Madeleine: 350 possible leads


Madeleine: 350 possible leads
9 May 2007
The Scotsman

DETECTIVES in Portugal investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, three, have investigated 350 separate suspicious incidents.

As two child abduction experts arrived from the UK yesterday, police in the Algarve said they had received hundreds of calls and interviewed more than 100 people. Police are reported to be investigating British paedophiles with links to the Algarve.

Portuguese media said authorities in the UK have supplied detectives in the region with information on child abusers who have moved or travel there.

The British ambassador, John Buck, last night said: "The Portuguese authorities are very pleased with the collaboration of the British authorities. They are in close touch with Interpol and Europol, and I know [Madeleine's parents] Kate and Gerry are very grateful for their efforts."

The Portuguese football stars Cristiano Ronaldo and Paulo Ferreira appealed yesterday for the three-year-old's return.
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Madeleine police are doing their best, says ambassador


Madeleine police are doing their best, says ambassador
John Bingham and Chris Greenwood
9 May 2007
Aberdeen Press & Journal

The British ambassador stepped in to the media spotlight last night to defend the efforts of the police in Portugal as they try to find missing Madeleine McCann. John Buck said he had received assurances at the highest level that detectives were doing all they could to find the three-year-old.

The diplomat said Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry - with whom he spent an hour yesterday evening - were happy with the investigation so far. And he underlined the restrictive nature of Portuguese law which has so far virtually gagged police, despite a huge clamour for information about their inquiry.

Speaking in the Algarve, Mr Buck said Mr and Mrs McCann were "grateful" for the work of police from Portugal, Britain and across Europe. He added: "I also wanted to assure myself personally that the necessary links between British and Portuguese experts here on the ground are working well - and they are."

Mr Buck said he had spoken to the Portuguese prime minister's office, cabinet ministers and the police authorities. "They all assure me that everything possible is being done to ensure the safe return of Madeleine," he said.

The Portuguese ambassador in London, Antonio Santana Carlos, echoed his comments, saying the police were doing all they could.

As the search entered its sixth night, with no evidence of a breakthrough, some details did emerge of the scale of the investigation. Officers said they had followed up 350 separate suspicious incidents and searched 500 apartments.

Two British experts - reportedly in child-abduction cases - arrived to join three family-liaison officers from Leicestershire Police.

Police are believed to have an e-fit picture of their suspect, reportedly a dark-skinned man, but have refused to release it.

Officers said they had interviewed more than 100 people following a deluge of phone calls by both Portuguese people and foreigners.

Detectives involved in the inquiry are also investigating British paedophiles with links to the Algarve, according to Portuguese media reports.

Leicestershire Police confirmed they were responding to any requests from the Portuguese police to supply them with information from the UK.

Officers said they had also scoured fields across a nine-mile (15km) area for traces of little Madeleine.

Meanwhile, appeals were made by football superstars Cristiano Ronaldo, John Terry and Paulo Ferreira.

Madeleine, from Rothley, near Leicester, disappeared on Thursday night after she was left with her brother and sister, two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, in a holiday apartment.

Her parents, Gerry and Kate, had been dining in a nearby restaurant and checking on them regularly.

She was wearing white pyjama bottoms with a small floral design and a short-sleeved pink top with a picture of Eeyore on it when she vanished.

A vigil was held in Madeleine's village last night as family and friends prayed for her to be found safe and well.

One of the 350 reports of suspicious incidents came from tourist Amanda Mills, 34, of Basildon, Essex. She said she saw a man trying to steal a pushchair at the same resort two weeks ago.

"It was late at night," said Mrs Mills. "This guy came along and put his hands on a pushchair outside somebody's apartment. He didn't even look to see if there was a child in it."

A Mark Warner Holidays spokesman said she only reported the incident three weeks later. Had she done so immediately it would have been followed up.

Football superstar Cristiano Ronaldo made his own personal appeal - in English and in his native Portuguese - for help in tracing the three-year-old.

