one of the hundreds of calls to a hotline for potential witnesses
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Maddie investigator didn't listen to any tip-offs given to hotline


29 Nov 2009
The Mail on Sunday
 
Daniel Boffey


A private eye whose company was paid £500,000 from a public fund to find Madeleine McCann squandered the money on a series of bizarre schemes that had no chance of locating the missing child. Kevin Halligen, who claimed to have experience in the British secret services, was arrested last week in an Oxford hotel after an FBI manhunt over an unrelated £1.3million fraud case in America.
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MADDIE INVESTIGATOR DIDN'T LISTEN TO ANY TIP-OFFS


29 November 2009
The Mail on Sunday


A PRIVATE eye whose company was paid £500,000 from a public fund to find Madeleine McCann squandered the money on a series of bizarre schemes that had no chance of locating the missing child.

Kevin Halligen, who claimed to have experience in the British secret services, was arrested last week in an Oxford hotel after an FBI manhunt over an unrelated £1.3million fraud case in America.

His investigations company, Oakley International, was taken on in March last year by the Find Madeleine Fund and her parents Kate and Gerry McCann.

But The Mail on Sunday can reveal today that despite setting up a hotline for potential informants and witnesses, none of the hundreds of calls received by a call centre hired by Halligen, 48, was listened to by Oakley investigators - and Halligen also bragged to his colleagues that he had executed a series of peculiar tactics to find Madeleine.

He claimed to have hired an actor to pretend to be a 'drunken priest' who would seek confessions as he toured the bars of Praia da Luz, the resort where Madeleine disappeared in May 2007.

And he told colleagues that a family with a Madeleine lookalike daughter had been paid to set up home in a nearby resort in order to tempt out a potential kidnapper.

Meanwhile, a paper trail obtained by The Mail on Sunday shows that Halligen, a former director of a catering firm, launched an extraordinary spending spree on hotels, cigar bars, restaurants and luxury goods while he was in the pay of the Find Madeleine Fund, and in the period shortly after he was fired last summer.

Documents show that in his first two months as lead investigator in the search for Madeleine, Halligen spent £7,000 on a personal chauffeur.

A few months later, on a short trip to New York with a girlfriend, he lavished £1,600 on Salvatore Ferragamo leather goods, £5,500 on handbags, £500 on an Italian meal, £150 on a pair of designer glasses and £900 on a three-night stay at the five-star Renaissance Hotel. And in a one-month visit to Washington, where he owned a £1.5million mansion, he spent more than £3,000 on dining out and £6,000 on a room at the US capital's Intercontinental Hotel. He also paid out more than £50,000 on plumbing and mosaic tiling for his house in Great Falls, Virginia - a property in which he has never spent a night because of constant home-improvement work.

The revelations will dismay everyone who donated to the Find Madeleine Fund. But perhaps of most concern is the lack of attention paid to the hundreds of phone calls received by the Madeleine hotline.


Halligen and Oakley International, based in Washington, failed to listen to a single call received on the hotline set up for potential informants by Kate and Gerry McCann last year.

Johan Selle, the director of operations at iJet, the US firm that managed the Find Madeleine phone line, revealed that for a year nobody even asked his company if they could listen to any of the calls received.


Mr Selle said his operators, in Annapolis, Virginia, had answered 'hundreds of calls', but the information seemed wasted - possibly squandering valuable leads.

He said:

'We delivered Oakley a report with a summary of the calls and said if they wanted to come back they could listen to the recording, but nobody did.


'For someone with an understanding of the case it would be very easy for some to say that maybe 80 or 90 per cent of the calls were hogwash, but there may be a percentage where one would say maybe we should listen to this one or listen to that one. But our understanding is that this never took place.


'We are not sure whether Halligen provided our report to the family or to the trust or to those working with them or to the teams working after him, because no one came back to us.


'We sent the report to Oakley group and our assumption was that they were using it as a piece in the puzzle. But it appears that wasn't the case.'

The firm says it was not paid for it services by Halligen or Oakley International.

Last night two of Halligen's former colleagues in the investigation, John Taylor and Dr Richard Parton, said they became concerned early on in their working relationship with the self- styled 'super-spy'.

Dr Parton, whose company Psyintel was employed for its expertise on interview techniques, said he and his partner had been encouraged by Halligen to get involved with the highprofile case.

Halligen had also mentioned other future projects that could net them millions of pounds, although these schemes never came to fruition.

But Dr Parton said fears over Halligen's suitability for the job first arose when the private detective suddenly asked him to stop calling him Richard, the name by which they had known him for several years. He then also raised details of Halligen's extraordinary tactics to find Madeleine.

