The Carvi Seafood Restaurant Scandal


THE CARVI SEAFOOD RESTAURANT SCANDAL
Fish Feed Fiasco







I was motivated to return to this issue after reading the Mirror article published this week entitled:  "Revealed: How shamed cop made a fortune spouting lies about Madeleine McCann's parents

Quoting the article:
"...[Goncalo] Amaral, 52, led the investigation until October 2007 when he was removed for claiming British police were only helping with leads provided by the McCanns.
During his stint heading the inquiry, the Sunday Mirror caught him enjoying regular boozy ­lunches, one of which lasted more than three hours."
It seemed a good time to return to 2007, when the boozy lunches story first emerged. Perhaps, at long last, we may finally uncover the truth of its origin.
.

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


The following news articles published in the British press were based on alleged observations made at the 'Carvi', a seafood restaurant in Portimão, Portugal.

The anonymous 'fellow diner' referred to in the articles is extremely important!

He or she has been (and continues to be) used by the British media to manipulate public opinion regarding the Portuguese police.

It therefore seems important to understand whether this person was a member of the media itself, or simply a 'concerned citizen' who happened to speak to reporters.

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

The foreshadowing of what was to become the Carvi Seafood Scandal was a single line in the Daily Telegraph on May 26, 2007.

Reporter Fiona Govan wrote the following:
"Rarely observed at the scene of Madeleine's abduction or available for comment, those leading the investigation have frequently been spotted lunching at the Carvi seafood restaurant in Portimão."

And this, my friends was where it all began!
 

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

The next article about the emerging scandal was written by Press Association reporter Caroline Gammell on June 7, 2007. It was a bit more detailed and was the first introduction to the individual known as a *fellow diner*.

According to Gammell:
...In Portimao...a diner at fish restaurant Carvi said he recognised the police officials...

...A fellow diner at the Carvi restaurant allegedly saw what looked like a bottle of wine and a bottle of whisky at the table where the Portuguese police officers sat for about two hours.

The diner said that about 2 pm the officers asked for the TV news to be switched on and that the officers watched the news.

As we've learned from the Leveson Inquiry, the McCanns or their official spokespersons were contacted prior to the publication of all articles.

It appears to be true regarding Carvi Seafood Scandal as family members are quoted in all the subsequent articles.

Gammell includes a quote from Gerry McCann (dropped by most other articles on the day):
...In Berlin, the McCanns said they had initially been frustrated by parts of the investigation but went on to praise efforts of Portuguese officers.

Mr McCann said: 'We have no doubts of the desire of the Portuguese police to find Madeleine. 'We have witnessed their efforts first hand and they are working harder than Kate and I.''...

Gammell's article quotes Gerry's sister Philomena McCann:
'If it were detectives from Scotland Yard there would be absolute uproar.

'But we have to let them to get on with their work because that's all we have to rely on.

'It is a different country and we have to accept the way that they do things and that it is a different culture where they have lunches and siestas but we hope the work is made up at other times.'

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

On the very next day, June 8, 2007, the story sprouted wings, took off flying and has never landed.

As was discussed during the Leveson hearing, many newspapers will use an article supplied by one of the news services (in this case, possibly the Press Association report) as a base upon which the newspaper's own reporter can build an article different enough to allow their byline.

On June 8, 2007, the Evening Standard introduced its readers to the Carvi Seafood Scandal.

Reporter Ed Harris wrote:
...In Portimao, a town near where the four-year-old was snatched on 3 May, a diner at fish restaurant Carvi said he recognised the police officials from TV.

'They asked for the Portuguese TV news to be switched on Madeleine's parents had given a press conference in Berlin and they came on the screen.'

The diner said they had what looked like a bottle of white wine and whisky on the table...

Harris, like Gammell, included Gerry McCann's quote:

...The McCanns praised the officers. Mr McCann said: 'They are working harder than Kate and I.'...

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

SAME DAY (June 8, 2007):

The Daily Star appears to have been the first news agency to use the term "bender" regarding the Carvi Seafood Scandal and the disgraceful manner in which the Portuguese police were behaving that day, but it was far from the last time it has been used over the last 5 years.



In the Star's version of the Carvi Seafood Scandal, the Portuguese police go on a bender, crack jokes during a boozy lunch and laugh as they knock back wine and whisky while the TV broadcasts video of the McCanns in Berlin.
...Insp Goncalo Amaral - sat slumped in a chair staring at a bottle of Johnnie Walker Black Label whisky.
Chief Insp Olegario Sousa burst into a fit of laughter when fellow diners warned British journalists would be shocked.


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

SAME DAY (June 8, 2007):

Lucy Hagen handled the Sun's version of the Carvi Seafood Scandal:


Hagen wrote that the detectives were boozing while Maddie's ANGUISHED parents were in Berlin and that *fellow diner* said that one of the detectives was slumped in his chair.

Interestingly, Hagen reported that the fellow diner was taken to a police station, held for four hours and had his camera confiscated.

It would be extremely helpful if this alleged arrest could be verified and if it could be determined whether the diner was a vacationer, journalist or press photographer.
The cop leading the Maddie hunt was blasted yesterday after he and two colleagues spent two hours boozing - at lunchtime. Chief inspector Olegario Sousa downed wine and whisky with fellow Portuguese officers as a restaurant TV screened Maddie's anguished parents at a Berlin press conference.

A British snapper was ARRESTED after he spotted Wednesday's long lunch in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz, where Maddie vanished. He was held at a police station for four hours and had his camera confiscated. An onlooker told how Sousa - who has appeared on TV fronting the inquiry - relaxed with officers including detective Goncalo Amaral. The witness said: "When I left, one was still slumped in his chair."

Asked whether it was acceptable for cops to drink wine and whisky at lunch, Sousa insisted yesterday: "It is my free time. What does it have to do with you what I drink or what I eat? "I drink what I want to drink when I can drink. Have you seen anyone drunk? Have you seen any action deterred by that?"

The missing girl's aunt Philomena said: "If it were detectives from Scotland Yard there would be absolute uproar."

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

SAME DAY (June 8, 2007):

The Times report was written by reporters David Brown and Thomas Caton

They wrote:
...not only had the senior Portuguese officers been seen frequently going out for lunch at the Carvi restaurant, but they REGULARLY took two hour lunches at the Carvi Seafood restaurant.

Further details were given regarding the *fellow diner*'s observations:

The party shared a bottle of white wine and there was what appeared to be a bottle of whisky on the table during the lunch, which lasted almost two hours.

The *fellow diner* said: "Someone on another table seemed to know them and joked about them having two-hour lunches and knocking back Johnnie Walker Black (Label)."
****************

NEXT DAY (June 9, 2007):
The Daily Mail published an article that detailed the 'boozy lunches' and the alleged arrest of a photographer:

Excerpts:
...Portuguese police were forced to defend their reputation amid allegations that they were enjoying boozy lunches while the search for Madeleine continued...

