POLICE RETURN TO SUSPECT'S HOME IN HUNT FOR TODDLER


POLICE RETURN TO SUSPECT'S HOME IN HUNT FOR TODDLER
Olga Craig in Praia da Luz
6 August 2007
New Zealand Herald



Ten policemen, two of them believed to be British, have begun a renewed search of the Portugal home of Robert Murat, the chief suspect in the kidnap case of Madeleine McCann.

The officers yesterday began clearing undergrowth and cutting down trees at Casa Liliana, the home Murat shares with his mother, Jenny.

The property is metres from the holiday apartment in Praia da Luz where Madeleine was abducted on May 3.

The search is expected to last up to four days.

Murat, 33, has always said he is innocent, insisting he was at home with his mother on the evening Madeleine was taken.

The renewed search came as Belgian police said they were carrying out DNA tests on a milkshake bottle and straw used in a cafe in Tongeren, 130km from Brussels, by a girl who may have been Madeleine.

A little girl matching her description was seen with a couple who drove off in a black Volvo soon after being served by a waitress who suspected the child was Madeleine.

Police have issued an identikit picture of an unshaven, buck-toothed man, aged around 40, who was with an English-speaking younger woman.

Another witness, a child therapist, said the couple were acting strangely and the child seemed nervous.

``It was obvious that the couple were not her parents,'' she said.

The woman telephoned police but the three left before officers arrived.

Kate and Gerry McCann are in Spain highlighting the three-month anniversary of their daughter's disappearance.

They say they have been hurt by recent speculation that their relationship is crumbling under the stress of searching for Madeleine.

In Praia da Luz, police remained silent over why they were again searching Murat's home. Last month he was interrogated again by detectives who claim his original statement has inconsistencies.

``'We have reached a phase in the investigation where we are trying to evaluate everything,'' one Portuguese police source said. ``We are going through all the interviews, facts and clues - with the help of British profilers - to ensure nothing has been missed or left out. At the moment there is still only one suspect.''-Telegraph Group additional reporting, Observer
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We're so desperately sorry we left you


We're so desperately sorry we left you;
Code Madeleine; NOW Campaign;
Interview; Kate McCann
5 August 2007
The News of the World
Ross Hall


Kate's secret regret. In an emotional, tear-filled interview, Maddie's mum delivers a message to her little girl

Heartbroken Kate McCann sobbed last night as she spoke fully for the first time of her anguish and regret at leaving her daughter alone on the night she vanished.

In her first solo newspaper interview an emotional Kate, her eyes red and puffy from the endless sleepless nights, admitted: "We're just so desperately sorry to Madeleine that we weren't there.

"Even now, every hour I still question myself, 'Why did I think that was safe?'

"I do feel regret, and I've gone through all of my life saying I never want to have any regrets. But you can't not regret something like that."

As mum-of-three Kate, 38, spoke she repeatedly broke down, gripping tightly on to Maddie's favourite pink Cuddle Cat toy.

Asked what she would tell her missing daughter if she could, Kate said: "I'd tell her we love her. She knows we love her very much. She knows we're looking for her, that we're doing absolutely everything and we'll never give up."

In a heart-rending twist, Kate revealed four-year-old Maddie's last words on the evening she was snatched from their Portuguese holiday apartment, Thursday May 3, telling her mum she'd just had the happiest day of her life.

Fighting back tears Kate said: "We used the Kids' Club and Madeleine had a ball.

They did swimming, went on a little boat, went to the beach, did lots of colouring-in, face-painting, tennis. She was so happy.

"That night before she went to bed she said, 'Mummy, I've had the best day ever.

I'm having lots and lots of fun.'

"She had a little dance prepared for me for the Friday-they'd been working on it for days."

Her voice dropping to a whisper, Kate sobbed: "I don't know what it was-I never got to see it."

Since Maddie was snatched, GP Kate and her hospital doctor husband Gerry, along with their two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, have remained in Praia da Luz to be near the search. Kate's voice breaks as she relives the gut-wrenching moment as she walked into the room and realised Madeleine was gone.

"There were about 20 seconds of disbelief where I thought, 'That can't be right'," she said. "Then there was panic and fear. I was screaming her name, it was just total fear.