Dr Parton, who claims he was later left with an unpaid invoice for £50,000, said: 'It was very strange. I had met him years earlier and it had been Richard. Then before a meeting with some people who wanted a presentation on my techniques, I was asked to call him Kevin from then on. I thought it was odd but he was so secretive and that was just the way he was.

'Whenever we had a meeting he would also always immediately say that he needed to leave for a flight. Every time. He would always also try to get the conversation around to talking about the psychological characteristics of a sociopath.'

Dr Parton added: 'I repeatedly told him his investigators on the ground in Portugal were not doing a proper job but he insisted lots of things were going on I didn't know about.

'That is when he told me about some of his schemes, such as the drunken priest seeking confessions from people drinking in the bars of Praia da Luz and the family with a girl who looked similar to Madeleine. This family were set up, apparently, in a resort near to Praia da Luz just to sit and wait and see what happened.

'It was all such a waste of money and time.'

However, it was only later, when tape recordings of interviews undertaken in Praia da Luz were sent to Dr Parton and Mr Taylor, in Washington, that they started to fear the worst for the investigation.

Mr Taylor said: 'The quality of the interviews was terrible, very amateurish-The noise in the background was bad, the interview questions were useless and the subjects were irrelevant. I told them to stop wasting time and money on such low-key figures - homeless people and receptionists who knew nothing.'

Things came to a head after Halligen reneged on repeated promises to pay their invoice. Dr Parton said: 'I took him to one side and asked when I was due to be paid. Three days later he disappeared. He had fled to Rome with his girlfriend.'

It was then that Dr Parton and Mr Taylor started to contact others who had been hired by Oakley International. Mr Taylor added: 'He would hire lots of people to do work but only pay a few of them. Meanwhile, he was spending lots of money on his own lifestyle. It only gave the appearance that work was being done.'

They also contacted Maria Dybczak, a trade lawyer for the US Commerce Department, whom they understood to be Halligen's wife. It emerged she had agreed to go along with a fake wedding service to keep up appearances for Halligen.

Dr Parton said: 'She admitted she wasn't proud of it but she had been tricked, too. He claimed that a job he was doing with the CIA meant that he couldn't have his name on a marriage certificate.

'She was manipulated into going along with a fake wedding with an actor posing as a priest. He said they would get properly married a few weeks later, but that never happened.'

Shortly afterwards Halligen fled to Rome with a girlfriend, named in a writ filed by another former colleague as Shirin Trachiotis, a glamorous doctor based in Washington.

Almost immediately after arriving in Rome on their first-class Lufthansa tickets, Halligen withdrew hundreds of thousands of pounds more from Oakley International's bank accounts and spent £8,000 on a luxury hotel before slinking back to the UK a few months later.

Dr Parton said: 'He has left a trail of debts across America and the UK. But the horrible truth is that he stole from the McCanns what they really couldn't afford - time.'

Following a short hearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court last week, Halligen was refused bail and was remanded in custody until December 2, when the next stage of his case for extradition will be heard.

The US Department of Justice issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, earlier this month alleging that he tried to defraud a London law firm.

They claim he took £1.3million as part of a deal to secure the release of Dutch business executives arrested in the Ivory Coast. Instead, it is claimed, he spent it on a mansion, a gift to his girlfriend, cash machine withdrawals and debit-card transactions.

Last night Kate and Gerry McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell refused to be drawn on the details of Oakley's investigation, much of which, it is understood, the McCanns were unaware of. He said: 'The first phase of the contract was satisfactorily seen through, such as the setting up of the hotline. Towards the end of it there were question marks about delivery and the relationship was terminated.

'Given Mr Halligen is in custody it is inappropriate to comment further.'
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Trio deny arms smuggling role


28 November 2009
The Irish News

British secret service agents recorded 190 hours of conversations involving three dissident republicans facing terrorism charges, Belfast Crown Court heard yesterday. The three men were arrested as part of an MI5 sting to smash an alleged gun-smuggling operation between May 2005 and June 2006.
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Why I was on the run by Maddie private detective


NOV 27, 2009
Liverpool Echo
Luke Traynor
Fraud suspect explains why he hid away at hotel 

A private detective paid £500,000 to help find Madeleine McCann who is wanted in the USA for an alleged £1.3m fraud claimed he went on the run from journalists. Kevin Halligen, 48, faced City of Westminster magistrates court, in London, after he was arrested on an extradition warrant in Oxford.
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Maddie 'tec is arrested