It is hoped the appeal by Ronaldo, who plays for the Portuguese national team and is a huge star in his own country, will boost the search further.

He told Sky News: "I was very upset to hear of the abduction of Madeleine McCann and I appeal to anyone with information to come forward, please come forward."

His countryman, Chelsea star Paulo Ferreira, and England captain John Terry, also appealed for the safe return of Madeleine.

Terry said: "We are all devastated to hear that Maddie was abducted. Our thoughts and feelings go to her parents and family.

"We are urging anyone out there with any information at all - please, please, please come forward. It's a terrible thing for her family to go through - she's only young - so, please, please come forward."

Portugal international Ferreira repeated his team-mate's words in Portuguese.
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British experts fly to Portugal to help in hunt for Madeleine


British experts fly to Portugal to help in hunt for Madeleine:
Portuguese detectives hit back at criticism of inquiry:
More than 500 apartments searched near resort
Steven Morris, Praia da Luz and Sandra Laville
9 May 2007
The Guardian


British police and behavioural experts are working with Portuguese officers to try to solve the mystery of Madeleine McCann's disappearance, it emerged last night.

In an "unprecedented" move, two staff of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre, one a police detective with experience of heading investigations, flew to Portugal yesterday to give an insight into how a child abductor might have acted and how he or she may now be thinking.

British police are also following up calls from around the UK over the disappearance of the three-year-old girl. Britain's ambassador to Portugal, John Buck, said last night he had been in touch with the office of the Portuguese prime minister, Jose Socrates, and senior police chiefs to make sure that links between British and Portuguese officers were working. The developments followed concerns that Portuguese police had lost control of the investigation and did not have the experience to deal with such a complex case.

Earlier, a potential sighting in northern Portugal briefly raised hopes that the police may have had a breakthrough but it turned out to be a false alarm. Local television reported that a man with a girl matching Madeleine's description was seen in a supermarket in the town of Nelas, six hours away from where she vanished. An hour later police said it was only one of many leads that had been followed.

Another lead came from a worker in a bar near the apartment from which Madeleine disappeared last Thursday who said police showed him a sketch of a tanned suspect with shoulder-length hair. He was sure the man had been repeatedly using a telephone near the bar in the days before Madeleine vanished.

Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa, who is leading the investigation, said at another chaotic press conference that his officers had been following 350 leads and interviewed more than 100 people. Five hundred apartments and an area nine miles around the resort of Praia da Luz on the Algarve, from where Madeleine disappeared, had been searched. Mr Sousa, clearly impatient, hit back at claims that the police operation was botched, saying: "We are doing everything we can."

Responding to growing frustration at the lack of information, he added: "I ask the British people for their cooperation. The legal system in Portugal is not equal to the British system. It's not my fault."

At lunchtime yesterday Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, spent 15 minutes with the parish priest at the church of Nossa Senhora da Luz in Praia da Luz. In the UK, Leicestershire police received calls from people who were on holiday when Madeleine went missing from her bed last Thursday as her parents dined nearby, including a woman who reported seeing a man trying to walk off with a pushchair.

The Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre said the decision to send their staff to Portugal was "unprecedented".

Portuguese newspapers reported that one of the theories is that a British paedophile gang snatched Madeleine.

The Manchester United and Portugal footballer Cristiano Ronaldo appealed yesterday for anyone with information to come forward.

The investigation

What we do and don't know about the kidnapping case

Portuguese police have so far refused to provide a timeline, have not issued descriptions of possible suspects and have not said how she might have been taken. This is what we do know about how Madeleine disappeared

When did Madeleine vanish?

Between 9.30pm and 10pm on Thursday. Her parents were dining at a tapas bar within a Mark Warner resort about 100 metres from where Madeleine and her twin siblings were sleeping. There is a pool, a hedge, a wall and an alleyway between the bar and the apartment. Kate and Gerry McCann were checking the children at half-hourly intervals. Mr McCann checked at 9.30pm. When they returned at 10pm, Madeleine had gone.