...Senior police officers...were seen laughing and joking as images of the missing four-year-old and her desperate parents appeared on a restaurant TV screen...They laughed and cracked jokes as they enjoyed a meal washed down with wine and whisky - as footage of the couple played in the background. Afterwards, they left a table littered with empty glasses - and went back to work...

...In Portimao,...a diner at fish restaurant Carvi said he recognised the police officials. "I knew who they were because Mr Sousa has been all over the TV and in the papers," he said. The diner watched as officers enjoyed the lunch, which took place a short walk from the police station...

...Then - in what looked like becoming the first arrest in this case after nearly five weeks, a photographer trying to take a picture of them emerging from the restaurant was detained, held for four hours, fingerprinted, interviewed, and had his camera confiscated. He has now been formally named as an 'Arguido' - the same status as the chief suspect in Madeleine's disappearance, Robert Murat...

...On Tuesday, two groups went to two separate restaurants. The bigger party did not begin to leave for an hour and three-quarters. The smaller party had a 50-euro meal of fish and wine and shared jokes between what appeared to be discussion about police business...

...On Wednesday, the party included senior figures from police headquarters at Portimao... One of them was Ch Insp Olegario Sousa... Another was Goncalo Amaral... At 12.50pm the two men strolled across a sun-drenched square to Carvi restaurant... Inside, they formed a table of four with two other officers. The diner said: 'They asked for the Portuguese TV news to be switched on and sat at the table watching it. It must have been about 2pm. Madeleine's parents had given a press conference in Berlin and they came on the screen.'...

... The diner added: 'The police were laughing and joking among themselves while it was on. They seemed to be sharing some sort of joke. Whatever it was, I thought that laughing like that in public was in really poor taste...

...'They had a bottle of chilled wine with the meal but they had a bottle of whisky on the table after the main course as well. I was pretty shocked to see they were drinking whisky at lunchtime. The bottle was passing between them for about half an hour. 'Someone on another table seemed to know them and joked about them having two-hour lunches and knocking back Johnnie Walker Black. He said they would get themselves in the papers.

...'I got the impression they went there regularly - they were very friendly with the waiter. I don't know what time they came in but I was there for a good 90 minutes and when I left, one of them was still slumped back in his chair in the corner with the whisky bottle in front of him. He was a big sweaty guy and he was sagging into the chair. The table was littered with empty glasses. 'There was some sort of commotion and I heard someone shout out. They swore and said something about the 'Paparazzi Ingles' (English Paparazzi) hiding behind the door.'...

SUMMARY:

An individual dining at the Carvi Restaurant observed Portuguese police officers having lunch and recognised them as members of the team working on the Madeleine McCann investigation.

The 'fellow diner' claimed to have witnessed four detectives sharing a bottle of wine and what "looked like" a bottle of whisky.

The' fellow diner' was interviewed by reporters working for a number of British papers or those reporters borrowed material from one another's stories or a news service.

Philomena McCann was contacted and responded.

Kate McCann's mother, Susan Healy was contacted and responded.

Olegario Sousa was contacted and basically told the media that what the investigators did on their own time was none of their business.

A person was arrested by the Portuguese police.

The arrested person's camera was confiscated.

The arrested person was made an 'arguido'.

There have been no further details made public about the alleged arrest.

  • One must wonder - was the fellow diner simply a tourist who happened to take photos of the officers?

  • Was the fellow diner a journalist or a press photographer?

  • If the fellow diner was simply a tourist, what right did the Portuguese police have to confiscate the camera?

  • If the fellow diner was a journalist or press photographer, was this entire 'boozy lunch' story developed simply to discredit the Portuguese police as rumors were circulating that the focus of the investigation moving away from abduction?

Whatever the truth might be about the Carvi Seafood Scandal, it has provided 5 years of fodder to those attempting to portray the Portuguese as incompetent bunglers, boozers and Keystone Kops.

All one has to do is read articles published over the last three years to see how this one incident, blown out of all proportion, enabled the reputation of the Portuguese investigators working diligently to find the truth about Madeleine's fate to be destroyed by the British press.

You may find the following list interesting: Goncalo Amaral - Boozer

Note:
Statements in the official Portuguese police files indicate the McCanns and their friends claim to have left all of their eight children (ages 3 and under) unattended in their holiday apartments to have dinner and wine nightly at the Tapas Restaurant. Reports vary regarding the number of bottles of wine consumed.

See: 
Puzzles and mysteries at the very heart of the investigation

The Times, 10 Sept 2007
How much alcohol did the McCanns and their friends drink on the evening Madeleine disappeared?

Kate and Gerry McCann and their friends are reported to have told detectives they shared four bottles of wine, with another two barely touched before Madeleine was discovered missing.

However, it is claimed detectives have recovered a bill showing they downed eight bottles of red wine and six white during the afternoon and evening.
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How shamed cop made a fortune spouting lies about Madeleine McCann's parents


Daily Mirror

Revealed: How shamed cop made a fortune spouting lies about Madeleine McCann's parents
Mirror
12 Feb 2012



Gonçalo Amaral has been paid at least £320,000 for a book and DVD ­peddling his outrageous claims that Kate and Gerry McCann covered up the death of Madeleine

The  Portuguese detective who was thrown off the Madeleine McCann case in disgrace has made a fortune spouting lies about the missing girl’s parents.

The Sunday Mirror can reveal Gonçalo Amaral has been paid at least £320,000 for a book and DVD ­peddling his outrageous claims that Kate and Gerry McCann covered up the death of Madeleine in the family’s holiday apartment.

Amaral was booted off the investigation after just five months in charge. But his book, The Truth About The Lie, became a bestseller in Portugal even though the country’s top lawman insists there’s no evidence to back up his accusations.

A legal source close to the ­McCanns believes ­Amaral could have made as much as ­£1million in total.

“Amaral made an astonishing amount of money from his ­campaign to discredit the ­McCanns,” said the source.

“I don’t know how he sleeps at night, knowing he’s cashing in on the tragic story of a three-year-old girl’s disappearance.”

Gerry and Kate are suing ­Amaral for at least £1million for libel and breaching their human rights.

Lawyers for the couple, from Rothley, Leics, are expected to present proof of some of the ex-detective’s earnings when the case is heard.

They will show Amaral ­received at least £287,000 from the ­publisher of the book, which has been ­translated across Europe, and £33,600 for a DVD ­documentary.

SLURS

The McCanns’ civil case against Amaral was due to be heard in Lisbon last week but was ­postponed when the ex-cop split suddenly from his legal team.

In 2009 the Sunday Mirror ­revealed the McCanns had lodged a 36-page writ at the Lisbon court saying Amaral’s slurs left them “totally destroyed”.

Friends, relations and those who worked with the couple after Madeleine’s disappearance will support their claims as witnesses. The McCanns are not expected to give evidence in person.

If they win, the money will be used in the search for Madeleine, who disappeared in May 2007 on a family holiday in the Algarve.