NOV 27, 2009
Loughborough Echo


A businessman whose firm helped to look for Madeleine McCann was arrested after a hotel manager recognised him as an alleged fraudster wanted by US authorities. Kevin Halligen, 48, had been staying at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford for several months under an assumed name. He was arrested there this week following a discrepancy over his hotel bill. The hotel manager had seen a newspaper report last weekend concerning the alleged fraud and realised the man pictured alongside the article was his customer. Halligen was taken into custody in the city, where he remains.The US Department of Justice had issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, earlier this month, alleging he tried to defraud a London law rm of £1.2m. Halligen's rm, Oakley International, was used by Madeleine's parents Kate and Gerry, of Rothley, for around six months last year to look for their missing daughter.
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McCanns' adviser Halligen in court


26 November 2009
Leicester Mercury


A businessman whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US for an alleged £1.3m fraud, appeared in court yesterday.  Kevin Halligen, 48, faced City of Westminster magistrates after he was arrested on an extradition warrant in Oxford. The US Department of Justice issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, this month, alleging that he tried to defraud a London law firm of £1.3m. It said he took the money as part of a deal to secure the release of Dutch business executives arrested in the Ivory Coast, but instead spent it on a mansion, a gift to his girlfriend, cash machine withdrawals and debit card transactions.
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Madeleine PI arrested in UK


NOV 26, 2009
New Zealand Herald


A private detective who allegedly disappeared after being paid $685,000 to search for missing British child Madeleine McCann and is wanted in the United States was arrested in England over an unpaid hotel bill, reports said yesterday. Kevin Halligen, 48, a British national, wanted by the FBI over an alleged fraud unrelated to the search for Madeleine, was arrested in Oxford...
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McCann helper arrested for fraud


NOV 26, 2009
Metro


A suspected fraudster who was once hired to help look for Madeleine McCann has been arrested at a hotel. Kevin Halligen was held for a bill discrepancy when police realised he was wanted by US authorities over an alleged £1.2million fraud. The 48-yearold, from Surrey, tried to con a London law firm, US officials have claimed. The McCanns paid £300,000 to Mr Halligen to help the search for their daughter but ended the contract a year ago.
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McCann fraud case


NOV 26, 2009
The Times


A businessman whose company was paid to look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US for an alleged £1.2 million fraud was refused bail and remanded in custody when he appeared before City of Westminster magistrates. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested on Tuesday at a hotel in Oxford where he had been staying for several months under an assumed name.
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Madeleine searcher arrested for fraud


26 November 2009
Calgary Herald


A businessman paid to help search for British girl Madeleine McCann was arrested after a hotel manager recognized him as an alleged fraudster wanted by U.S. authorities, British police said Wednesday. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested Tuesday following an argument over his bill at a luxury hotel in Oxford where he had been staying for several months under an assumed name.
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Man is held by police over £1.2m fraud case


NOV 26, 2009
Belfast Telegraph

A businessman whose firm helped to look for Madeleine McCann was arrested after a hotel manager recognised him as an alleged fraudster wanted by US authorities.
Kevin Halligen (48) had been staying at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford for several months under an assumed name. He was arrested there on Tuesday following a discrepancy over his hotel bill. The US Department of Justice had issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, alleging he tried to defraud a London law firm of £1.2m. Halligen's firm, Oakley International, was used by Madeleine's parents for six months.
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McCann 'fraudster' arrested at hotel


NOV 26, 2009
The Independent


A businessman whose firm helped to look for Madeleine McCann was arrested after a hotel manager recognised him as an alleged fraudster wanted by US authorities. Kevin Halligen, 48, had been staying at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford for several months under an assumed name. He was arrested there on Tuesday following a discrepancy over his hotel bill. The manager had seen a report last weekend concerning the alleged fraud and realised the man pictured was his customer.
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Madeleine McCann private detective held for fraud


NOV 26, 2009
Guardian Unlimited
James Meikle

Kevin Halligen, arrested in Oxford over unpaid hotel bill, was involved with search for missing girl and is wanted in the US. A security consultant who was once paid £300,000 to help find Madeleine McCann and is wanted by US authorities in connection with a $2m (£1.2m) case has been arrested at an expensive hotel in Oxford.
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Maddie fraud: Irishman in court