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

"There wasn't a shadow of a doubt in my mind she'd been taken. That's why the fear set in. Then you go through the guilt phase straight away.

"I can't describe how much I love Madeleine. 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.

"Maybe it was because it was family friendly, because it felt so safe. That week we'd left them alone while we had dinner.

"There's no way on this planet I'd take a risk, no matter how small, with my children."

She added: "This has touched so many people. I've had so many letters from mothers, really kind words.

"People have said, 'Kate, we've done this a hundred times over ourselves. Why would you for one minute think something like that would happen?'

"It's not like we went down to the town or anything. People have said to me, 'You're the unluckiest person in the world'-and we are.

"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.

"But it's important not to lose sight of the fact we haven't committed a crime.

"Somebody has. Somebody's been there. Somebody's been watching. They took our daughter away and we can't lose sight of that." Pausing for a moment to choke back the tears, Kate continued: "How can someone do that to a child? I've just got to keep focused and positive."

Despite their young age, Mad-eleine's little brother and sister repeatedly ask about her.

"They know she's not there and miss her," said Kate. "They talk about Madeleine's things and if they get biscuits they say, 'One for Sean, one for Amelie, one for Madeleine.'

"When we went back to the UK for a family baptism there was an empty seat on the plane and Sean said, 'That's Madeleine's seat.' That caught me.

"The hardest thing wasn't being in the UK, it was to be with such close family and for Madeleine not to be there. I knew how much she'd have loved it.

"Amelie asked me afterwards, 'Where's Madeleine? I miss my big sister.'

"I don't know where that question came from, it could have been because it was a family day.

"I can be doing OK and then something like that catches me in the throat.

"Despite her small size, Madeleine just has this huge presence. She brings a lot of joy."

Occasionally Kate does allow herself to think of the worst-case outcome but she tries to remain focused and is sure she will see Madeleine again. Welling up, she said: "I still have moments of panic and fear.

"It's not as intense and unrelenting as the first five days. Now, obviously we have hope and it's important to hold on to that.

"I do go back to those dark moments. It would be abnormal never to touch on them.

I do feel panic and fear when I'm thinking about Madeleine. But it doesn't help her. It's important to channel those emotions into something positive."

Next Saturday is the 100th day since Madeleine was taken, and it will be an emotional milestone for the family. "I'm still hoping that we're not going to get there," added Kate.

"Every day I'm hoping we won't get to the next day without Madeleine. It's been a long time. But we have to keep going for her.

"We haven't talked about staying here for ever, we're just not looking that far ahead."

But Kate admitted she doubts she'll ever be able to return to the family home in Rothley, Leicestershire, because of the memories.

"I can't bear the thought of it," she confessed. "At the moment we feel happier staying here, closer to the investigation.

"We don't know where Madeleine is, we don't think she's in the UK but there's nothing to say she's any further from there than she is from here. 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.

"We've had so much support, mothers can empathise with me. Speaking now, on my own, is a way of saying thank you. They've given a bit of themselves to me.

"We've got three beautiful children. Madeleine is irreplaceable. I want her back.

We just have to wait and see what life has in store for us."
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I know where to find missing Madeleine


15 July 2007
The Sunday Mirror
Niall Donald
Girl 'still in Portugal' by Irish psychic Sarah Delamere Hurding


An Irish 'psychic' yesterday insisted she knew the exact location of missing Madeleine McCann. Sarah Delamere Hurding claimed to have met gardai to tell them how to find the four-year-old. Ms Hurding said she believed Maddy had NOT been taken out of Portugal.

Yesterday, she urged the Portuguese police to follow her "psychic clues". She said: "I believe that Maddy is not a stone's throw from where she was taken. "She is in a place which is just a 20-minute drive away when the roads are deserted."
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The Hunt For Madeleine


The Hunt For Madeleine
10 July 2007
Press Association National Newswire
Aislinn Simpson, PA


The search for Madeleine McCann continues. Here are the key events around her abduction in the Algarve:

Thursday May 3

Kate and Gerry McCann leave their daughter Madeleine and her two-year-old twin brother and sister Sean and Amelie in bed in their apartment and head for dinner at a nearby tapas restaurant.

The couple check on them regularly and at around 9pm, Mr McCann finds nothing amiss when he returns to their room in the seaside resort at the Ocean Club in Praia Da Luz.

