I saw 'Maddie' too


7 August 2008
The Sun
Lucy Hagan in Amsterdam and Veronica Lorraine in Praia Da Luz
Additional reporting: Antonella Lazzeri



HER EYES TOLD ME IT WAS HER SAYS HANNIE
SECOND SIGHTING OF TOT IN AMSTERDAM

A second possible sighting of Madeleine McCann in Amsterdam was revealed last night.

Pensioner Hannie Weichmann said she saw a little girl with an anxious woman near her home in the Dutch city days after Maddie vanished from her family's holiday apartment in Portugal.

Hannie, 71, believed a crude attempt had been made to disguise the child by cutting and dyeing her hair, giving her a badly-trimmed fringe and some red locks. But she said: "Those eyes...I knew it was her."

Hannie spoke 24 hours after released police files revealed Amsterdam party shop worker Anna Stam spoke to an English girl who called herself Maddie.

She was with an odd couple and told 41-year-old Anna: "They took me from my holiday." She said of the woman with her: "She is not my mummy."
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5,000 Number of doors knocked on by British cops


5,000 Number of doors knocked on by British cops hunting missing Shannon Matthews ..
433 Number of doors knocked on by the Portuguese cops... Madeleine McCann
Exclusive
The Sunday Mirror
27 July 2008
Lori Campbell


Portuguese police knocked on just 443 doors in the failed hunt for missing Madeleine McCann.
Their investigation was last night branded "pathetic" by her parents Kate and Gerry, who are furious police did not do more to find their daughter.

There are 7,000 homes in Praia da Luz, the resort where four-year-old Madeleine was snatched - but police went to fewer than one in 10 doors, says a report into the investigation.

In stark contrast, British police probing the disappearance of Shannon Matthews earlier this year knocked on 5,000 doors and searched 2,000 houses.

Nine-year-old Shannon was found in 24 days, whereas Portuguese police have stopped looking for four-year-old Madeleine after 14 months.

A friend of the McCanns said: "The 443 doors would barely cover 500 yards from the apartment where Madeleine was taken. That is shocking and unacceptable."

Police didn't even bother to go out of the resort to question residents in neighbouring towns.

The McCanns expect to see the full police report this week and their team of private investigators will go through every shred of evidence.

The source added: "They will analyse exactly what has and hasn't been done. If it means going back to the very basics of knocking on doors in Praia da Luz, then they will do it.

"The report shows Portuguese police clearly didn't do a thorough job from day one. It is immensely frustrating for Kate and Gerry." Former chief superintendent Dai Davies, who was head of the Royal Protection Squad, slammed the Portuguese detectives' efforts as shameful.

He said: "It is simply ridiculous they only knocked on 443 doors. That would take just a few hours.

"In the UK, officers go to thousands of doors and don't give up until they have a lead. That is basic policing, especially in an abduction case when the child could still be nearby."
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Is this the best way to help Maddie?


Is this the best way to help Maddie?
26 July 2008
Daily Mail
Amanda Platell


Excerpt:


...Few who saw Kate and Gerry McCann's press conference can fail to have been deeply moved as they responded to the news they had been cleared as suspects in their daughter Madeleine's disappearance.

With a face like stone to hide a breaking heart, Gerry sat clutching his wife's hand under the table. 'It has been devastating to witness the detrimental effect being named as suspects has had on the search for Madeleine,' Kate said.

But there was more than sorrow behind those tear-filled eyes. For the first time since their daughter went missing, there was bitterness, too.

'It is hard to describe how utterly despairing it was to be portrayed as suspects,' she said.

One can understand her anger at being falsely named as 'arguidos', but surely this should have been the end of that part of their torment. Finally they have been exonerated, and at last they are free to pursue their search.

Instead, the McCanns seem set on revenge. Revenge against the Portuguese police who launched the biggest missing child investigation in its history. Revenge against the former head of the investigation, Goncalo Amaral, over his book about Madeleine, even though he has already been sacked, discredited and disgraced.

And revenge against the media -- yes, the same media that with the help of hired PRs they used ruthlessly, relentlessly and understandably to try to keep their daughter's face in the public eye. How sad.

Their PR Clarence Mitchell insists: 'The only thing they care about now is finding Madeleine.'

So surely this is the time to go up a gear in that quest and not allow themselves to become bogged down in lengthy compensation cases.

How does that help to find Madeleine?

Little wonder so many ordinary people -- the very ones they rely on in the search for their daughter -- are asking if this quest for retribution is in Madeleine's best interests.

It wasn't just their precious daughter that was missing at Monday's press conference, but also any reference to their own behaviour on that dreadful night when they went out wining and dining and left their beloved children untended in an unlocked holiday flat.