NOV 26, 2009
Metro


A Dubliner whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US for an alleged €1.3million fraud, appeared in court yesterday.  Kevin Halligen, 48, faced City of Westminster magistrates after he was arrested on an extradition warrant in Oxford. The US Department of Justice issued an indictment for Halligen earlier this month alleging he tried to defraud a London law firm. They claim he took the money as part of a deal to secure the release of Dutch business executives arrested in the Ivory Coast, but instead spent it on a mansion, a gift for his girlfriend, cash machine withdrawals and debit card transactions.
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How I spotted Maddie fraud suspect at hotel


NOV 26, 2009
Liverpool Echo
Luke Traynor

Student recognised man wanted by cops
 
An Oxford university graduate helped to snare a high-profile on-the-run alleged fraudster hired to find missing toddler Madeleine McCann. Businessman Kevin Halligen was arrested at Oxford's Old Bank Hotel on Tuesday following several months evading police.
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Fraud charges


NOV 26, 2009
The Journal Newcastle

BRITAIN TODAY: COURT 
 
A businessman whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US for an alleged £1.2m fraud, appeared in court yesterday. Kevin Halligen, 48, faced City of Westminster magistrates after he was arrested on an extradition warrant in Oxford. The US Department of Justice issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, earlier this month alleging that he tried to defraud a London law firm of 2.1m US dollars (£1.3m).
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Madeleine businessman faces court


November 26, 2009
Press Association

A businessman whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US for an alleged £1.2 million fraud has appeared in court.  Kevin Halligen, 48, faced City of Westminster magistrates after he was arrested on an extradition warrant in Oxford.
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Businessman hired to look for Madeleine denied bail


26 November 2009
BBC News
Outline of article:
Kevin Halligen
  • Irish national businessman 
  • 48-year-old 
  • from Surrey 
  • hired to help look for Madeleine McCann 
  • hired by Kate and Gerry McCann as a security consultant 
  • Oakley International initially awarded a £500,000 contract 
  • paid about £300,000 to help search for Madeleine 
  • McCanns terminated the arrangement before paying any more fees
  • wanted by the FBI on fraud charges related to Trafigura
Arrest Tues Nov 24, 2009
  • arrested at Old Bank Hotel Oxford UK 
  • arrested over a discrepancy in a bill of about £5,000 police discovered he had already packed his bag to leave
Court Appearance Wed Nov 25, 2009
  • appeared at London's City of Westminster Magistrates' Court
  • refused bail
  • facing extradition to the US
  • wanted for an alleged £1.2m fraud 
  • Court told he had been staying at a series of addresses during the past eight months to evade reporters interested in the McCann case 
  • Refusing bail, Judge Howard Riddle said: "I note the gravity of the offences alleged and the high value involved.  "At this stage, comparatively little is known about his movements, how he came to be in this country and where he has been staying."  
  • Full extradition request likely to be submitted by the US authorities by end of January 2010
Melanie Cumberland
  • acting for the UK government 
  • told the court Halligen wanted in the US for taking money from Dutch company Trafigura, via a London-based law firm 
  • said he had been employed after the two executives had been arrested following a petrochemical spill on the Ivory Coast 
  • said Halligen spent 
  • £1m ($1.7m) on a mansion
  • £85,000 ($141,000) a gift to his girlfriend
  • more than £26,000 ($43,000) in cash on other items
US Department of Justice
  • issued an indictment for Halligen early Nov 2009 
  • alleged Halligen tried to defraud a London law firm of £1.2m ($2.1m) 
  • took the money as part of a deal to secure the release of Dutch business executives arrested in the Ivory Coast 
  • spent the money on buying a mansion and gifts

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Maddie rat tried to sue fund for £150k


26 Nov 2009
The Sun 
Antonella Lazzeri & Tom Wells

Maddie McCann "fraudster" Kevin Halligen tried to SUE the Find Madeleine fund for £150,000, The Sun can reveal today. Conniving Halligen was sacked by the charity - which had already paid him £300,000 - after bosses began to suspect he was a conman. But he then had the nerve to threaten to sue for half as much money again, claiming he was still owed it as part of a three-phase contract.
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Student journalist leads police to Madeleine McCann FBI fraud suspect hiding in Oxford hotel


Nov 26 2009
Liverpool Daily Post
Luke Traynor

This is the Oxford University graduate who helped to snare a high-profile on-the-run alleged fraudster.