His wife Kate goes to check on them again at 10pm and finds the shutter slid up, the bedroom window open and Madeleine gone.

They carry out their own quick search for Madeleine but find nothing and inform the police.

Fellow holidaymakers, staff at the resort and police spend most of the night searching frantically.

Friday May 4

Sniffer dogs are brought in, the Spanish and border police and airports are notified and volunteer teams continue to comb the village, resort and beach for clues.

Fears grow that Madeleine has been taken against her will and her parents accuse the Portuguese police of not doing enough to find her.

The Policia Judiciaria - the Portuguese CID - refuses to comment on the investigation into the girl's disappearance.

Relatives including Madeleine's grandparents start flying out to Portugal to offer support to her parents as they continue to wait for news.

The British Ambassador to Portugal, John Stephen Buck, and director of Mark Warner UK Operations, Craig Mayhew, also travel to the Algarve.

The McCanns later make an emotional plea, directly appealing to their daughter's abductors, and speak of their 'anguish and despair'.

With his wife at his side clutching Madeleine's favourite teddy, Mr McCann asks: 'Please, if you have Madeleine, let her come home to her Mummy, Daddy, brother and sister.''

Saturday May 5

Three Family Liaison Officers (FLOs) from Leicestershire Police arrive in Portugal to support the family.

Madeleine's aunt Philomena McCann criticises the Portuguese police, claiming they had played down her disappearance and were being 'uncommunicative'.

Detectives reveal they do now believe she was abducted but is still alive and in Portugal, and say they have a sketch of a 'suspect'. Police also reveal they are considering she might have been abducted for sexual abuse.

Mr McCann makes a fresh appeal for help and thanks the police for their efforts.

A colleague of Madeleine's mother offers a £100,000 reward for help in finding the missing girl.

Sunday May 6

The McCanns attend an emotional Mother's Day service in Praia Da Luz and prayers are said for Madeleine and her family in both Portuguese and English.

Mrs McCann then breaks down with emotion as she addresses reporters to express her gratitude for the local community's support.

Questions arise about the police's sketch of a 'suspect'' with one newspaper reporting the image is based only on the rear view of a man seen with a child in the area.

Monday May 7

Police begin investigating a claim a man was seen dragging a girl towards a marina a short drive from the Portuguese resort where she went missing.

Portuguese media later report that police think the abductor may have been British but this remains unconfirmed by officers involved in the investigation.

Mrs McCann makes another personal plea to anyone holding her daughter, saying: 'Please, please do not hurt her. Please do not scare her. Please let us know where to find Madeleine or put her in a place of safety and tell somebody where.''

Portuguese police later hold a chaotic press conference where they say they cannot give Madeleine's family any firm assurance that she is still alive or still in the region.

Tuesday May 8

People in Madeleine's home village of Rothley, Leicestershire, hold a silent vigil for the family.

Portuguese reports claim detectives are investigating British paedophiles with links to the Algarve.

Football superstar Cristiano Ronaldo makes his own appeal for help in tracing the missing three-year-old, and is later followed by fellow footballers John Terry and Paulo Ferreira.

Portuguese police say an apparent sighting of the youngster is a false alarm, and also reveal that more than 350 suspicious incidents have been investigated.

British Ambassador to Portugal John Buck defends the Portuguese investigation after meeting with the McCanns.

Wednesday May 9

Gerry and Kate McCann say in a short statement they continue to 'remain positive'' and thank all those taking part in the search.

Police examine a CCTV tape from a service station just a few miles from Praia da Luz showing a woman with a girl fitting Madeleine's description.

An internet appeal in English, Portuguese and Spanish is launched while Crimestoppers also creates an international number for people with information.

Madeleine's grandmother says that mistakes could have been initially made in the police investigation due to 'inexperience'.

Thursday May 10

Kate McCann leads villagers and holidaymakers in prayer at the local church in Praia Da Luz a week after Madeleine disappeared.

Crimestoppers says it has passed on four pieces of 'very useful'' information from hundreds of calls made to the special number set up by the charity.

Reports say police are investigating the possibility that Madeleine was snatched by a group of three - two men and a woman.

The footage from the petrol station is also described as possibly holding the 'key'' to the investigation.