My own view has always been that the McCanns deserve the greatest sympathy for their loss, but the public increasingly is not so understanding.

If the couple were now to spend as much time campaigning against the dangers of parents leaving children alone as they are apparently spending trying to seek financial recompense, then the nightmare of Madeleine's disappearance might have one positive legacy...
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Donegal welcome for dropping of suspect status


23 July 2008
Belfast Telegraph
Anita Guidera


Friends and relatives of the McCann family in Donegal yesterday welcomed news that the Portuguese authorities are no longer treating the parents as suspects in the disappearance of toddler Madeleine over a year ago.

Joe Peoples, who runs a pub in the east Donegal village of St Johnston which Madeleine and her parents Kate and Gerry visited just weeks before her disappearance in Portugal, said: "It doesn't surprise me at all that they are in the clear."
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BBC Video Interview with Goncalo Amaral


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/7517883.stm
BBC
21 July 2008
VIDEO

The former lead detective on the Madeliene McCann case Goncalo Amaral has defended making her parents official suspects.

Mr Amaral was removed from his post in October 2007 after reportedly criticising his British counterparts.
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We'll savage bungling cops on Oprah show


We'll savage bungling cops on Oprah show
20 July 2008
People
Nick Dorman


CLEARED McCANNS VOW TV ONSLAUGHT

Madeleine McCann's parents will savage bungling Portuguese cops in a tell-all interview with chat queen Oprah Winfrey when they are cleared as suspects tomorrow.

For 317 days fuming Kate and Gerry have been gagged by their status as arguidos.

But at noon tomorrow a judge will formally lift the cloud of suspicion - as exclusively revealed in The People in April.

And the McCanns will finally be free to speak about the investigation into three-year-old Maddie's disappearance.

They are set to launch a stinging attack on US star Oprah's TV show - although her rival Barbara Walters is also vying to secure the first interview with the couple. The doctors, both 40, will either go to the States or speak from their home in Rothley, Leics.

Pals expect them to highlight more than a dozen basic errors by police in the four weeks after their daughter's disappearance on May 3 last year.

These include: FAILING to immediately seal off the crime scene in Praia da Luz, allowing vital forensic evidence to be lost in and around the McCann holiday apartment.

FAILING to inform Spanish border cops until the next morning.

WAITING more than 48 hours before house-to-house inquiries began.

DELAYING the decision to bring in child abduction specialists and ISSUING a baffling series of different descriptions of suspects - including one primitive e-fit picture which resembled a "boiled egg with hair".

The McCanns will also round on cops for leaking details of the case to the Portuguese press in a bid to incriminate them.

Their spokesman Clarence Mitchell said last night: "Kate and Gerry will talk about the police inquiry once their arguido status has been lifted.

"They want to get their side of the story across. They want the weight of guilt by association lifted from their shoulders. And they will make it clear that they will continue to search for Madeleine, come what may."

The couple are likely to focus their fury on top cop Goncalo Amaral, who was kicked off the Madeleine case last October following allegations of incompetence and attacks on his British police counterparts.

Moustachioed Amaral, 48, sometimes worked little more than four hours a day and enjoyed long, boozy lunches.

He was also overheard telling of his suspicions that the McCanns killed their daughter.

Police still have NO idea what happened to Madeleine, who disappeared from her bed while her parents were eating out.

A friend said yesterday: "Kate and Gerry are furious. They've kept their thoughts private - because the Portuguese legal system left them no choice. It's been incredibly frustrating.

"They know the police have given up looking for Maddie, so they've nothing to lose. A string of mistakes were made. And police leaked things that were totally untrue. When it was reported that Maddie's DNA was found in their car, Kate and Gerry could only conclude someone was trying to frame them.

"Being suspects has put an appalling strain on them. Kate hasn't been able to go out without thinking people may be pointing a finger of blame.

"As soon as they're free to talk about the appalling way they have been treated, they will."