How could a kidnapper have got into the apartment?

There are three likely routes. The bedroom where she was sleeping has a window with a plastic shutter, and a door leading on to a narrow car park and a quiet residential street. This side of the apartment cannot be seen from the bar. At the back of the apartment, which can partially be seen from the bar, are french windows. These were the doors the parents were using when they checked the children. They may have been left unlocked.

Were the doors or window forced?

Family members said the shutter on the street window was forced. Police have dusted the shutter for fingerprints. But the Mark Warner holiday firm has said there was no sign of a forced entry. A kidnapper could have come through the street window and left via the street door. It is unlikely he or she would have entered or left via the french windows as they face the bar and the complex.

Do the police have any suspects?

At the weekend the police appeared to say they had a suspect, but it became clear that this was not a named person but a man seen by witnesses acting suspiciously. This has been turned into a sketch but has not been published - normal procedure for local police. The sketch is not a clear image.

Why has so little information been published?

Police claim their judicial system makes it impossible to release information for fear of prejudicing any future case. But Madeleine's family are known to be frustrated by the investigation. It was their decision to make the direct appeal to any kidnapper and their decision to release details of what Madeleine was wearing. The police had not done that.

Has the search been thorough?

Many people, including some family members, believe not. Criticism that the police did not begin searching immediately, however, seems unfounded. Officers and members of the public did begin searching as soon as Madeleine was reported missing. But there is scant evidence of an organised, exhaustive search. Neither border nor marine police were given descriptions for many hours after she vanished. Officers have not been seen making extensive door-to-door inquiries.

What about the police investigation?

Again, it appears unsatisfactory. The scene has not been secured as tightly as it would have been in the UK. Passers-by are allowed to go right up to the shutters of the window that Madeleine's parents say were forced. The lack of appeals for help and information has upset the family and surprised police experts.    
   
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Family visited Donegal at Easter


9 May 2007
Belfast Telegraph
Brendan McDaid

The three-year-old, who was snatched from her bed as she slept in a holiday complex in Praia da Luz last Thursday, enjoyed an Easter break in the western coastal town of Dungloe.

It has also emerged that the family of Madeleine's father, Gerry, once ran a pub in St Johnston near Donegal town. Maddy, her father, mother and two-year-old siblings Amelie and Sean visited the pub during their trip.
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Co Donegal villagers' thoughts with family


9 May 2007 
The Irish News
Seamus McKinney

Madeleine's disappearance has devastated her grandfather's home village of St Johnston in Co Donegal, a publican said yesterday. Joe Peoples, who took over a bar once owned by the three-year-old's grandfather, Johnny McCann, said the youngster and her parents visited the border village at Easter.

The McCann family have strong links with Co Donegal, where they still have many relatives. Maddy's paternal grandmother Eileen is originally from Crolly in the west of the county.
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Star Ronaldo issues appeal for missing girl


9 May 2007
Irish Independent
Patricia McDonagh

Manchester United's Portuguese winger Cristiano Ronaldo has recorded an appeal for the return of missing Madeleine McCann. Ronaldo filmed the appeal in English and Portuguese before travelling with the United squad to London for tonight's game against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.

Meanwhile, a close Irish family friend of the devastated English parents of missing Madeleine yesterday spoke of his shock at the tragedy.
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Desperate parents of missing girl take initiative


George Brooks / Burke
Desperate parents of missing girl take initiative and make direct appeal to her abductor:
Move reflects impatience over police response
Description of clothing when girl went missing

8 May 2007
The Guardian
Steven Morris Praia da Luz, Portugal

The mother of Madeleine McCann yesterday made a direct appeal to the person who snatched her "beautiful" daughter during a family holiday in Portugal.

Kate McCann begged the abductor: "Please, please do not hurt her. Please don't scare her. Please let us know where to find Madeleine, or put her in a place of safety and tell somebody where."