Amaral, 52, led the investigation until October 2007 when he was removed for claiming British police were only helping with leads provided by the McCanns.

During his stint heading the inquiry, the Sunday Mirror caught him enjoying regular boozy ­lunches, one of which lasted more than three hours.

Portugal’s attorney general Jose Pinto Monteiro later archived the investigation and cleared the McCanns of any wrong-doing.

Kate and Gerry have never given up hope of finding Madeleine, and Scotland Yard detectives are now carrying out their own probe into her disappearance.

Source: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/goncalo-amaral-made-a-fortune-spouting-681722
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The F*** the McCanns Scandal


The F*** the McCanns Scandal

Presented here are the articles published by the British press related to this "scandal".   In each of the articles, I have attempted to highlight the negative comments about Dr. Goncalo Amaral in red and the positive comments about the McCanns in green.  I urge you to review the articles carefully and watch for the abundant emotive language and spin.
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Adjectives used by the British Press to describe Goncalo Amaral


Adjectives used by the British Press to describe
Goncalo Amaral and/or the Portuguese police

(Source: Factiva database)

  • 53 articles: "boozy" or "boozer" (Examples)
  • 418 articles: "disgraced, disgraceful, disgrace" (Examples)
  • 440 articles: "outrage, outrageous" etc. 
  • 37 articles: "bungling"
  • 23 articles: "Keystone cops" (or Kops) (or Keystone cretins)  ("Keystone" cops has been used by English speaking people to describe bumbling or inept cops; based on old movies of the Keystone Cops.  Extremely insulting articles.)
     
  • 42 articles: "Goncalo Amaral" and "lunch"  (includes all the "boozy lunch" "two hour lunch" etc. Many accuse him of "boozy three hour lunches" etc.  Why is it newsworthy that a man eats lunch?)
  • 45 articles: "inept" 
  • 220 articles: "sacked" or "fired"  (Note: Amaral was TRANSFERRED off the Maddie case and then chose to quit.)
  • 49 articles: "hampered" "hampering" "hindered" "hindering" (the investigation);
  • 43 articles: "outburst" (regarding his statement re: McCanns and the British police)
  • 43 articles: "shameful" "shame" "shamed"
  • 14 articles: "evil"
  • 146 articles: "torture" "tortured" "attacked" (re: Leonor Cipriano)

Other terms used to describe
Goncalo Amaral and/or his colleagues
  • "Oh, up yours, senor" (Title of column in the Daily Mirror by Tony Parsons - about which the Press Complaints Commission received 485 complaints.)

  • sweaty oafish

  • Inspector Clueless

  • corpulent figure in an ill-fitting jacket

  • fat, sweaty cop

  • out of his depth

  • liar

  • lazy

  • failed police chief

  • giant ego

  • manufacturing a case

  • dishing dirt

  • making stuff up

  • feeding smears to the press

  • spends hundreds of pounds per week at Carvi fish restaurant

  • witch hunt

  • stupendously stupid

  • fragile macho pride

  • swaggering plods

  • lumbering yokels

  • clueless

  • corrupt

  • biased

  • Portuguese tormentors

  • leaked information to the media

  • vital evidence was ditched

  • crucial documents were ignored

  • weeks were wasted

  • a shambles from the outset

  • ignored sightings

  • worked only four hours a day

  • dirty tricks

  • scarily amateur police investigation

  • flawed inquiry

  • beleaguered police

  • evil suggestions (re: the McCanns)

  • bizarre allegations

  • vile slurs

  • just want a convenient confession, true or false

  • career in tatters

  • abysmally mishandled Portuguese police investigation

  • "Amaral was the main reason Kate and Gerry were named as suspects, despite there not being a shred of evidence that the couple were involved" (Blogger note: Cadaver dog alerts to McCann items only, Gaspar statement, Smith family sighting, refusal to answer police questions or return to Portugal for reconstruction, changes to statements re: the night Maddie disappeared, etc.) 

  • "Life on Mars" police (refers to a British television program, extremely insulting articles)

  • "It was bad enough for the McCanns that their child was snatched. It was worse luck still for it to happen in a backwater policed by incompetents."  (In other words, Portugal is a backwater country and it's police force is incompetent.)
  • spectacularly stupid, cruel Portuguese police”

  • pigs

  • filth

  • fitting up her parents

  • it is the Portuguese police who are the clowns

  • Cruel, stupid, spiteful clowns

  • bunch of clueless amateurs

  • turned their rage on the McCanns

Portuguese citizens
  • leering bumpkins

  • sardine munchers (This began when Tony Parsons said about the Portuguese Ambassador to Britain "If you can't say something constructive about the disappearance of little Madeleine, then you just keep your stupid, sardine-munching mouth shut.")

  • "... a scathing attack by Sir Richard Branson on the Portuguese media...'The Portuguese press have behaved abysmally, fed inaccurate stories by the Portuguese police, which all turned out to be a load of garbage,' he told The Observer" 30 Sept. 2007

******

The most recent example of the outrageous treatment of Dr. Amaral is the BBC broadcast claiming he had said "F*** the McCanns".  Native Portuguese claim that Amaral actually said "'Não, força aos McCanns" "Ask the McCanns" in response to a reporter's questions.  (GONCALO AMARAL DOES NOT SPEAK ENGLISH -  a fact widely reported.) 

UPDATE:

ECU Ruling: East Midlands Today, BBC1 (East Midlands), 
12 January 2011

Publication date: 30 May 2011

Complaint
The programme included a brief exchange between a reporter and
Gonçalo Amaral (a former policeman who had worked on the
disappearance of Madeleine McCann and had since written a book on
the case). One word in the exchange was bleeped, and the report gave
the impression that this was because Sr Amaral had used offensive
language about the MrCanns. A viewer complained that this was
inaccurate and unfair to Sr Amaral.

Outcome
The reporter’s belief, reinforced by others on the programme team
who viewed the recording, was that Sr Amaral had indeed used an
English phrase which included an offensive term applied to the
McCanns. On further examination, however, it became clear that Sr
Amaral had been speaking Portuguese, and that an inoffensive phrase
had been misconstrued. Upheld

Further action
The Editor of the programme has discussed the outcome with the
producer and reporter involved. In future, the team plans to use
interpreters if clips from interviews are unclear.

BBC Complaints
http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/content/ecu/ecu_eastmidlandstoday120111
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Goncalo Amaral - Boozer


Goncalo Amaral - Boozer

Also see:  
and


Headlines:

The detectives working as the world watches
Daily Telegraph 26 May 2007 Fiona Govan 

Rarely observed at the scene of Madeleine's abduction or available for comment, those leading the investigation have frequently been spotted lunching at the Carvi seafood restaurant in Portimão.

Madeleine police 'seen at two hour lunch'
Press Association National Newswire, 7 June 2007

...Portuguese police working on the Madeleine McCann case defended their reputation today after they were seen enjoying a two hour lunch

...The diner said they had what looked like a bottle of white wine and whisky on the table...