Businessman Kevin Halligen was arrested at the city’s Old Bank Hotel on Tuesday, following several months evading police. The 48-year-old was hired by Liverpool-born Kate McCann and her husband, Gerry, to find their three-year-old daughter, Maddie, who disappeared from a flat in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in 2007. But, after £500,000 was pocketed by him from the Find Madeleine Fund, his contract was cancelled after he had delivered precious little to the investigation.
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Madeleine 'detective' fraud case


26 November 2009
The Daily Express


A man whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann was in court yesterday accused of an attempted £1.2million fraud. Kevin Halligen, 48, from Surrey, is the subject of an extradition warrant by US authorities who claim he conned the money from a London law firm claiming it would free executives arrested in the Ivory Coast. City of Westminster magistrates refused bail. Halligen's firm, Oakley International, was last year paid £300,000 by Kate and Gerry McCann's fund to look for Madeleine, who vanished aged three in 2007.
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Washington 'security consultant' wanted in US on fraud charges refused bail in UK


Nov 25, 2009
The Canadian Press
Jill Lawless


A former security consultant wanted in the U.S. on charges of defrauding a client of more than $2 million was refused bail in a British court Wednesday. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested Tuesday after staff at a British hotel recognized him from a newspaper article that said he had gained defense and security contracts by claiming to be a former British secret agent.
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Police nab accused bilker of Find Madeline


Nov 25, 2009
UPI NewsTrack


British police arrested a man accused by U.S. authorities of defrauding people across the world, including a Madeline McCann fund in Britain, officials said.  British media reported Kevin Halligen of Surrey was arrested Tuesday as he was trying to leave the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford. Halligen, whose Washington firm was hired as a security consultant by Find Madeleine for about $835,000, allegedly took off with more than $500,000, The Times of London reported Wednesday. Madeline McCann was 3 years old when she disappeared in May 2007 while vacationing with her family in Portugal.
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Oxford hotel arrest man faces extradition hearing


Nov 25, 2009
The Oxford Times
George Gaynor


A businessman arrested at an Oxford hotel over an alleged £1.3m fraud is expected to appear in court tomorrow facing extradition to the US. Kevin Halligen, 48, who ran a firm that helped look for missing girl Madeleine McCann, was arrested at the Old Bank Hotel, in High Street, yesterday. Police went to the hotel after a manager read a newspaper article about the US case and recognised a hotel guest as the wanted man. The US Department of Justice issued an indictment against Irish national Halligen, from Surrey, earlier this month, alleging he tried to defraud a London law firm of £1.3m.
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Madeleine detective arrested


Nov 25, 2009
The Daily Express


A private detective who worked for the Madeleine McCann fund has been arrested following allegations of an unpaid hotel bill. Kevin Halligen was held last night after staff at the £350-a-night Old Bank Hotel in Oxford called police. The 48-year-old security consultant from Dublin is being held by police and now faces extradition to the United States over an alleged £1.3million fraud.
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Madeleine businessman arrested at hotel


25 November 2009
Press Association
Lauren Turner


A businessman whose firm helped to look for Madeleine McCann was arrested after a hotel manager recognised him as an alleged fraudster wanted by US authorities. Kevin Halligen, 48, had been staying at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford for several months under an assumed name. He was arrested there yesterday following a discrepancy over his hotel bill. The hotel manager had seen a newspaper report last weekend concerning the alleged fraud and realised the man pictured alongside the article was his customer. Halligen was taken into custody in the city, where he remains today. The US Department of Justice had issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, earlier this month, alleging he tried to defraud a London law firm of 2.1 million dollars (£1.2 million).
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Maddy man is arrested


25 Nov. 2009
The Evening Chronicle
Newcastle


A businessman once hired to help look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted by US authorities over an alleged fraud was arrested at a hotel, according to sources. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested yesterday afternoon at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford following a discrepancy over his hotel bill and is currently in custody in the county, it is understood. The US Department of Justice issued an indictment for the Briton two weeks ago alleging he tried to defraud a London law firm of more than £1.2m. His firm, Oakley International, was used by Madeleine's parents Kate and Gerry for around six months last year to look for their missing daughter.
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Maddy man held


Nov 25, 2009
Evening Gazette
World today

A businessman once hired to help look for Madeleine McCann, who is wanted by US authorities over an alleged fraud, was arrested at a hotel, according to sources. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested yesterday afternoon at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford, following a discrepancy over his hotel bill and is currently in custody in the county.
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Maddie fraud suspect arrested


Nov 25, 2009
Liverpool Echo
Luke Traynor

Hunt for fund fugitive ends in a top hotel: Suspected fraudster living at hotel

A private detective hired to find missing toddler Madeleine McCann was sensationally arrested yesterday after spending six months living a life of secret luxury in a top hotel, the ECHO can exclusively reveal. Detectives swooped at the plush Old Bank Hotel in Oxford to arrest suspected fraudster Kevin Halligen yesterday afternoon. The 48-year-old has remained high on the FBI's wanted list following an alleged £1.3m con in America and police have been flummoxed as to his whereabouts. Now, following a tip-off from an ex-hotel worker, Halligen is today in custody being questioned by officers.
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Maddie 'fraudster' nabbed