It is understood the family is becoming impatient with the response of the police in the Algarve to the disappearance of three-year-old Madeleine, who vanished from her bed on Thursday evening.

The decision to make the direct appeal was the idea of Mrs McCann and her husband Gerry, rather than the Portuguese police.

They also decided to release a full description of the pyjamas the little girl was wearing when she was taken as the parents dined in a nearby tapas bar. The police had failed to issue a description of what Madeleine was wearing, one of the first things a British force would have done if a child went missing.

Speaking in an apartment a few doors from where the family were staying when Madeleine vanished, Mrs McCann, a GP, said:
"We would like to say a few words to the person who is with our Madeleine or has been with Madeleine.

"Madeleine is a beautiful, bright, funny and caring little girl. She is so special. We beg you to let Madeleine come home.

"We need our Madeleine. Sean and Amelie [the girl's twin two-year-old brother and sister] need Madeleine and she needs us. Please give us our little girl back."

Mrs McCann, 39, still clutching Madeleine's cuddly toy that was left in her bed when she was taken, repeated the final plea in Portuguese: "Por favor, devolva a nossa menina."

As she made the plea Mr McCann, 38, a cardiac surgeon, leaned his head into his wife's neck, tears in his eyes. Afterwards Alex Woolfall, a spokesman for the Mark Warner complex in the seaside village of Praia da Luz from which Madeleine was snatched, confirmed that the idea to make the direct plea had come from the McCanns, though they had informed the police they were doing it.

He said: "They wanted to make a very direct appeal. Every day they are trying to do whatever they can."

The family, who are from Rothley, Leicestershire, said that the pyjamas she was wearing had white bottoms with a floral design on them and a pink, short-sleeved top with a picture of the Winnie the Pooh character Eeyore on them. They were bought from Marks & Spencer last year.

Meanwhile, the police investigation included patrols of a marina at the nearby town of Lagos and volunteers took part in searches on foot of the scrubby countryside a few miles inland from the resort.

There have been reports that a bald man was seen dragging a girl towards the marina. Police have checked the departure records of the pleasure boats that left the marine in the hours after Madeleine's disappearance.

At least two yachts left the harbour for other Portuguese ports the morning after the child was taken. A police launch was patrolling the marina yesterday.

Marques Pereira, a maritime police captain at Lagos, also became the first public official to admit that the Madeleine might be dead. He said that they were searching for clothes, shoes or a body. One of the sites they have been looking at are caves, which can only be accessed by canoe.

There was a swirl of other possible sightings of suspect and theories. One man from Liverpool, George Burke, said that he had seen a couple with a girl who fitted Madeleine's description eight hours after her disappearance, again close to the marina and the railway station at Lagos, which is a 10-minute drive from Praia da Luz. There were reports of yet another suspect handing out sweets to children near the marina.

Barra da Costa, a former inspector in the Judicial Police, PJ, claimed that his sources within the force believed that Madeleine's abductor could be from Britain.

Ex-pat and Portuguese volunteers continued to help with the search. A party of around 20 people searched forests and rough ground around the village of Espiche, just north of Praia da Luz.

Dave Felton, a Manchester man who lives in the village said: "I think people are still hoping that we don't actually find her and that she is safe and sound somewhere."

A picure of Madeleine attached to a sign on a beach in Luz, in the Algarve

Gerry and Kate McCann hold a picture of Madeleine during an appeal for her safe return.
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I'm sorry Madeleine


I'm sorry Madeleine
8 May 2007
Sunday Mirror
Lori Campbell in Praia Da Luz


POLICE MOVE IN.. AS KATE TELLS OF PAIN

Every hour I ask myself 'Why did I think she was safe?' We have doubted what we did & I do feel regret we weren't there

Heartbroken mum Kate McCann quietly sobs as she speaks for the first time of her guilt about leaving little daughter Madeleine alone the night she was snatched. "I feel desperately sorry to her that we weren't there," she says.