Police go on bender
Daily Star,  8 June 2007

...PORTUGUESE detectives hunting Madeleine cracked jokes during a boozy lunch as her parents flew across Europe to try to find her...

Maddy police defend long lunch break
The Evening Standard, 8 June 2007, Ed Harris

...Portuguese police working on the Madeleine McCann case defended their reputation today after they were seen enjoying a two - hour lunch.,.he diner said they had what looked like a bottle of white wine and whisky on the table...

Madeleine officers defend their regular two hour lunches
Times, 8 June 2007, David Brown, Praia da Luz / Thomas Catan, Madrid
...Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa and Goncalo Amaral , the head of the regional Policia Judiciaria, joined two other men at a speciality fish restaurant called Carvi a few minutes' walk from police headquarters

...The party shared a bottle of white wine and there was what appeared to be a bottle of whisky on the table during the lunch, which lasted almost two hours....

Detectives' boozy lunch
Daily Express, 8 June 2007

...Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa and the detective ranked number three in the investigation, Goncalo Amaral, drank wine and whisky with their lunch in Praia de Luz as a news programme replayed footage of Gerry and Kate McCann facing questions at a gruelling press conference in Berlin...

Cops' booze shame
The Sun, 8 June 2007, Lucy Hagan in Praia da Luz

...Chief inspector Olegario Sousa downed wine and whisky with fellow Portuguese officers as a restaurant TV screened Maddie's anguished parents at a Berlin press conference

...A British snapper was ARRESTED after he spotted Wednesday's long lunch in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz, where Maddie vanished...

Madeleine detective faces charges over attack on suspect
Press Association National Newswire, 7 September 2007, Tim Walsh

...News of the charge came as Mr Amaral was forced to defend his taking a two - hour lunch break

...A diner said he spotted them drinking what looked like white wine and whisky...
'I know where Madeleine is' call traced to Argentina
Daily Mail, 9 June 2007

...Senior police officers involved in the investigation were seen laughing and joking as images of the missing four-year-old and her desperate parents appeared on a restaurant TV screen. It happened at a lunch lasting nearly two hours as Kate and Gerry McCann were away campaigning in Europe. They laughed and cracked jokes as they enjoyed a meal washed down with wine and whisky - as footage of the couple played in the background. Afterwards, they left a table littered with empty glasses - and went back to work... (Note: Read full article for more excerpts re: 'Carvi Scandal'.)

Detective in charge faces claims of assaulting female suspect
Yorkshire Post, 8 September 2007

...News of the charges came as Mr Amaral was forced to defend his taking a two - hour lunch break

...A diner said he spotted them drinking what looked like white wine and whisky...

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
Sunday Mirror, 30 September 2007, Grant Hodgson in Praia da Luz

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

...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... (Note: Read full article for more excerpts re: 'Carvi Scandal'.)

The Portuguese detective in charge of the Madeleine McCann inquiry today accused her parents of manipulating British police
Press Association National Newswire, 2 October 2007, Chris Greenwood

...The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao. The two men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case...

Chief investigator in missing Madeleine case dismissed
France Presse, 2 October 2007

...The British press has remained largely supportive of the couple and very critical of the Portuguese police investigation, with Amaral a favourite target. Britain's Sunday Mirror claimed over the weekend that Amaral had a habit of taking a "long, boozy lunch" and said his "beer belly spilling over his baggy jeans" made him look "more like a holidaymaker than a detective"...

Portuguese detective 'removed from Madeleine case'
Press Association National Newswire, 2 October 2007, Josie Clarke

...The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao. The men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case...

Madeleine McCann chief detective sacked
Telegraph, 2 Oct 2007, Aislinn Simpson in Praia da Luz

...the detective, who has come under fire in the British press for his "boozy" three-hour lunches and allegedly failing to investigate some of the tip-offs his 30-strong team of officers have received...

Officer leading hunt for Madeleine 'enjoys boozy lunches and half days'
Mail Online, 2 October 2007

...The man leading the world's biggest missing child inquiry, Portuguese police chief Goncalo Amaral, is working as little as four-and-a-half hours a day. And he has been enjoying boozy lunches- despite a mountain of uninvestigated sightings of Madeleine McCann...

Off the case; Madeleine police chief demoted after amazing rant against McCanns and British detectives
Mail, 3 October 2007, Vanessa Allen in Portimao

...Chief Inspector Goncalo Amaral was removed from the inquiry after he claimed that British detectives had been duped by Kate and Gerry McCann and only investigated leads which were ' convenient' for the couple

...He enjoyed frequent three-hour boozy lunches and two days ago a British newspaper claimed he worked only four hours a day and had ignored most of the 252 possible sightings and tip-offs in the case...

Detective leading hunt for Madeleine sacked after blast at UK police
Inspector says McCanns swayed British officers
Family lawyer attacks 'absurd' comments
Guardian, 3 October 2007, Paul Hamilos Madrid Brendan de Beer Portimao

...At the weekend Mr Amaral was criticised in the British press for allegedly working 4 1/2 -hour days, enjoying "boozy lunches" and failing to investigate most of the 252 tip-offs his officers have received...

Detective leading Madeleine hunt dropped from case after outburst
The Independent, 3 October 2007, Ian Herbert
...The detective was also forced to defend taking a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa in Portimao while the McCanns were flying to Berlin to publicise the case...

Madeleine case officer demoted
Times, 3 October 2007, Paul Hamilos in Madrid and Brendan de Beer in Portimao

...The British media criticised Mr Amaral for allegedly working 4½-hour days, enjoying "boozy lunches" and not investigating tip-offs...

Madeleine cop axed
Scottish Daily Record, 3 October 2007, Ryan Parry

...Amaral was embarrassed at the weekend by reports that he enjoyed two and three-hour boozy lunches while he was supposedly working to find Madeleine. A newspaper told how the beerbellied cop spent as little as four-and-a-half hours per day at his desk...

McCanned
Mirror, 3 October 2007, Ryan Parry in Praia da Luz

...Boozy cop is demoted after furious outburst against the McCanns

...He works as little as four and a half hours a day and takes boozy three-hour lunches despite a mountain of Madeleine leads to investigate...

Fears for Maddy search after police chief is axed
Evening Standard, 3 October 2007,
Kiran Randhawa in Praia da Luz
...It came days after he was criticised in a British newspaper for allegedly working four-and-a-half hour days, enjoying 'boozy lunches' and failing to investigate the majority of the 252 tip-offs his officers have received...

The new head of the Portuguese police investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann should 'refocus'' the inquiry on finding the youngster, the family's spokesman said today.
Press Association National Newswire, 3 October 2007
...The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao during the search for Madeleine. The men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case...

Axed detective was controversial figure in Madeleine inquiry
Press Association National Newswire, 3 October 2007

...Mr Amaral was also forced to defend taking a two-hour lunch break. He was spotted with PJ spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao as the McCanns travelled to Berlin and Amsterdam to appeal for more information about their missing daughter. A diner said he spotted them drinking what looked like white wine and whisky...