Nov 25, 2009
Scottish Daily Record


A businessman hired to help look for Madeleine McCann who is wanted by US authorities over an alleged fraud has been arrested. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested yesterday at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford after a discrepancy over his hotel bill and is currently in custody. The US department of justice issued an indictment for Halligen two weeks ago alleging that he had tried to defraud a London law firm of more than £1.2million. His firm Oakley International were used by Madeleine's parents Kate and Gerry for around six months last year to look for their missing daughter. The Washington firm were paid around £300,000 to help look for Madeleine after she went missing, then aged three, from an Algarve resort in May 2007.
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Kevin Halligen whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann


Nov 25, 2009
P.A. National Newswire


Kevin Halligen, whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US over an alleged £1.3 million fraud, appeared in court tonight after being arrested on an extradition warrant. Thames Valley Police said in a statement: "We arrested a 48-year-old man yesterday morning at the Old Bank Hotel in Oxford. It was a discrepancy over his hotel bill." He is being held in custody in the city, and it is understood a court hearing relating to an extradition matter could take place later today.
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British police arrest Madeleine 'investigator' over fraud


NOV 25, 2009
Agence France Presse


A businessman paid to help search for British girl Madeleine McCann was arrested after a hotel manager recognised him as an alleged fraudster wanted by US authorities, British police said Wednesday. Kevin Halligen, 48, was arrested Tuesday at a luxury hotel in Oxford, southern England, where he had been staying for several months under an assumed name. He was arrested following an argument over his bill. The hotel's manager recalled his face from a newspaper report last weekend about the alleged fraud.
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Madeleine businessman appears in court


25 November 2009 
Press Association
Laura May


A businessman whose firm helped look for Madeleine McCann and who is wanted in the US for an alleged £1.2 million fraud, appeared in court today. Kevin Halligen, 48, faced City of Westminster magistrates after he was arrested on an extradition warrant in Oxford. The US Department of Justice issued an indictment for Halligen, from Surrey, earlier this month alleging that he tried to defraud a London law firm of 2.1 million US dollars (£1.3 million). They claim that he took the money as part of a deal to secure the release of Dutch business executives arrested in the Ivory Coast, but instead spent it on a mansion, a gift to his girlfriend, cash machine withdrawals and debit-card transactions. He was arrested at a hotel in Oxford yesterday where he has been staying for several months under an assumed name.
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FBI hunts for investigator paid £500,000 by McCanns


23 November 2009
The Independent
Jerome Taylor
Briton implicated in string of frauds thought to have changed his identity


A PRIVATE investigator whose company was paid more than £500,000 by the McCann family to look for their missing daughter has gone on the run after being implicated in a string of high-profile frauds. Kevin Halligen, 48, is thought to have pocketed at least £300,000 from public donations that were given in the wake of Madeleine McCann's disappearance before he went on the run from his mansion near Washington DC over a separate investigation into an allegation that he defrauded an international oil company out of more than £1m.
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Madeleine search aide 'failed to pay investigators'


23 November 2009
Daily Post
Liza Williams
Businessman wanted in US for fraud


A businessman hired to find Madeleine McCann has allegedly kept up to £300,000 meant to pay investigators. It was reported yesterday that British security consultant, Kevin Halligen, 50, allegedly failed to pass the money on to private detectives who did the work for him. £500,000 was paid to his firm, Oakley International, by the Find Madeleine fund. Sources close to Halligen claim he offered to provide satellite photos from the night Madeleine - whose mother, Kate, is from Mossley Hill - vanished to the family, but failed to do so.
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Madeleine investigator on the run over fraud


23 November 2009
Belfast Telegraph
Jerome Taylor


A PRIVATE investigator whose company was paid more than £500,000 by the McCann family to look for their missing daughter has gone on the run after being implicated in a string of high-profile frauds. Kevin Halligen (48) is thought to have pocketed at least £300,000 from public donations that were given in the wake of Madeleine McCann's disappearance before he went on the run from his mansion near Washington DC over a separate investigation into an allegation that he defrauded an international oil company out of more than £1m.
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Madeleine McCann investigator Kevin Halligen ’facing fraud allegations