Police say in a press conference that the search for Madeleine is being wound down. They also issue an image of a pair of pyjamas identical to those which Madeleine had been wearing when she disappeared.

It is thought the McCanns may have been shown pictures of two suspects during a visit to a police station in Portimao.

Four other people, believed to be friends of the McCanns, are also questioned.

Friday May 11

Madeleine's father vows his family will leave 'no stone unturned'' in the search for her.

On the eve of Madeleine's fourth birthday, Mr McCann says he and his wife were grateful for the worldwide support.

Three British people are believed to have been taken in by police for questioning. It is believed they are potential witnesses rather than suspects.

A businessman offers a reward of £1 million for information leading to the return of Madeleine.

Owner of Scottish health spa, Stobo Castle, Stephen Winyard, 57, who lives in Monaco, said he was moved to come forward by photographs of Madeleine's distraught parents.

Former England captain David Beckham makes a television appeal for information from the public.

In the broadcast, shown on Sky News, he says: 'If you have seen this little girl please go to the local authorities or the police with any genuine information. Please, please help us.''

Saturday May 12

Madeleine turns four.

Residents in Rothley were considering baking a cake and holding a party to mark the milestone - but relatives say they would only want the celebration to take place when she returns and the birthday is postponed.

Her parents mark the day by calling for people to redouble their efforts to find her.

A group of business figures, celebrities and a national newspaper offer a reward of £1.5 million for information leading to Madeleine's safe return.

Entrepreneurs including Sir Richard Branson and Sir Philip Green are among those who join together to offer the huge sum, bringing the total amount of money now being offered in the search to more than £2.5 million.

Chancellor Gordon Brown expresses his sympathy for Madeleine's parents and says his thoughts are with them.

Sunday May 13

It emerges London lawyers from the International Family Law Group have flown out to Portugal to assist Gerry and Kate McCann, and are setting up a special 'fighting fund'' to allow members of the public to make their own financial contribution to the search.

Monday May 14

In a statement to the media, Mr McCann says that 'until there is concrete evidence to the contrary, we believe Madeleine is safe and is being looked after'. Mrs McCann says they cannot consider going home at the moment.

The home of a British man 160 yards from where Madeleine was snatched is searched by police. Robert Murat has been living there with his mother Jenny, who is believed to own it.

The Policia Judiciaria says two or three people are being questioned but stress no-one has been formally arrested.

Tuesday May 15

Robert Murat is officially classed as a suspect by police in Portugal. He claims he is being made a scapegoat in the investigation.

Robert Murat's family friend says the suspect's daughter could be the 'twin'' sister of missing Madeleine.

Tory Euro MP Struan Stevenson demands an immediate ban on the free movement of convicted child sex offenders across Europe and said Madeleine's disappearance 'highlighted the ludicrous loopholes in current legislation covering the movement of convicted paedophiles'.

The National Missing Persons Helpline says that more than 450 children have gone missing in the UK since Madeleine was snatched.

Gerry and Kate McCann pray for police leading the search at a low-key private church service in Praia da Luz, Portugal.

Wednesday May 16

Madeleine's aunt Philomena McCann travels to Westminster to lobby for support.

Gordon Brown pledges to help 'in any way he can'.

A fighting fund is officially launched at Leicester's Walkers Stadium to support Madeleine's family and 'bring her abductors to justice'.

New video images of Madeleine are broadcast at half-time during the Uefa European cup final between Sevilla and Espanyol in Glasgow.

Detectives in Portugal swoop on the home of 22-year-old Russian computer expert Sergey Malinka, who designed a website for suspect Robert Murat, in Praia da Luz.

In an interview with the BBC on Robert Murat's behalf, his cousin Sally Eveleigh says he claimed: 'I am totally, totally innocent.''

Thursday May 17

Portuguese police investigate telephone calls between Sergey Malinka and Robert Murat on the night Madeleine was abducted.

More than 25 million people visit the official website set up to help find missing Madeleine McCann.

A relative of the McCanns, Michael Wright, pays tribute to the McCanns' determination. He revealed details of the scope of their campaign and says: 'This is just the start'.

Posters protesting the innocence Robert Murat appear around the Norfolk village where he lived.

At the first Test match against the West Indies at Lord's, England cricket captain Andrew Strauss and his team all wear yellow ribbons in support of efforts to find the four-year-old.