"Every hour now, I still ask myself, 'Why did I think that was safe?' But it did feel safe and so right. I do feel regret. I've gone through all my life and said I never want to have any regrets, but you can't not regret something like that."

Speaking without her husband Gerry at her side for the first time, Kate, 38, reveals how she is haunted by the unbearable regret that she wasn't there to protect her daughter.

In an emotional interview, in which she repeatedly breaks down in tears, Kate says that if she could tell her four-year-old daughter anything now, it would be that she loves and misses her.

Clutching the pink Cuddle Cat toy which has been a constant source of comfort to her since it was left lying in Madeleine's bed the night she was taken, Kate says: "I want to tell her we love her very much. She knows we're looking for her, that we're doing absolutely everything and we'll never give up."

Kate reveals how their happy girl had told her she'd had the best day of her life before she fell asleep on the evening she disappeared.

Madeleine had spent the day at a kids' club near the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz in Portugal, swimming, face-painting and colouring-in with other children.

But Kate now plays over in her mind the heart-wrenching words which could tragically be the last Madeleine ever said to her.

She says: "As I put her to bed, she smiled at me and said, 'Mummy I've had the best day ever. I'm having lots and lots of fun'."

Kate reveals Madeleine had been practising a dance at the club which she was looking forward to showing her mum the following day - "but I never got to see it".

After putting Madeleine and two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie to bed, Kate and Gerry joined friends at a tapas restaurant 50 yards from their ground-floor villa.

They took turns to check on the children every half-hour. But when Kate returned at about 10pm, she discovered Madeleine was gone.

Recalling the moment she found her daughter's bed empty, Kate says: "There was 20 seconds of disbelief where I thought, 'That can't be right'. I was checking for her. Then there was panic and fear. That was the first thing that hit. I was screaming her name. I ran to the group. Everyone was the same. It was total fear.

"I never thought for one second that she'd walked out. I knew someone had been in the apartment because of the way it had been left.

"But I knew she wouldn't walk out anyway. There wasn't a shadow of a doubt in my mind she'd been taken."

Kate says she saw that Madeleine's toy Cuddle Cat had been left behind, but was careful not to touch it in case it held a clue to who took her.

She says: "I knew straight away a crime had been committed, we had no doubt about that. We were very conscious of not touching things."

Speaking with moving honesty, Kate reveals how she asks herself every day whether she and Gerry were wrong to leave their children alone.

She says they felt so safe at the "family-friendly" resort they didn't think twice about leaving Madeleine and the twins - and she reveals how they'd left them alone every evening as they ate dinner in the week until Madeleine was taken on a Thursday night.

But she admits it was a decision that torments her with every waking moment. "We've doubted what we did," Kate says. "It's hard to answer the question, 'Were we wrong to leave them?' If I'd had to think for one second, 'Should we have dinner and leave them?' I wouldn't have done it.

"It didn't happen like that. I didn't have to think for a second, that's how safe I felt. It's not like we went down town or anything. That night runs over and over in my mind and I'm sure people will learn from our mistake, if you want to call it that. I love her and I'm a totally responsible parent and that's the only thing that keeps me going."

Her eyes falling to Cuddle Cat, which she has reluctantly washed after it became filthy from her carrying it around, Kate adds: "I feel desperately sorry to her that we weren't there."

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But Kate says she and Gerry have never blamed each other for that night. She says: "We have a strong relationship. We don't row. We talk a lot and that is vital at the moment."

Kate, a GP, can't imagine ever returning to the family's home in Rothley, Leics, without Madeleine as it holds too many memories of the bright and playful youngster.

She says: "I can't bear the thought of it. We had lived in that house for a year and it was a really happy home. When we left it the last time we were so excited. I can't think about going back without her."