Inspector clueless gets boot
Star, 3 October 2007, by Jerry Lawton

...A BOOZY Portuguese police chief heading the Madeleine McCann inquiry has been sacked from the case after accusing Brit detectives of shielding her parents

...Amaral's tirade came days after he was blasted for taking long boozy lunches during the case...gold medallion-wearing, beer-bellied bobby...

Rogue Maddie cop enjoyed 3-hour-long boozy lunches
Herald, 3 October 2007

...The sacked Portuguese detective who had been leading the Madeleine McCann case had gained a reputation for his long, liquid lunches while the world waits for a breakthrough in the case. Chief Inspector Goncalo Amaral had regularly spent hours enjoying boozy lunches despite being openly criticised for failing to spend more time on the case...

Mad rant that got Maddie cop sacked
Sun, 3 October 2007, Clodagh Hartley and Nick Parker in Portimao

...Some sources claimed he works 4 1/2-hour days, enjoys "boozy lunches" and has reportedly failed to investigate many tip-offs his officers receive...

Police chief removed from missing Madeleine inquiry
Yorkshire Post, 3 October 2007

...The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao. The men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky...

Top Portuguese detective 'axed' from case
Aberdeen Press & Journal, 3 October 2007

...The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a restaurant in Portimao. The men were seen drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case...

Lead detective taken off Madeleine case
Journal, 3 October 2007

...The detective was also forced to defend a two-hour lunch break with police spokesman Olegario Sousa at a fish restaurant in Portimao. The men were spotted drinking what looked like white wine and whisky as the McCanns flew to Berlin to publicise the case...

Boozy lunches and unchecked leads
Daily Express, 3 October 2007

http://newsoutlines.blogspot.com/2007/10/boozy-lunches-and-unchecked-leads.html
...Amaral regularly enjoys boozy lunches and last week, while the eyes of the world were on an apparent sighting of the toddler in Morocco, the detective spent two hours knocking back wine in his favourite fish restaurant...

Madeleine detective kicked off case after blasting British police
Daily Express, 3 October 2007, David Pilditch and Martin Evans in Praia da Luz

...Just days ago it was revealed he has been spending as little as four-and-a-half hours a day on the case – while up to 250 potential leads have still not been checked out. He regularly spends hours enjoying boozy lunches. Last week, while the eyes of the world were on an apparent sighting in Morocco, he spent two hours knocking back wine in his favourite fish restaurant...

New cop in charge .. New hope for us
Mirror, 4 October 2007, Ryan Parry in Praia da Luz

...They believe that the boozy chief inspector, kicked off the case after criticising them and British police, has hindered the hunt for their four-year-old daughter...But he left at 12.30pm for a two hour lunch with deputy national police director Guilhermino Encarnacao, 59, who is working on the Madeleine case, and two colleagues

...Amaral was in charge of 30 detectives. But he worked as little as four and a half hours a day, taking boozy three hour lunches. He arrived prompt for his new job at 9am yesterday. But he left at 12.30pm for a two hour lunch with deputy national police director Guilhermino Encarnacao, 59, who is working on the Madeleine case, and two colleagues...

Good riddance
Sun, 4 October 2007, Sharon Hendry

...He was boozy, incompetent and convinced the McCanns killed Maddie

...so we say to sacked police chief Amaral: HE'S the crumpled copper who looks like a seedy character from a bad detective movie

...Most days would see him swagger up to his favourite Carvi table wearing a creased white shirt, unbuttoned to the chest, where a gleaming gold cross dangled

...A booze-fuelled lunchtime, featuring white wine and his favourite Sagres lager, would often soon be followed by Amaral driving home in his blue Volvo...

Copper meant to find Maddie hunted down parents instead; Opinion
Sun, 6 October 2007, Lorraine Kelly

...It is a scandal that it has taken so long for the boozy, bumbling policeman in charge of the Madeleine McCann investigation to be given the boot. Goncalo Amaral is thought to be almost single-handedly responsible for the public vilification of parents Kate and Gerry

...You would have thought that finding a sick and dangerous criminal would be at the very top of any copper's agenda. Instead, Amaral went on long booze-filled lunches and felt peeved that the McCanns had their own high-profile campaign to find their daughter. In a display of petulance, this mean-spirited little man turned against them...

Truth about the Madeleine police
Daily Express, 6 October 2007, David Pilditch in Praia da Luz and Rachel Porter

...In the week that the top detective was sacked and his deputy quit, we reveal the lies, boozy lunches and alleged incompetence of a farcical investigation

...But dressed in his trademark baggy jeans and crumpled shirt barely big enough to cover his belly, he refused to let a little matter like a missing girl come between him and the fish platters at Carvi, a popular local eatery

...So, for instance, on the day that Kate and Gerry McCann flew to Berlin as part of their own desperate campaign to keep their daughter's image in the public eye, Amaral could be found at his usual table where he and his colleagues spent two hours eating, smoking and knocking back the booze...

Warning over cop shambles
The Sunday Mirror, 7 October 2007, Grant Hodgson

NOTE: Please read: PCC Complaint Leicestershire Constabulary

..."Portuguese cops were told to sort it out," a police source told the Sunday Mirror, which last week exposed the long, boozy lunch breaks taken by Goncalo Amaral. "It's not good enough when the man who was supposed to be running the world's biggest police inquiry was taking huge lunch breaks," the source said...

Portuguese put top cop in charge of the search
Herald, 9 October 2007

...The detective, who heads the regional Policia Judiciaria in Portimao, was also said to have engaged in three hour boozy lunches at the height of the investigation into Maddie's disappearance...

Inept.. Incompetent.. I'm incandescent
21 October 2007, Stewart Whittingham

...Insiders claim vital evidence was ditched by boozy officers and crucial documents were ignored

...Rebelo was also told his predecessor had regular three hour boozy lunches when he accused Kate and Gerry of drugging and killing their daughter...


How inept police let Madeleine's kidnapper get away
The Daily Express, 27 November 2007, Robert Downing Adapted by Virginia Blackburn

...It was not long before eyebrows were raised again by police behaviour, though this time the problem was a culture clash as much as anything else. The problem appeared to be lunchtime drinking. At the same time as the McCanns were facing that brutal press conference in Berlin, Sousa and detective Goncalo Amaral were pictured enjoying a two-hour lunch with drinks. Sousa was defensive: "It is very, very sad but a person's free time is for lunch. That is a normal thing to do." Worse still, the men were heard discussing the case in front of other diners. "If it were detectives from Scotland Yard there would be an uproar, " said Philomena McCann...

You're still prime suspects
4 January 2008, Rod Chaytor and Paul Byrne

...When Rebelo replaced boozy chief Goncalo Amaral in October the McCanns thought his review of the case would back them. But they were stunned to find his report still keeps them in the frame...