Thursday May 24

The last photograph known to have been taken of Madeleine before she was snatched is released by her family.

The happy family snap, taken seven hours before she was abducted exactly three weeks ago, shows carefree Madeleine laughing in the sunshine, dangling her feet in the swimming pool.

It also emerges that the Catholic bishop of the Algarve, Manuel Neto Quintas had offered to become a go-between with any kidnapper.

In a Portuguese radio discussion, it was reported, he said he would make himself available if Madeleine's abductor chose to contact him.

A fighting fund for their campaign reaches almost £300,000 and 125 million people have clicked on the www.findmadeleine.com website.

Thousands of green and yellow wristbands symbolising the plight of missing Madeleine McCann go on sale sale across Leicestershire for a minimum donation of £1.

The bands - coloured yellow to reflect the ribbons used to mark Madeleine's disappearance and green, the Portuguese symbol of hope.

Friday May 25

The first detailed description of a possible suspect is issued by police.

The man is described as white, approximately 35 to 40-years-old, of medium build and 5ft 10ins tall. He was wearing a dark jacket, light beige trousers and dark shoes.

He was seen walking in the area of Praia da Luz at around 9.30pm on the night Madeleine was snatched.

A 'witness'' reported seeing a man carrying 'an object that could have been ... a child'' around that time, sources said.

A previously unseen picture of Madeleine playing happily on holiday shortly before she was snatched was released by her family.

The snap, taken by a family friend, shows Madeleine in bright pink trousers, a white T-shirt and pink top, smiling as she plays in a garden.

Police in Portugal speak of an attempt to snatch a girl similar to Madeleine McCann last year.

Three-year-old Carolina Santos, who is blonde with blue eyes, was found being led away by a man from the family cafe near the town of Silves, just half an hour from Praia Da Luz.

The European Commission marked International Missing Children's Day with a plea not to forget the plight of Madeleine McCann and her family.

Tuesday May 29

The last moving pictures of Madeleine are released.

The Mobile telephone images show Madeleine excitedly clambering up the steps to the aircraft for her holiday.

She is clasping her pink Barbie rucksack and holding hands with another little girl. She loses her footing and slips, grazing her shin on the third step. She cries for a few seconds and carries on.

Wednesday May 30

Kate and Gerry McCann attend an audience with the Pope at the Vatican.

Thursday May 31

Portuguese police say they are trawling through two dossiers, 8cm thick, of emails and messages from clairvoyants who say they know where Madeleine is and trying to find out if any of the messages could be from her kidnapper.

Saturday June 2

The parents of Madeleine McCann pledge to stay in Portugal to look for their daughter until there is 'absolutely no hope'.

Wednesday June 6

Madeleine's parents are forced to deny any involvement in her abduction when asked by a German journalist, while in Berlin, if they had anything to do with her disappearance.

Thursday June 7

A mystery phone call from a man claiming to know Madeleine's whereabouts is received.

The caller provides such detail that Kate and Gerry McCann put their European search for their daughter on hold in case they need to act.

The call is later traced to a mobile phone registered in Argentina.

Wednesday June 13

An anonymous letter sent to Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf claims Madeleine's body is buried in deserted scrubland only nine miles from where she was abducted.

Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa says the information was being taken seriously and 'everything necessary'' was being done to validate the allegation.

Friday June 15

Portuguese police with sniffer dogs search scrubland just north of the village of Arao where Madeleine's body was reported to be but the hunt is called off after just four hours.

Sunday June 17

Portuguese police say Madeleine's friends and family may have unwittingly destroyed vital evidence in the first few hours after her abduction, during their search for her.

Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa says their well-meaning actions could prove 'fatal'' for the investigation.

Tuesday June 19

Gerry McCann returns to the UK for the second time since his daughter was kidnapped for a series of meetings about the campaign to find the four-year-old.

Friday June 22

Detectives in Malta say they are investigating two fresh claims of sightings on the island and reveal they have received details of 11 sightings in total, dating back to May 27.

Madeleine's parents declare that they 'convinced'' she is still alive in an open letter, thanking British news organisations for their help.

Hundreds of balloons bearing her picture are released across the world as a tribute to mark the 50th day of her disappearance.

