Spies and their lies


1 October 2007
David Rose
New Statesman
British intelligence has long used clandestine "undeniable briefings" to release information real and false to tame hacks including David Rose...


My secret life began, as if scripted by P G Wodehouse, with an invitation to tea at the Ritz. The call came at the end of the first week of May 1992. I was the Observer's home affairs correspondent, and at the other end of the line was a man we shall call Tom Bourgeois, special assistant to "C", Sir Colin McColl, the then chief of the Secret Intelligence Service. SIS (or MI6, as it is more widely known) was "reaching out" to selected members of the media, Bourgeois explained, and over lunch a few days earlier with McColl, my editor, Donald Trelford, had suggested that I was a reliable chap - not the sort, even years later, to betray a confidence by printing an MI6 man's real name. Would I like an informal, off-the-record chat? You bet I would. "I make no apologies for the cliché," Bourgeois said, "since we do need a way to spot each other. I will be in the lobby, with a rolled-up copy of the Times."
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Find the maid: New Maddie Suspect


Find the maid: New Maddie Suspect: 
Amazing twist in investigation as cops hunt for suspect with a grudge
30 September 2007
The News of the World
Lucy Panton, Crime editor


* Sacked worker in 'revenge plot'

* Anonymous tip to Prince Charles

BRITISH cops launched an urgent hunt for a new suspect in the Maddie McCann case-after an astonishing tip-off from the PRINCE OF WALES.

An anonymous email sent to the prince's official website insists three-year old Madeleine was kidnapped from the Mark Warner Ocean Club holiday resort in Portugal by a disgruntled ex-employee.

The informant named a maid who was sacked from the apartment complex in Praia da Luz and claimed she snatched the child in a crazed revenge plot.

British police are now liaising with Portuguese detectives over the dramatic new twist which is revealed 150 days after Maddie vanished.

Officers believe the tipster entrusted the new information to Prince Charles because he and wife Camilla came out firmly in support of Maddie's parents Kate and Gerry.

Factual

In a statement released from Clarence House in May, the royal couple said they had been following the case "closely and with deep concern" and "fervently hoped" Madeleine would be reunited with her family.

As soon as the whistleblower's email arrived on the royal website aides passed it to Scotland Yard.

Officers from Leicestershire police- the McCanns' local force-are now trying to trace the writer.

The detectives have already established that the named ex-employee EXISTS and the checkable details appear to be ACCURATE.

A police source said:

"There have been hundreds of Madeleine theories, sightings and tips sent into UK cops from members of the public. But this one is different.

"It's incredibly detailed and so far, from the inquiries being made in Portugal, it appears to be based on factual events.

"UK officers have been taking a back seat in the hunt for Madeleine as it's a Portuguese inquiry. But they couldn't ignore this information.

"Any clue which could shed new light on the case will be dealt with seriously. This could be very significant."

After being told of the tip-off, McCann family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said last night:

"We have continually said that any lead with a shred of credibility should be swiftly and thoroughly investigated by the police.

"Kate and Gerry are encouraged by any development that brings focus firmly on to finding Madeleine.

"Legitimate police activity is entirely proper and hopefully will bring about an end to the rampant unfounded and unsubstantiated allegations that have been so hurtful and distracting in recent days and weeks."

Yesterday it was not clear exactly how far Portuguese police have got with the new information. They have been given the name of the maid, who is thought to be Portuguese, but it is not known whether she has been physically traced.

But it has been established that the woman was sacked and left on bad terms with bosses at the resort.

The email tipster claimed the maid was incredibly bitter and wanted vengeance on her former employers.

An inside source added:

"The vital next step is for the police to track down the woman and either question her or put her under surveillance.

"She needs to be ruled in or out of the inquiry as soon as possible."

Meanwhile UK police are now focusing on tracing the informant who they feel may have MORE vital information which needs to be probed.

The Madeleine mystery has been the No1 topic of conversation among the dozens of British and Portuguese workers employed at the Algarve complex, owned and managed by Mark Warner.