262 days missing and.. Maddy's blunder cop back on case
Sunday Mirror, 20 January 2008, Nick Owens and Grant Hodgson

...Goncalo Amaral - fired from the investigation after the Sunday Mirror exposed his long, boozy lunches - has held a string of meetings with new chief detective Paulo Rebelo.

The man who ran off with Maddy?
Sunday Mirror, 20 January 2008, Nick Owens and Grant Hodgson

...Lazy Goncalo Amaral - fired from the investigation after the Sunday Mirror exposed his long, boozy lunches - has held a string of meetings with new chief detective Paulo Rebelo...

Letter: Your say
Sunday Mirror, 27 January 2008, John McCafferty

...Portuguese cop Goncalo Amaral had long, boozy lunches when he was supposed to be heading the inquiry for missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann and was taken off the case, so why is he being...

McCanns blast top cop 's book
Star, 26 April 2008, Jerry Lawton

...Amaral was also overheard openly discussing the evidence during a boozy lunch...

'Lies' of Maddie parents
Sun, 26 April 2008, Antonella Lazzeri

... Goncalo Amaral, 48, who was booted off the case after five months, refuses to believe Gerry and Kate McCann had nothing to do with the tot's disappearance. He authorised their status as suspects, but was removed after allegedly enjoying boozy lunch breaks while leading the hunt in Portugal...

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

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

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

...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...

Is this the best way to help Maddie?
Mail, 26 July 2008

...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.

Dodgy trackers top a catalogue of police howlers
10 August 2008, Dean Rousewell

...Chief detective Goncalo Amaral , 47 - later thrown off the case after criticising British cops - was accused of taking boozy three-hour breaks...

Sacked cop chief to give Maddie talk
Daily Record, 11 January 2010

...Former police chief Goncalo Amaral was sacked after he criticised British police involvement in the case and was pictured having boozy lunches when he should have been working...

Portugal still pouring pain on the McCanns; They need our help
News of the World, 17 January 2010, Anna Smith


ALSO SEE:
ECU Ruling: East Midlands Today, BBC1 (East Midlands 12 January 2011

"On further examination, however, it became clear that Sr Amaral had been speaking Portuguese, and that an inoffensive phrase had been misconstrued. UPHELD"
...So it shouldn't be any surprise that disgraced detective Gonçalo Amaral spat, "F*** the McCanns," when asked if his book was hurting the couple

...This, remember, is a man who enjoyed boozy lunches when he should have been out looking for Maddie in those terrifying days after she went missing...

How shamed cop made a fortune spouting lies about Madeleine McCann's parents
Mirror, 12 February 2012
...Amaral, 52, led the investigation until October 2007 when he was removed for claiming British police were only helping with leads provided by the McCanns. During his stint heading the inquiry, the Sunday Mirror caught him enjoying regular boozy ­lunches, one of which lasted more than three hours...
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Adjetivos usados pela imprensa britânica para descrever a Gonçalo Amaral


Inglês para Português tradução do Google. Lamento - este é o melhor que posso fazer!
Adjetivos usados pela imprensa britânica para descrever a Gonçalo Amaral e / ou a polícia Português
(Fonte: Banco de dados Factiva):

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Portugal still pouring pain on the McCanns; They need our help


Portugal still pouring pain on the McCanns; They need our help
17 January 2010
The News of the World
Anna Smith



I DON'T know if we can stand much more of their public pain - and yet we must.

The agony on the faces of Kate and Gerry McCann is hard to watch as they run the gauntlet of hate in Portugal.

Against the bitter winter chill, they arrived for the court case to ban a truly evil book by a fat, useless ex-cop who was sacked for not doing his job.

So it shouldn't be any surprise that disgraced detective Gonçalo Amaral spat, "F*** the McCanns," when asked if his book was hurting the couple.

This is a man who is not just without morals or compassion. He is a greedy parasite who has fed off the the misery of a couple whose suffering never ends.

This, remember, is a man who enjoyed boozy lunches when he should have been out looking for Maddie in those terrifying days after she went missing.


Chancer

And he presided over a bungling police investigation that didn't just trample over crucial forensic evidence, but failed to set up road blocks within hours of Maddie's disappearance.

This chancer turns my stomach, just about as much as the sicko individuals who have so little to do in their twisted world that they set up a pressure group to heap more distress on the McCanns.

Led by retired solicitor Tony Bennett, a man who clearly has nothing better to do, their sick websites spout bile against the McCanns, alongside lurid pictures and cartoons that nobody in their right mind would ever associate themselves with.

And yet, despite appeals to MPs, Cabinet Ministers and the Attorney General, the website is still allowed to operate.

These weirdos will be rubbing their hands with glee at the agony Maddie's parents are suffering as they sit through the libel case in Portugal, hoping to prevent publication of Amaral's diatribe.

Whatever you think of this tragic case, if ever anyone has been punished for an error of judgement, it is Kate and Gerry McCann.

Of course they will never forgive themselves for leaving Madeleine alone in the apartment that night.

But nobody deserves to have reaped the whirlwind of hate on top of unimaginable suffering in the way they have. Finding Maddie is a crusade they will take to their graves and it has brought them to Portugal, once again clutching at straws.

They probably thought they could steel themselves for the court case, as they must have read the details of the police investigation a thousand times, hoping for something that may have been missed.

But from the look on the Mc-Canns' faces, sitting within the grim, cold walls of a courtroom as the details of cops' sniping unfolded, it has been much more painful than they anticipated.

No wonder heart specialist Gerry lost his cool under the aggressive questioning of the Portuguese Press.

Because the fact is, from day one, the Portuguese have never forgiven the McCanns.

Not for leaving their children alone in the holiday apartment while they ate dinner with friends nearby. No.

They have never forgiven them for one reason alone - because, when you think of Portugal now, you think of Madeleine McCann.

You think of a child being snatched from her bed.

You think of that day when Kate McCann walked into the police station to a barrage of cruel jibes and shouts from an ugly mob of locals.

Sponger

That is the image Portugal brings to so many of our minds.

Let's be honest - the Portuguese were more interested in the effect on the tourist trade than finding Maddie.

And when they turned on the couple, sponger Amaral saw a way of making some money after being sacked as a cop.

If any of the allegations in his book were founded on real evidence, you would be able to see the force of it.

But this is just a slapdash effort - designed to do nothing more than cash in.

We've even had wild allegations - denied by Gerry - that Kate dreamt Maddie's body was on a hillside, which convinced police she'd killed her.

If anything confirms for me that this bunch couldn't find their a***s in the dark, it is this.

We have watched the McCanns almost disintegrate in the last few years, and it has been very painful.

But we have to stick with them - because maybe, just maybe, Maddie is still alive out there somewhere.

After all, it wouldn't be the first time that a missing kid turned up years later.

So I, for one, pray that one day we can share their joy if Maddie returns.
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Sacked cop chief to give Maddie talk


Sacked cop chief to give Maddie talk
11 January 2010
Scottish Daily Record


McCanns' fury at invite

The cop who led the hunt for Madeleine McCann plans to visit the UK to talk about his claims that her parents are to blame for her disappearance.