Monday June 25

Malta Police say they have received eight fresh reports in the past two days from people claiming to have seen the four-year-old.

Thursday June 28

Spanish police arrest an Italian man and a Portuguese woman suspected of trying to extort money from Madeleine's parents by offering them information about the missing girl.

They are not believed to have anything to do with her disappearance.

Tuesday July 10

The only named suspect in the case, Robert Murat, returns to the police station for questioning.
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Maddie hunt aid


Jul 6, 2007
The Sun


Madeleine McCann's parents were given a boost last night when David Miliband assured them of his full support. The Foreign Secretary phoned Gerry, 39, and Kate, 38, in the Algarve. A spokesman said: "David Miliband has been in the job less than a week but it was high on his list. "He wanted to let them know he'll do all he can to help find Madeleine."
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McCanns move out of kidnap resort


McCanns move out of kidnap resort
The Sunday Mirror
1 July 2007
Lori Campbell

MADELEINE McCann's parents have made the heart-wrenching decision to move out of the resort where their daughter was kidnapped.  Gerry and Kate were yesterday packing boxes at the rented apartment just a few doors from where Madeleine went missing 59 days ago.

The couple have found a modest property near Praia da Luz to use as their base as they continue their campaign to find her.

Their new location will remain secret as they try to rebuild a normal family life with their two-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie.

Gerry, 39, said yesterday: "Kate and I are staying in the Algarve, continuing to search for our daughter, but we will be moving shortly.  "We remain convinced that Madeleine is alive and will be returned to us safely and well."

Meanwhile Danilo Chemello, 61, and girlfriend Aurora Pereira Vaz, 54, who are accused of trying to extort £2.5million reward money from missing Madeleine Mc-Cann's parents, appeared in court yesterday.

Spanish police say the man had no connection with the girl's disappearance two months ago.

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

McCanns move out
The Sunday Mirror
1 July 2007
Lori Campbell in Praia da Luz

They find new home near holiday resort

MADELEINE McCann's parents have made the heart-wrenching decision to move out of the resort where their daughter was kidnapped.  Gerry and Kate were yesterday packing boxes at the rented apartment just a few doors from where Madeleine went missing 59 days ago. The couple have found a modest property near Praia da Luz to use as their base as they continue their campaign to find her.  Their new location will remain secret as they try to rebuild a normal family life with their two-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie.  Gerry, 39, said yesterday: "Kate and I are staying in the Algarve, continuing to search for our daughter, but we will be moving shortly.  "We remain convinced that Madeleine is alive and will be returned to us safely and well. At this point we are determined to stay in Portugal."  The couple will take with them several boxes containing thousands of letters of support from wellwishers. Kate, 38, said: "Gerry and I want to thank everyone who is supporting us. We have had thousands of letters and we know that people all over the world remember Madeleine in their prayers."  The McCanns have vowed not to return to their home in Rothley, Leicestershire, until they have some news of their daughter.
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Scum


Scum
Ross Hall In Spain
1 July 2007
The News of the World


Maddie monsters face justice over evil plot

THE evil couple accused of plotting to swindle the huge Madeleine McCann reward are led off to face justice yesterday.

Grey Danilo Chemello, 61, looked scruffy in a green polo shirt and grubby white shorts as he was escorted from a Spanish police station.

Aurora Vaz, 54, his girlfriend of ten years, skulked in the back of a car as she was driven to a nearby court.

The couple were seized on Thursday at their swanky rented villa in Sotogrande after police got a tip they were plotting to claim the Pounds 2.5million reward-including Pounds 1.5million from the News of the World-despite knowing nothing about Maddie's disappearance.

Today we can reveal the extent of the couple's criminal past.

Chemello and Vaz were jailed for five years in Italy in 2001 after her ex husband Alberto Tana was shot four times in the knee from point-blank range.

The couple were said to have planted drugs and a gun in Tana's car while he was locked in a bitter battle with Vaz over custody of their daughter.

Chemello and Vaz were later cleared of the shooting but convicted of perverting the course of justice.

The couple have also been investigated for alleged child-trafficking.

Chemello, an Italian construction millionaire, was yesterday being taken from Algeciras, southern Spain, to Madrid where he is expected to be extradited to France.