Most of those hired as nannies, pool lifeguards, tennis coaches and front- of-house staff, such as receptionists, are young Brits. And the teams of maids, waiting and bar staff, pool cleaners and security officers are mainly Portuguese.

The housekeeping staff are given keys to the apartments which are cleaned at least twice a week.

There is no security monitoring of the staff who are free to come in and out of the complex unchecked.

But they are easily identifiable and all wear uniforms-red shorts and Mark Warner T-shirts for the kids' club workers, white uniforms for maids and smart suits for receptionists.

Dumped

The new lead comes as desperate Portuguese police are STILL working on the discredited theory that Maddie may have been accidentally killed by mum Kate and then assisted by dad Gerry to cover it up.

The cops' latest claim was that the body may have been kept in a fridge before being dumped.

They are said to be focusing on a "mysterious and fatal period" of 90 minutes when they claim Kate was alone in the apartment with her children while Gerry played tennis.

McCann spokesman Mitchell dismissed this latest line as "utterly ridiculous" and begged for an end to the smear campaign. The stress on the couple was visible yesterday as they went for a 20- minute jog together near their home in Rothley, Leicestershire. A local said:

"It's great to see them back doing the things they love, but Kate looked dreadfully pale and thin. The strain shows."

Portuguese police have come in for huge criticism for missing vital clues in the investigation. Crucial forensic tests which should have taken place in the first few hours were not carried out until several months after Maddie vanished on May 3.

And door-to-door inquiries, documenting what locals and visitors saw, are still incomplete. The McCanns' apartment was described by one experienced cop as "the worst-preserved crime scene" he had ever witnessed.

It was not taped off until 10am the next morning and was compromised by hundreds of people passing through.

Family, friends and assorted helpers all wandered freely about the apartment and it was 48 hours before any fingerprinting was done.
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Exclusive: Maid's kidnap plot: We reveal new Maddie suspect


Exclusive: Maid's kidnap plot: We reveal new Maddie suspect
The News of the World
Lucy Panton
30 September 2007


Cops hunt for worker at resort

COPS hunting Maddie McCann are probing a sensational new tip-off that she was kidnapped by a maid sacked from the Portuguese resort.

Detectives have a confirmed NAME for the suspect, said to be seeking revenge on the Mark Warner complex in Praia da Luz.

A police source said last night: "It could be a very significant lead."

FULL STORY - Pages 4 & 5
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He has 3-hour boozy lunches, works only four hours a day and has openly accused Kate & Gerry of killing their daughter


He has 3-hour boozy lunches, works only four hours a day and has openly accused Kate & Gerry of killing their daughter.. this is the cop leading the hunt for Madeleine.. IT'S JUST SICKENING
30 September 2007
The Sunday Mirror

Grant Hodgson

EXCLUSIVE THE SEARCH FOR MADELEINE DAY 150

Puffing on a cigarette and knocking back beers, the man leading the world's biggest missing child inquiry enjoys yet another long, boozy lunch.

Portuguese police chief Goncalo Amaral worked as little as four-and-a--half hours a day this week - despite a mountain of uninvestigated sightings of Madeleine McCann on his desk.

The Sunday Mirror has discovered that 252 possible tip-offs about the four-year-old have been reported to Amaral, any one of which might just lead to her being traced. But the vast majority have not even been checked.

Amaral, in charge of a squad of 30 detectives, has convinced himself she is dead, despite having no evidence for it.

And since the return from Portugal of Kate and Gerry McCann and most of the media covering the case, many in his squad have had their feet up, their main role seemingly to provide drinking companions for their boss.

The McCanns, who cling to the hope of getting Madeleine back, will be appalled that the inquiry - supposedly still running at full-steam - has effectively stopped amid a welter of boozy lunch breaks.

A source close to the family said: "It is devastating for them to know leads are not being chased up. They always feared that once they left Portugal, the inquiry would peter out."

On Wednesday, when the world was praying that a little girl seen in Morocco may be Madeleine, Amaral and his team seemed utterly uninterested and left it to the British media to establish it was a false alarm.

He instead enjoyed a twohour 10 minute lunch washed down with wine. The next day was a similar tale - lunch lasted two-and-a-half hours. And on Friday he was gone for more than three.