Portuguese former police chief Goncalo Amaral also criticised British police involvement in the case.

And he was pictured enjoying boozy lunches when he should have been working. He was eventually sacked.

Next week, he will appear in a Lisbon court to fight a £1million libel action brought against him by Kate and Gerry McCann after he published a book accusing the couple of killing their daughter.

Now Amaral, 49, has been being invited to the annual conference of the Madeleine Foundation pressure group.

Their members believe she is dead and her parents bear some of the responsibility.

The McCanns have asked their lawyers to consider what action can be taken to prevent him speaking at the gathering, near Nottingham, at the end of next month.

The couple already have a High Court injunction banning the foundation's secretary Tony Bennett from making any allegations about Madeleine's disappearance.

Sources close to the McCanns said the couple were "deeply concerned" about the conference - due to be held on February 27 and 28 at The Liberal Club in Melbourne, Derbyshire - and the invite to Amaral.

He was put in charge of the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance in May 2007 , a few days before her fourth birthday, during a family holiday in Praia Da Luz, Portugal.

He was the one who authorised their status as arguidos, or official suspects.

But he was removed from his post after five months and then retired.

His 224-page book, Maddie - The Truth Of The Lie, was published in July last year.
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Sacked cop chief to give Maddie talk


Sacked cop chief to give Maddie talk
11 January 2010
Scottish Daily Record

McCanns' fury at invite

The controversial cop who led the Madeleine McCann investigation has been invited to the UK to speak about his belief that her parents were to blame for her disappearance.

Former police chief Goncalo Amaral was sacked after he criticised British police involvement in the case and was pictured having boozy lunches when he should have been working.

Next week he will appear in a Lisbon court to fight a £1million libel action brought against him by Kate and Gerry McCann after he published a book accusing the couple of killing the youngster.

But Amaral, 49, intends to speak about his views again after being invited to the annual conference of the Madeleine Foundation pressure group. Their members believe the missing three-year-old is dead and her parents bear some responsibility.

The McCanns have asked lawyers to consider action to stop Amaral speaking at the conference near Nottingham and the end of next month.

The couple already have High Court injunction banning the foundation's secretary Tony Bennett from making allegations about Madeleine's disappearance.

Sources close to the McCanns say the couple are "deeply concerned" about the group's conference and their invite to Amaral.

The meeting is due to be held on February 27 and 28 at The Liberal Club in Melbourne, Derbyshire.

Amaral was put in charge of the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance in May 2007 in Praia Da Luz, Portugal, and authorised their status as arguidos, or official suspects.

But he was removed from his post after five months, and then retired.

His 224-page book, Maddie - The Truth Of The Lie, was published in July last year.
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Dodgy trackers top a catalogue of police howlers


Dodgy trackers top a catalogue of police howlers
10 August 2008
People
Dean Rousewell


EXCLUSIVE DOGGED BY BLUNDERS

BUNGLING Portuguese cops used DUFF sniffer dogs in the search for missing Madeleine McCann.

The animals had only been trained to follow scents in the countryside - yet four-year-old Maddie vanished from her family's holiday apartment a busy TOWN.

And the trackers weren't brought in for five days after the tot disappeared - even though experts said they should have been there within 48 hours.

When the dogs did finally arrive in Praia da Luz, they gave up the hunt after just 100 yards because they were confused by the stench of rotting food from a pile of binbags.

The appalling blunder is revealed in a damning report by Portuguese state prosecutors.

And it is just one of a catalogue of disastrous gaffes by detectives after the toddler went missing from the Ocean Club complex on May 3 last year.

The bungles began almost as soon as Maddie was reported lost.

Blood specks in her bedroom were missed by Portuguese police - only to be found by British cops when they were drafted in three months later.

Bedding was not forensically tested for traces of an abductor.

Cops failed to seal off the flat in the hours after the disappearance.

No fingertip search of local streets was carried out at the time - and house-to-house inquiries were not launched for 48 hours.

Two days passed before police got a list of other holidaymakers at the complex - by which time many of them had already flown home.

Border guards were only alerted about Maddie after 24 hours and coastguards were told nothing for 14 hours.

The catastrophic blunders continued after the shambles with the dogs.

Detectives spent hours poring over footprints found at the scene - which turned out to belong to policemen.

Forensic samples sent for analysis contained ash from cops' cigarettes.

Chief detective Goncalo Amaral, 47 - later thrown off the case after criticising British cops - was accused of taking boozy three-hour breaks.

Police only declared the McCanns' holiday flat a crime scene after two months - allowing 11 other tourists to contaminate vital evidence. And cops leaked stories to local media about Maddie's parents Kate and Gerry and British ex-pat Robert Murat, who were all named official suspects.

The prosecutors said: "Investigators worked with an enormous margin of error and achieved very little in terms of conclusive results, especially with regards to the fate of the unfortunate child."

The sniffer dog revelation infuriated Kate and Gerry, who were only recently ruled out as suspects.

A family friend said last night: "It is heartbreaking for them - but sadly it will be no surprise."
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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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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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'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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'Lies' of Maddie parents


'Lies' of Maddie parents
26 April 2008
The Sun
Antonella Lazzeri


The disgraced cop who led the search for Maddie McCann has written a money spinning book - pointing the finger at her parents.

Goncalo Amaral, 48, who was booted off the case after five months, refuses to believe Gerry and Kate McCann had nothing to do with the tot's disappearance.

He authorised their status as suspects, but was removed after allegedly enjoying boozy lunch breaks while leading the hunt in Portugal.

Amaral's book True Lies accuses Maddie's parents of dumping her body at sea after accidentally killing her. He says British police were too close to the couple and did not follow up leads he suggested.

His lawyer Paulo Santos said of the book: "It's not speculative, but factual."

But the McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We are not surprised at this.

"It is sad that people feel the need to make money out of Madeleine."
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McCanns blast top cop's book


McCanns blast top cop's book
26 April 2008
Daily Star
Jerry Lawton

Plan to cash in on Madeleine case


The boozy detective sacked from the Madeleine McCann inquiry is to publish a book about the case.

Her parents have branded the move "despicable".

Goncalo Amaral, 48, spent five months in charge of the inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance in Praia da Luz, Portugal, on May 3 last year, two days before her fourth birthday.

He was sacked after criticising British police, claiming they were too sympathetic towards Madeleine's parents Gerry, 39, and Kate, 40.

Amaral was also overheard openly discussing the evidence during a boozy lunch.

He has now written his own account of the case under the title True Lies. The McCanns were said to be "horrified".

Their spokesman Clarence Mitchell warned: "Kate and Gerry's lawyers will be among the first to study this book."
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Letter: Your say


Letter: Your Say
John McCafferty
27 January 2008
The Sunday Mirror


INCOMPETENT Portuguese cop Goncalo Amaral had long, boozy lunches when he was supposed to be heading the inquiry for missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann and was taken off the case, so why is he being put back on it?