Speaking at a charity headquarters in Lagos, a 10-minute drive from the apartment where Madeleine was kidnapped, Kate says she had asked Gerry, 39, not to join her. She wanted to express her feelings as a mother, and to say thank you to all the mums who have sent her letters of support. Kate says: "Sometimes I want to speak, but I just can't. It's not natural for me. Gerry's used to having to speak at conferences and it's harder for me. I've had so many letters from mothers, really kind words. They have said, 'Kate, we've done this a hundred times over ourselves'. I wanted to say thank you for that support and reassurance."

Kate tells how she and Gerry had the agony of celebrating Madeleine's fourth birthday without her, eight days after she went missing.

She says: "She was due to have a party in the nursery, including her best friend. That went ahead and quite rightly. But it was hard to ignore the reason why they were there, because Madeleine wasn't. Not having her there was such a huge void."

Kate now wears a silver locket round her neck with a picture of Madeleine inside and the words "Tower of Strength" engraved on it.

She says a friend gave it to her because "that's what Madeleine was to us, a tower of strength".

The McCanns have moved from the apartment two doors from where Madeleine disappeared to a villa just outside the resort as they continue their campaign to find her.

And Kate says they are still clinging to the hope she will join them there. "We unpacked some of Madeleine's things. I've kept her clothes together. She has lots of presents to open that people have sent - mostly people who don't know her."

Kate also speaks for the first time of her first visit back to the UK for a family baptism two weeks ago.

She says: "The hardest thing wasn't being in the UK, it was to be with such close family and for Madeleine not to be there. She's such a big part of our lives."

Conscious to speak of her in the present tense, she adds: "Despite her small size she just has this huge presence. She brings a lot of joy."

She says the twins often ask about their older sister. "They know she's not there and they do miss her," Kate explains. "But on a day-to-day basis they are happy. They're lovely, like a little double act, they're so funny."

Smiling, she adds: "They talk about Madeleine's things and if they get a biscuit they say, 'One for Sean, one for Amelie, one for Madeleine'.

"There was an empty seat on the plane on our trip to the UK and Sean said, 'That's Madeleine's seat'. Amelie asked me afterwards, 'Where's Madeleine? I miss my big sister'.

"Amelie will point at the Cuddle Cat and say, 'Madeleine. Her Cuddle Cat. Looking after it'. She's probably heard me saying that. It catches me."

Kate reveals she still battles with nightmarish thoughts that Madeleine might be dead. "I still have moments of panic and fear. It's not as intense and unrelenting as the first five days. We have hope now and it's important to hold on to that."

And she says she is still not considering returning home to the UK. "It's a gut feeling. I'm aware there are probably things that would be easier at home, but at the moment this is the right thing for us."

With next Saturday marking 100 days since Madeleine was snatched, Kate reveals her heartache at each passing day without news of her.

She says: "I'm still hoping we're not going to get there. Every day I'm hoping we won't get to the next day without her. It's a long time. But we have to keep going for Madeleine."
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Maddie's Irish holiday


8 May 2007
The Sun
Paddy Clancy
Family spent Easter week in Donegal


Kidnapped Madeleine McCann enjoyed an idyllic holiday in Ireland before being snatched in Portugal. She and her family spent a week in a B&B in Dungloe, Co Donegal, it was revealed last night.

Parents Gerry and Kate with Maddie and two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie were accompanied by the kids' great uncle Hughie and gran Ellen McCann, who was born in the area.

It's been a regular Easter trip for them for years. Pub owner Joe Peoples, of St Johnstown, near Derry, who knows them well, said: "Maddie really enjoyed herself. She's a beautiful child. I'm praying she'll be found safe."
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Maddy's Ulster hol


8 May 2007
Belfast Telegraph
Brendan McDaid


The three-year-old, who was snatched from her bed as she slept in a holiday complex in Praia da Luz last Thursday, enjoyed an Easter break in the western coastal town of Dungloe.

It has also emerged that the family of Madeleine's father, Gerry, once ran a pub in St Johnston near Donegal town. Maddy, her father, mother and two-year-old siblings Amelie and Sean visited the pub during their trip.
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