Even more appallingly, while Kate and Gerry have been warned they face a year in jail for discussing the case, Amaral was overheard in a cafe brazenly accusing them of killing Madeleine.

In a conversation with a Portuguese racing driver, he was heard saying he was sure the little girl was dead even though there's no final proof that she is. He told ex-F1 star Pedro Lamy he believed the McCanns drugged Madeleine to keep her quiet and accidentally killed her.

Amaral said: "The police case is we are sure the parents kiled Madeleine. They are both doctors and know about drugs. We are confident in our case." One of the group outrageously chipped in how he believed the couple could have taken cocaine on the night Madeleine disappeared.

The conversation was a flagrant breach of the judicial secrecy rules which prevent Kate and Gerry from defending themselves against police leaks. Amaral, his beer belly spilling over his baggy jeans and a creased shirt unbuttoned to reveal a gold medallion, looked more like a holidaymaker than a detective in charge of a case which today enters its 150th day.

Only last week Antonio Cluny, president of Portugal's public prosecutors service, said the search for Madeleine's body was a huge priority for the police. Until it is found, he said, prosecutors had to consider the possibility that almost anything could have happened to the girl and they could not rely on the police theory that Kate and Gerry were responsible for her death. He said: "Without the little girl's body, everything is extremely complicated."

Amaral, who is himself under investigation for allegedly helping to cover up a police beating carried out to extract a confession from the mother of another missing girl, is the regional head of the Policia Judiciaria, or PJ for short.

The Carvi fish restaurant where he spends hundreds of pounds a week is a few minutes' walk from PJ headquarters in the seaside town of Portimao.

The Sunday Mirror watched as Amaral and colleagues tucked into a series of fish dishes, washed down with lager and white wine.

His longest session, which lasted three hours and 10 minutes, was on Friday afternoon. It meant he could not have carried out more than four-and-a-half hours of work all day. Amaral, 47, who has a young daughter, is No3 in the Madeleine inquiry, in charge of its day-to-day running. After one drinking spree this week, the moustachioed police chief got in his car and drove home.

The McCanns were questioned separately at the grim PJ building for up to 10 hours earlier this month when they became suspects in Madeleine's disappearance.

Kate was also told if she agreed to admit she had accidentally killed Madeleine she would receive a lighter sentence.

The couple, now at home in Rothley, Leics, vehemently deny having anything to do with their daughter's disappearance. The McCanns' official spokesman Clarence Mitchell said last night: "Kate and Gerry want to cooperate with the Portuguese police and would hope that they and their resources are being deployed as effectively as possible at all times."

And writing in his regular internet blog this week Gerry McCann told of the rollercoaster ride they experienced this week after the false alarm in Morocco. He added: "Despite the disappointment, it is encouraging that people are still being vigilant and have not stopped looking for Madeleine. This is so incredibly important to us both."

Although not, it seems, to Chief Inspector Goncalo Amaral.

DIARY OF POLICE CHIEF AMARAL

1.15pm GO FOR LUNCH

4.23pm BACK TO WORK

WEDNESDAY: While the world hopes a young blonde girl seen in Morocco might be Madeleine, Amaral and his team have other priorities.

9.30am: Amaral arrives for work in his car wearing a beige jacket, jeans and a white shirt.

1.17pm: He casually strolls out of the police building and takes a leisurely stroll to the Carvi restaurant with his boss Guilhermino Encarnacao - dubbed Inspector Clueless - who is making a rare visit to the investigation.

Lunch: They share a bottle of wine white and two fish platters before heading back to the office at 3.27pm.

6.30pm: Amaral heads home.

THURSDAY: Amaral's boss has left town, meaning he can focus properly his lunch.

9.30am: He clocks on.

1.07pm: It's down tools time as he heads for lunch with a younger colleague.

1.15pm: They are joined by a Nancy Dell'Olio lookalike, who wears a figure-hugging black dress. The woman greets Amaral by patting him on the backside and ruffling his thinning hair.

1.20pm: The group move to Amaral's preferred secluded table. His first drink is a pinkcoloured fruit cordial but he's soon switching to a glass of Portuguese Sagres lager.