  
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British police failed to stop DNA evidence in McCann case from being made public


19th July 2008
Daily Mail


British police officers were yesterday accused of trying to stop DNA information allegedly linked to Kate and Gerry McCann’s hire car from being made public. The claim was made in a Portuguese newspaper after Midlands detectives travelled to Portugal to meet the public prosecutor involved in the investigation into the disappearance of their daughter Madeleine. Under the headline ‘English in Portimao to Protect Secrecy’, the newspaper Correio da Manha claimed two Leicestershire officers tried to stop information – including results of a DNA test on a sample from the McCanns’ Renault Scenic hire car – from being made public.
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Judge's plea to Maddie abductor: Show mercy


July 8, 2008
Daily Mail
Vanessa Allen

A judge yesterday begged Madeleine McCann's abductor to 'show mercy and come forward'. In an astonishing plea, Mrs Justice Hogg called for an end to Kate and Gerry McCann's 14 months of suffering and said she prayed Madeleine would be found alive soon. The British High Court judge gave the couple fresh hope in the hunt for their missing daughter by ordering British police to hand over a dossier containing the details of 81 potential witnesses. She said Leicestershire Police should pass on information about those who had tried to contact the McCanns in the immediate aftermath of their daughter's disappearance in Portugal days before her fourth birthday.
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'Madeleine is dead' claims ex-police chief in charge of the case


'Madeleine is dead' claims ex-police chief in charge of the case
05 July 2008
Daily Mail


Goncalo Amaral says he is 'convinced' Madeleine McCann is dead

The former detective in the Madeleine McCann case has claimed the four-year old is dead.

Goncalo Amaral, 48, said he was convinced Madeleine will not be found alive and said that British officers only chased leads Kate and Gerry McCann wanted following up.

Amaral quit the force and handed over his gun and badge to bosses on Monday evening after 28 years as a police officer. He is now preparing to publish an "explosive" book on the case.

The father-of-three was in charge of the Madeleine investigation for five months before he was kicked off the probe for publicly criticising his British counterparts.

'I am not saying that the English police were under the command of the McCanns, but they were influenced', he said.

'In a way, we were all influenced by the campaign that they organised, according to which the girl was alive and had to be found.'

Amaral was thought to be the source behind many of the stories in Portugal suggesting the McCanns were involved in their daughter's disappearance.

He was also photographed enjoying long boozy lunches while in charge of the country's biggest ever missing persons case.

Gerry and Kate McCann influenced the investigation into their daughter's disappearance, it is claimed

On his final day as an officer he enjoyed a two-hour lunch in the seaside town of Portimao, newspaper 24 Horas reported.

He later marked his early retirement with a dinner with two police colleagues from Lisbon.

The disgraced former chief has finished writing a book, True Lies, which he plans to publish as soon as a judge lifts a secrecy order surrounding the case.

Amaral told 24 Horas the book "is ready" and said he plans to "carry on working in the area of criminal investigation, perhaps as a consultant."

He added: 'I am proud to have worked with the Judicial Police and to have worked with so many good people and excellent professionals.'

Amaral's book is said to contain "explosive elements" about the police investigation into Madeleine's disappearance.

The detective's lawyer Paulo Santos said previously: 'It's not going to be speculative, but rather factual, with accounts from someone who lived the case one hundred per cent.'

Amaral told colleagues he quit the force in order to recover his "freedom of speech".
His book, the first inside account of the investigation, is certain to be an instant best-seller.

Amaral was kicked off the case last October 2 after accusing British police of being too close to Gerry and Kate McCann.

He claimed British officers only chased up leads Madeleine's parents wanted following up.

He was also overheard in a cafe accusing Gerry and Kate McCann of accidentally killing their daughter.

He was replaced by current chief investigator Paulo Rebelo.

Strict Portuguese judicial secrecy laws mean the Maddie case files have never been made public.

But attorney general Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro has said the secrecy will be lifted this month.

As well as being kicked off the Madeleine investigation, he was also removed from his post as head of the Judicial Police in the Algarve town of Portimao and transferred to nearby Faro.

Amaral, who lives in Portimao, is facing trial for allegedly covering up the torture of a woman who was later convicted of killing her daughter in 2004.

He will be tried for allegedly lying about the treatment of Leonor Cipriano following her daughter's disappearance from the village of Figueira near to where Madeleine went missing.

Leonor claims officers beat her into a false confession by punching and kicking her repeatedly, placing plastic plastic bags over her head and forcing her to kneel on glass ashtrays.

Leonor and her brother Joao were subsequently convicted of Joana's murder after a trial and jailed for 16 years.

Amaral is charged with negligence and perjury.

His close friend and former Judicial Police inspector Paulo Cristovao has become a media star in his native Portugal after taking early retirement from the force.

He writes regularly for Portuguese newspapers and magazines and has penned two novels including a fictional account of the Madeleine McCann investigation called The Star of Madeleine.

Fictional officers bring the 180-page novel to a close by staring out at the Atlantic Ocean after a massive land search for Madeleine.

Cristovao is also due to stand trial with Amaral and three other men in the Leonor Cipriano case.
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Gordon Brown FSS Lab 17 June 2008


The PM visits the Forensic Science Service London Laboratory
17 June 2008

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