Nov 23 2009
Liza Williams
Liverpool Echo

A businessman hired to find Madeleine McCann has allegedly kept up to £300,000 meant to pay investigators. It has been reported that British security consultant, Kevin Halligen, 50, failed to pass the money on to private detectives who did the work for him.  Around £500,000 was paid to his firm, Oakley International, by the Find Madeleine fund. Halligen is said to have offered to provide satellite photos from the night Maddie – whose mother Kate is from Allerton – vanished to the family, but failed to do so. He is now reportedly wanted in the USA after an alleged £1.3m fraud. However he has not been arrested because authorities do not know where in the world he is.
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McCann consultant in pounds 1.3m fraud row


23 November 2009 
The Daily Telegraph 
Alastair Jamieson

A security consultant whose company was allegedly paid pounds 300,000 from publicly donated funds to help find Madeleine McCann has been charged with an unrelated pounds 1.3 million fraud.  Kevin Halligen, 48, from Surrey, is wanted in America for allegedly conning a law firm out of $2.1 million in fees which he spent on himself. The Washington-based businessman, who styled himself as a security expert with FBI and MI5 connections, has not been arrested because officials in America do not know where he is.
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Maddy investigator on run after fraud claims


23 November 2009 
Belfast Telegraph 
Jerome Taylor

A private investigator whose company was paid more than £500,000 by the McCann family to look for their missing daughter has gone on the run after being implicated in a string of high-profile frauds. Kevin Halligen (48) is thought to have pocketed at least £300,000 from public donations that were given in the wake of Madeleine McCann's disappearance before he went on the run from his mansion near Washington DC over a separate investigation into an allegation that he defrauded an international oil company out of more than £1m.
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FBI hunting PI charged over $2.3m law firm con


23 November 2009 
Daily Telegraph

A private detective whose company was paid up to pound stg. 500,000 ($900,000) from publicly donated funds to find Madeleine McCann has been charged with fraud.  Kevin Halligen, 48, is wanted in the US by the FBI for allegedly conning a law firm out of pound stg. 1.3 million ($2.35 million) by claiming he could help free two men jailed in war-torn Africa.
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Maddie 'spy' facing fraud allegations


23 November 2009 
Liverpool Echo 
Liza Williams

A businessman hired to find Madeleine McCann has allegedly kept up to £300,000 meant to pay investigators. It has been reported that British security consultant, Kevin Halligen, 50, failed to pass the money on to private detectives who did the work for him. Around £500,000 was paid to his firm, Oakley International, by the Find Madeleine fund.
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FBI hunt £300K Maddie conman


23 November 2009 
Scottish Daily Record 
Craig McDonald
Secret agent fantasist vanishes with cash after promise of help

A self-styled secret agent has pocketed £300,000 from the Madeleine McCann fund, it's been claimed. Businessman and "security consultant" Kevin Halligen, 50, was paid thousands to find the missing girl - but allegedly failed to pass the money on to private detectives carrying out the work for him. A McCann family friend said: "He offered to provide satellite images which could help the case - but all he came up with was something off Google Earth. "He acted as if he were a James Bond-style spy. He promised the Earth but it came to nothing."
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Private detective fleeced Maddie fund of £300,000


23 November 2009
Daily Mail
Neil Sears 


A 'Walter Mitty' private investigator who claimed to be an experienced secret agent was paid £300,000 from the funds raised to try to find Madeleine McCann. Thousands of members of public donated money to Gerry and Kate McCann's fund after their three-year-old daughter went missing during a holiday in Portugal in May 2007. Now it has emerged that a sizeable portion of that money was paid to self-proclaimed security consultant Kevin Halligen, 50, a Briton who boasted that secret service contacts in Washington DC could provide satellite images of Portugal from the night Madeleine disappeared.
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Detective hired in the hunt for Madeleine is charged with £1m con


23 November 2009
The Daily Express
Mark Reynolds


A private detective paid up to £500,000 from publicly donated funds to find Madeleine McCann has been charged with fraud, it emerged yesterday. Kevin Halligen, a 48-year-old security consultant, is wanted in America by the FBI for allegedly conning a law firm out of £1.3 million by claiming he could help free two men jailed in war-torn Africa.
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FBI searches for Madeleine detective


22 November 2009
The Observer
Ben Quinn


A British security consultant who was paid pounds 300,000 to assist efforts by Kate and Gerry McCann to find their daughter Madeleine is being sought by the FBI over an alleged pounds 1.3m fraud. A pounds 500,000 contract given to Kevin Halligen's private detective agency, Oakley International, to help with the search for the missing child was terminated last year after a major benefactor of the McCanns expressed concerns about the quality of the firm's work. However, Halligen is now wanted by the FBI following an indictment issued by US authorities in connection with allegations that he defrauded a London law firm of money that was supposed to be used to lobby for the release of two executives from the Dutch company Trafigura, arrested in the Ivory Coast.
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Ex Maddie detective 'on the run'