2.19pm: Amaral has a coughing fit which lasts more than three minutes. He splutters at the table, sipping water before picking up the bill for the £84 meal.

3.30pm: The woman leaves by herself and the men follow a few minutes' later. [NOTE: Sofia Leal, Amaral's wife, later explained that this was a birthday lunch in her honor.]

6.13pm: Amaral emerges from the building with the colleague he went to lunch with. They return to the Carvi and sit watching the evening news on the TV.

6.48pm: The young man leaves after another beer. Amaral stays on, eating a couple of fish dishes.

9.55pm: After a few more beers, he heads back to his car and drives home.

FRIDAY: 9.54am: Amaral pitches up for work even later than normal.

1.08pm: After fewer than three hours at his desk, he's off to pick up his daughter from school and brings her back to the Carvi with him.

1.15pm: He orders the first of at least four beers. He and his colleague also order a bottle of white wine while the little girl has a soft drink.

2.14pm: He takes his daughter back to the car. She is driven off and he is joined by two more friends and his racing driver friend. Amaral then has at least three more beers and a glass of wine.

4.23pm: It's nearly time to go home and, after splitting the bill and saying goodbye to his friend, Amaral and two of his colleagues slowly walk back to their office.

5.55pm: After just an hour and 32 minutes back at his desk, Amaral emerges into the bright afternoon sunlight carrying a white plastic bag and blue folder. He walks the short distance from his office to the underground car park.

6.10pm: After getting into his navy blue Volvo he heads for home, and the 148th day of the Madeleine hunt ends as it began - in a hive of inactivity.
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POLICE PROBE LOST 2 HOURS


28 September 2007
The Sun
Clodagh Hartley in Praia da Luz/Antonella Lazzeri in Rothley
POLICE PROBE LOST 2 HOURS; COPS' SHOCK CLAIM: MADDIE IS BURIED IN SPAIN


Kate and Gerry McCann were stunned yesterday at the latest police claim about missing Madeleine - that they buried her during a "missing two hours" while putting up posters in Spain.

A furious pal said as the outrageous theory emerged: "Kate and Gerry have had enough. "Underneath all this rubbish are horrible accusations and rumours.

"There are sightings of Madeleine which they want properly investigated."

A day earlier a girl thought to be Maddie in Morocco turned out not to be the four-year-old. Kate and Gerry - both doctors aged 39 - are incensed that it took The Sun to discover that the blonde tot photographed by a tourist in Morocco was the daughter of a local farmer.
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SAS join hunt for Maddie - Portuguese police failed


25 September 2007
Daily Telegraph
Sam Greenhill

Kate and Gerry McCann have hired a firm of investigators run by former SAS experts to hunt for their daughter Madeleine.

The couple, who fear the Portuguese police have all but given up the search, have asked Control Risks Group to mount a fresh hunt.

The firm, which has long experience of search and rescue operations, is said to have a team in Portugal already.

The McCanns want investigations carried out wherever there have been credible sightings.

The SAS development came as:

* IT WAS revealed that two separate witnesses reported seeing Madeleine in Marrakesh, Morocco, on the same day;

* A DOUBLE-glazing magnate pledged to bankroll the McCanns;

* BRITISH forensic scientists criticised Portuguese police for ``overinterpreting'' DNA results.

Control Risks was founded in 1975, initially to help businessmen in South America who were targeted by kidnappers. It claims to have solved more than 1000 cases.

It has 600 employees, many of them former special forces members or MI6 agents. Ex-SAS commander Sir Michael Rose is a director.
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’McCanns Are Lying’


September 24, 2007
Express
David Pilditch and Martin Evans

Portuguese police believe Gerry and Kate McCann are using friends to hide their role in killing Madeleine.The Daily Express can reveal that their seven holiday friends may now be named as suspects as police believe they are hiding the truth about Madeleine’s death.The dramatic move comes as it was reported that former chief suspect Robert Murat is to be told he will not face charges over the four-year-old’s disappearance. Ruling him out of the four-month investigation will leave Kate and Gerry McCann as the sole suspects.