Authorities there want him for allegedly blackmailing a judge who jailed him and Portuguese Vaz for the horrifying abuse of their five-year-old daughter when they lived in the French Riviera. But sources say it could take weeks before a decision is made about charging the couple.

Yesterday the Spanish Interior Ministry said: "Police investigated them to establish if they have tried to contact Madeleine's parents in order to claim the reward on offer.

"The facts point to them being fraudsters, although the police investigation is not closed."

Maddie has now been missing for 59 days since being snatched from her family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal.
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Maddie mum and dad send thanks to The News of the World


Maddie mum and dad send thanks to The News of the World
Ross Hall
24 June 2007
The News of the World


Missing Madeleine McCann's parents have written a heartfelt letter of thanks to the Irish News of the World for our support in the campaign to find their daughter.

Gerry and Kate sent the message as they marked the 50th day since their four-year-old was snatched.

Addressed to the Editor, it said: "We are writing to express our deep gratitude for all that your organisation and reporters have done to raise worldwide awareness of the abduction of our beautiful daughter.

"It is hard to express how much your support and the support of your readers have meant to us personally at this terribly difficult time. It has strengthened our resolve and supported our campaign enormously."

Soon after Madeleine was taken from her Portugese holiday apartment, we launched a 2million reward to help secure her release and arranged a poster campaign.
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Pickpocket steals snaps of Madeleine from father


21 June 2007
Daily Mail
Tom Kelly


A pickpocket has stolen treasured pictures of missing four- year- old Madeleine McCann from her father.

Gerry McCann was in London for a brief visit and withdrew £100 from a cash machine moments before the thief struck, lifting his wallet from a back pocket and running off.

The three pictures of Madeleine and her brother and sister were in the wallet along with cards and the cash.

They have never been seen in public and there are no copies.

Mr McCann, who is in London to organise the campaign helping to track down Madeleine, who vanished 49 days ago in Portugal, is said to be distraught.

Yesterday his sister, Philomena McCann, said: 'Gerry was at the bank to get some British currency, because he didn't have any at all.

'He took out £100 from a hole-in-the- wall machine, put it in his wallet then popped it in his back pocket.

'He bent down to put something in his rucksack and some dirty animal had the wallet out of his back pocket.

(Blogger note:  Why were the McCann's complete bank account records not turned over to the Portuguese police ?)
'We don't care about the money but we do care about getting the pictures of Madeleine back.

'There were three special ones that Gerry always kept with him, showing Madeleine and the twins. They were his favourites, really treasured pictures.

'How can you do that to someone who's been through what he has?

'He's desperate to get them back. He's not bothered about the money, he'd just like whoever stole them to hand them back.

'The family has been overwhelmed by the support and affection from all around the world but it takes just one rotten apple to bring you down.

'I hope whoever took the wallet is so ashamed when they realise what they've done that they get those pictures back to us as soon as possible.' 

Mr McCann, 39, was pickpocketed at a cash machine at Waterloo station in Central London.

He arrived on Tuesday for a two- day visit to interview candidates for the job of campaign manager who will help keep Madeleine's profile high.

His sister revealed that the consultant cardiologist had earlier come to the rescue of a fellow passenger who collapsed during his easyJet flight from Portugal.

The man, who has not been named, needed a medical assessment on arrival at Gatwick Airport and was taken by ambulance to hospital. An airline spokesman said: 'Mr McCann administered oxygen and advised the crew on how to treat the man.'

His sister said: 'He didn't make a big deal out of it because it's the kind of thing he does all the time at work.'

The trip to London was only the second time Mr McCann has returned to the UK since Madeleine was kidnapped.

He arrived back in Portugal yesterday to be reunited with his wife Kate and the couple's two-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie.
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Irish family may have been last to see Madeleine


18 June 2007 
Evening Herald
Aoife Finneran

An Irish family may have been the last to see missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann. Today’s revelation came as Portuguese police asked the family to refrain from speaking in public about the case. The Drogheda-based family were holidaying in Portugal in the same week as the McCanns last month. On the night of Maddy’s disappearance on May 3 in Praia Da Luz, members of the family saw a child being carried by a man. It was around the time that Madeleine was taken from her parents’ apartment.  Following news of her disappearance, the family contacted Portuguese police.
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