22 November 2009 
The Express on Sunday

Private detective once hired to find Madeleine McCann was reportedly wanted last night after an alleged £1.3million fraud in the US.  British security consultant Kevin Halligen, 48, who was paid £300,000 almost two years ago to find Madeleine, is wanted by the FBI in America for allegedly conning a US law firm. Rather than use the money to help free two men jailed in Africa, it is claimed he spent it on a mansion. Halligen has not yet been arrested because US officials do not know where he is.
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Halligen : Wanted by the SAS and FBI


22 November 2009 
The Sunday Times

A Dubliner who allegedly conned the Madeleine McCann fund out of more than ¤300,000 by posing as a secret service agent is on the run from the law — and the woman he pretended to marry

The wedding guests arrived in black limousines to see a British secret agent marry his US government lawyer bride, surrounded by the strictest of security. From the grand 19th-century Evermay mansion, where the ceremony took place, the guests had commanding views of America's power base, Washington, DC. It is a city where former intelligence agents and ex-military men mix warily with their former colleagues and politicians looking for lucrative government security contracts.
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McCann fund hired 'spy' conman


22 November 2009
The Sunday Times


A businessman who pretended to be a secret agent has allegedly pocketed up to £300,000 (¤333,250) from funds intended to pay investigators working to find Madeleine McCann. Kevin Halligen, a Dublin born security consultant, was paid £500,000 by the Find Madeleine fund but allegedly failed to pass it on to private eyes who worked for him. A friend of Kate and Gerry McCann, Madeleine's parents, said: "He acted as if he were a James Bond-style spy. He promised the earth but it came to nothing."
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Maddie Detective £1m Fraud Charge


22 November 2009
 The Mail on Sunday
Daniel Boffey and Mark Hollingsworth

A private detective whose company was paid up to £500,000 from publicly donated funds to find Madeleine McCann has been charged with fraud.  Kevin Halligen, 48, is wanted in America by the FBI for allegedly conning a law firm out of £1.3 million by claiming he could help free two men jailed in war-torn Africa. It is claimed he instead spent the money on a mansion.  However, he has not been arrested because US officials do not know where he is.
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'Agent' conned McCanns


22 November 2009 
The Sunday Times 

A businessman who pretended to be a secret agent has allegedly pocketed up to £300,000 from funds intended to pay investigators working on the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Kevin Halligen, 50, a British security consultant, was paid to find Madeleine but allegedly failed to pass the money on to the private detectives who did the work on his behalf. A friend of Kate and Gerry McCann, Madeleine's parents, said they had become increasingly concerned about Halligen. "He acted as if he were a James Bond style spy," said the friend. "He promised the earth but it came to nothing."
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United Kingdom Man Indicted for Fraud


12 November 2009
Targeted News Service


The U.S. Department of Justice's U.S. Attorney's office for the District of Columbia issued the following news release:

Kevin R. Halligen, 48, of Surrey, United Kingdom, was indicted today on charges of wire fraud and money laundering by a grand jury sitting in the District of Columbia, announced Acting U.S. Attorney Channing D. Phillips and Joseph Persichini, Jr., Assistant Director in Charge of the Washington Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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IRA terrorists were based in the Algarve


6 Nov 2009
Express
Hugo Franco


Google Translation (with apologies and request for more accurate translation. Original Article HERE)

Two operational Irish kept explosives in a restaurant in Alvor are on trial for murder in Belfast.


Panda Grill does not serve pints of Guinness or transmit games between Liverpool and Arsenal in the plasma display. Is a restaurant Algarve typical of bifanas and grilled fish, away from noisy pubs frequented by foreigners in the center of Alvor.

It was at that location that Paul Anthony McCaugherty , 43, and Michael Gregory, 41, two citizens of Northern Ireland, met to negotiate the purchase and sale of weapons between 2005 and 2006.

This week is being tried in Belfast, suspected of belonging to the Real IRA, a dissident faction of the Republican army (IRA).
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John Buck and the Madeleine McCann case


AMBASSADOR JOHN BUCK
TIMELINE

British ambassador to Portugal from 2004 to 2007
Left office the day after the McCanns were made arguidos.

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Madeleine McCann


The British Government Involvement in the case of Madeleine McCann
(NOTE: This is a work in progress - more information to follow.)

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