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Does the spy satellite called Moonpenny hold the key?


23 September 2007
The Express on Sunday
Gordon Thomas
Searchers in the sky

Madeleine's fate could be resolved by the giant golf ball-shaped objects towering over the windswept coast of North Yorkshire.  Almost a thousand miles from where the four-year-old was last seen alive in Portugal, the objects, known as radones, could answer in seconds the questions that have tantalised the world. But only Gordon Brown has the authority to mobilise the radones – the word means "stony ground" in ancient Saxon – at RAF Menwith Hill.
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Why did cops ignore link to Morocco?


Why did cops ignore link to Morocco?
Exclusive The search for Madeleine Day 143
The Sunday Mirror
23 September 2007
Lori Campbell


They failed to act on second vital sighting at garage

Portuguese police FAILED to follow up a key sighting of Madeleine McCann in Morocco which her parents believe is vital to solving the case.

It was revealed last night that a British tourist contacted police to say he saw a "lost-looking" youngster at a petrol station in Marrakech.

His testimony was identical to that of another tourist, Norwegian Marie Pollard, 45, who claimed she was "100 per cent convinced" she saw Madeleine at the same spot.

She said last night: "I still haven't been interviewed by Portuguese police and we're four-and-a-half months on. If this man saw Madeleine as well it adds weight to what I saw and proves I'm not going mad."

Both accounts were given to the police independently and without knowledge of the other. Yet incredibly police failed to follow either up at the time they were reported. When they did finally check out the leads, they found the garage's CCTV tape had been erased and didn't bother interviewing staff.

Both witnesses describe a little blonde girl standing near a man and asking him in English: "When can I see my mummy?"

The McCann family are livid at the blunder - always believing she could have been abducted and taken to Morocco. A family friend said yesterday: "Kate and Gerry believe the Morocco sightings were vital. They are furious they weren't followed up properly by police. They should have been fully investigated and publicised.

"Kate said her instinct from the start has been that Madeleine was smuggled into North Africa.

"The couple believe the information from the two witnesses is crucial and should have been released to the media immediately."

Like Mrs Pollard and her British husband Raymond, the unidentified witness was staying at the Ibis Hotel next to the petrol station.

It was only when he returned home to Yorkshire that he realised the significance of what he had seen and called police. He was unaware of Mrs Pollard's account of what happened on May 9, which she reported after she went home to Spain. The details of their statements matched.

Mrs Pollard, who lives in Fuengirola, said: "I didn't know about Maddie's disappearance then. I went in the shop to buy some water. My attention was drawn straight to her. She was a sweet, blonde-haired girl with a very cute face. She was wearing blue pyjamas with a little pink-and-white pattern, maybe flowers, on her top.

"She was standing alone with a man. She looked sad and a little lost. The man didn't look like her father. He was between 35 and 40, with dark brown hair, not very tall.

"She looked at me and then spoke to him, something like, 'Can I see Mummy soon?'. I don't think he responded."

Mrs Pollard said she called Portuguese police the day after she thought she saw Madeleine.

But it was another 10 days before they called her back to ask for any details.

It was only when she announced the sighting in the Press that they contacted her. "I contacted the police but no one has come to see me to take a statement," she said. "An Interpol officer rang me and asked for details and this is all I have heard.

"The British embassy said my sighting was being taken seriously but the police in Morocco have not contacted me."

Meantime a family friend revealed last night that police are working on the bizarre theory that Kate and Gerry McCann buried Madeleine's body near a holy shrine.

The McCanns - who made a pilgrimage to the Fatima 20 days after their daughter vanished - are stunned by the extraordinary claim. Police believe they used the trip to look for a suitable spot to dispose of Madeleine's body before returning in their hire car at a later date to bury her.

But a close family friend told the Sunday Mirror: "This allegation is not only ridiculous, it proves the Portuguese police are clutching at every last straw."

The McCanns' official spokesman Clarence Mitchell was with them on their journey to Fatima on May 23 but he has never been questioned by police.

Police plan to examine a pasture called the Cova da Iria, near the village of Aljustrel a mile from Fatima, which the McCanns would have passed on their car journey. A source close to the family said: "Police believe they used that trip as a reccie (reconnaissance mission). But they barely even glanced out of the window during the four-hour drive. They were both using laptops so they could work on the campaign to find Madeleine."

During the journey Gerry took a 45-minute phone call from Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who expressed his sympathy for their plight saying: "I've lost a little girl of my own. I know it's in different circumstances, but I can empathise with the pain you're going through."

Our source said: "It's ridiculous to think that while they were on the phone, Gerry was looking out for places to later bury his daughter's body." In the following week, the couple travelled to the Vatican to meet the Pope, and flew to Amsterdam and Berlin to publicise the hunt for Madeleine.

"It's madness to suggest they had the time to make a 500-mile return trip to Fatima to bury Madeleine's body," said our source, who also revealed how on September 3 they were called by a detective who asked them not to leave the country because they would be made "arguidos" later that week.

"He insisted the new status simply enabled police to give them more information on the inquiry," said the source. "But Gerry sensed the tables were turning against them and pleaded with Kate to flee Portugal. He told her, 'I don't believe them. We're being stitched up. We should get out of here'."

Kate convinced him to stay because she didn't want it to look like they were running away. But two days later, the couple were dramatically accused of playing a part in Madeleine's death.

During a break in her first grilling, Kate called Gerry to say police were telling her to confess to killing Madeleine in exchange for a lenient sentence. Soon afterwards a relative back in Leicester appeared on live TV talking about the development.

Our source said: "It was being shown in the interview room. The cops went mad and were swearing at the screen and they turned aggressive towards Kate."

The McCanns later learned it was Det Insp Luis Nevas who ordered the heavy grilling which left the couple feeling betrayed as he had previously befriended them.

 

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Kidnapper 'was hiding in apartment'


Kidnapper 'was hiding in apartment'
22 September 2007
Daily Express
Martin Evans and David Pilditch in Praia da Luz



Madeleine's father is convinced she was abducted by someone hiding in the apartment when he checked on his children, he claimed last night.

Gerry McCann told friends he is sure the kidnapper was already inside the property when he last saw his daughter alive at 9.05pm on May 3.

He believes the intruder had broken in through the unlocked patio doors and was lying in wait.

The McCanns, who remain suspects, think he carried Madeleine through a bedroom window at the front of Ocean Club apartment 5A.

Gerry's suspicions were raised when he remembered the door to the bedroom where twins Sean and Amelie were also sleeping was ajar.

At the time he thought nothing of it. But now he has said he is convinced he had previously shut the door.

He has concluded the abductor must have opened it and hidden in the bathroom or the McCanns' bedroom when he heard Gerry approaching through the doors.

A source close to the family said:
"When Gerry went to check on Madeleine at 9.05pm he realised the bedroom door was open.

Gerry is firmly of the view the abductor was already in the apartment.

"When he went in he saw Madeleine was asleep but the bedroom door was slightly open.

"He thought, 'That's odd' because he had left it firmly closed.

But all the children were asleep.

So he just went in and closed the door again and came out about 9.10pm.

"Gerry is convinced the man must have been hiding, and once Gerry went through the patio doors the only way out was through the window.

The front door was locked so the kidnapper took Madeleine and climbed out the window.

"The theory is the man came in through the patio doors, knowing he has a few minutes until the McCanns' next check.

"The rear doors are out of sight from the tapas bar where the McCanns and their friends are eating."

The source went on:
"The abductor goes in and he hides and when Gerry goes into the bedroom he just thinks he didn't close the bedroom door properly.

When Gerry leaves, the man realises he only has a few minutes.

He thinks that the only way to get out without being seen is through the window."

Gerry and Kate believe that Madeleine was being watched by the abductor during their week-long holiday and that she was stolen to order.

They had checked on their children every half an hour but at 9.30pm one of their dining companions, Matthew Oldfield, offered to look in on them.

However, rather than going into the bedroom, he listened at the door and on hearing nothing assumed all was well.

The McCanns are convinced that Madeleine had been taken by then.

Just 30 minutes later Kate discovered her daughter was missing.
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