He should have been sacked. Now the McCanns are stuck with a police officer who, I fear, couldn't find a missing child if she were in front of him. Haven't they suffered enough? - John McCafferty, Glasgow
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The man who ran off with Maddy?


The man who ran off with Maddy?
20 January 2008
The Sunday Mirror
Nick Owens and Grant Hodgson


EXCLUSIVE
Hunt for Madeleine: Day 262 First image of suspect


This is the face of a stalker now believed to have snatched Madeleine McCann. The image is a former FBI artist's impression based on a detailed description given by a key British witness.

It clearly reveals the features of a moustachioed man - who was carrying a little girl in pink pyjamas, believed to be four-year-old Maddie.

The original photofit issued by Portuguese police showed only a round egg-shaped head and blank face and was widely criticised as being useless.

The new picture, which was last night welcomed by the McCanns, is seen as a breakthrough.

It was carefully put together after interviews with 50-year-old holidaymaker Gail Cooper - viewed as a credible witness by key figures in the inquiry.

The healthcare worker was staying just 600 yard from the McCanns' apartments and claims to have seen the mystery stalker in the picture on three occasions.

He is thought to be aged between 38 and 45. He has sallow skin, lank dark hair, large teeth and a distinctive droopy moustache.

The suspect, who is said to have spoken in broken English, knocked on the door of Mrs Cooper's apartment claiming to be collecting for charity.

Mrs Cooper, from Newark, Notts, said: "He made my blood run cold - he gave me the creeps "My judgment is that this man was very suspicious and could have been the kidnapper."

A few days later Mrs Cooper and her husband saw the same man lurking near a group of youngsters from the Mark Warner Ocean Club on the beach. "He looked odd and out of place," said Mrs Cooper, who told police of her concerns days after Maddie vanished.

Last night the McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We urgently need to know who this man is and where he is."

But the two 39-year-old doctors from Rothley, Leics, have been dealt a blow by police chiefs in the resort of Praia da Luz who are bringing back the disgraced cop sacked from the inquiry to return to work on the case.

Lazy Goncalo Amaral - fired from the investigation after the Sunday Mirror exposed his long, boozy lunches - has held a string of meetings with new chief detective Paulo Rebelo.

And in a secret summit the pair have agreed he would be welcomed back on to the team responsible for finding out what happened to Madeleine, who vanished 262 days ago.

Amaral, 47, was leading the team when the investigation dramatically switched to put the couple in the frame.

A source said: "This will feel like a step back for Kate and Gerry.

"Amaral and Rebelo have been meeting regularly after he was kicked off the case and they are constantly talking on the phone.

"They have swapped notes and discussed various leads at length.

At times Amaral has been Rebelo's right-hand man. A lot of things that Rebelo has done since then has been on the advice of Amaral.

"The pair have become close and Rebelo thinks it will help having Amaral back as part of his team."

The source said Amaral, who has been working in Lisbon since his removal from the team, is desperate to return to Praia da Luz, the resort where Madeleine was taken.

The source added: "He really wants to work on the case again and has insisted he will be on his best behaviour and work hard."

Amaral was the main reason Kate and Gerry were named as suspects, despite there not being a shred of evidence that the couple were involved. He was eventually fired after launching a scathing attack on them in a Portuguese newspaper.

'He made my blood run cold'

 
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262 days missing and.. Maddy's blunder cop back on case


262 days missing and.. Maddy's blunder cop back on case
20 January 2008
The Sunday Mirror
Nick Owens and Grant Hodgson


EXCLUSIVE Cruel blow for Kate & Gerry

The disgraced cop who was sacked from the Madeleine McCann inquiry is to RETURN to work on the case.

Lazy Goncalo Amaral - fired from the investigation after the Sunday Mirror exposed his long, boozy lunches - has held a string of meetings with new chief detective Paulo Rebelo.

And in a secret summit the pair have agreed he would be welcomed back on to the team responsible for finding out what happened to four-year-old Madeleine, who vanished 262 days ago.

The move will be a massive blow to parents Kate and Gerry.

Amaral, 47, was leading the team when the investigation dramatically switched to put the couple in the frame.

A source said: "This will feel like a step back for Kate and Gerry.

"Amaral and Rebelo have been meeting regularly after he was kicked off the case and they are constantly talking on the phone.

"They have swapped notes and discussed various leads at length. At times Amaral has been Rebelo's right-hand man. A lot of things that Rebelo has done since then has been on the advice of Amaral.

"The pair have become close and Rebelo thinks it will help having Amaral back as part of his team."

The source said Amaral, who has been working in Lisbon since his removal from the team, is desperate to return to Praia da Luz, the resort where Madeleine was taken.

The source added: "He really wants to work on the case again and has insisted he will be on his best behaviour and work hard."

The move to bring back Amar is a sure sign the current team of police looking for Madeleine are desperately short of leads.

It will be heartbreaking for 39-year-old doctors Kate and Gerry because sources close to the investigation believe Amaral quickly convinced himself - and colleagues - that their child was dead. Amaral was the main reason Kate and Gerry were named as suspects, despite there not being a shred of evidence that the couple were involved. He was eventually fired after launching a scathing attack on them in a Portuguese newspaper.

A Sunday Mirror investigation exposed Amaral's work on the case as incompetent and lazy.

Instead of leading his team of 30 detectives, the chief inspector often took long boozy lunches, sometimes spending three hours guzzling wine and beer in restaurants in Praia da Luz.

It meant he sometimes worked for just four-and-a-half hours a day on the case.

Amaral disgracefully ignored most of 252 tip-offs of possible sighting of Maddy because he was convinced she was dead.

In a conversation with a Portuguese racing driver, he was heard saying he was sure the girl was dead even though there was no indication that she was.

He told ex-Formula One star Pedro Lamy he believed the McCanns drugged Madeleine to keep her quiet, killing her accidentally.

Amaral reportedly said: "The police case is we are sure the parents killed Madeleine. They are doctors and know about drugs. We are confident in our case."

One of the group involved in the conversation even said he believed the couple could have taken cocaine on the night Madeleine disappeared.

The conversation was a flagrant breach of judicial secrecy rules which have stopped Kate and Gerry from defending themselves against leaks and fake information.

Amaral, who has a young daughter of his own, has also been accused of concealing evidence that a team of his officers beat a confession out of a Portuguese woman who was jailed for the murder of her missing eight-year-old daughter.

'He is convinced she is dead'
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You're still prime suspects


You're still prime suspects
4 January 2008
Mirror
Rod Chaytor and Paul Byrne


McCanns' fury at police chief's report

Kate and Gerry McCann were furious last night after learning they are still prime suspects in daughter Madeleine's disappearance.

Their hopes of being cleared today were crushed when police boss Paulo Rebelo asked a judge to extend their arguido status as officers stick to the theory that they accidentally killed the four-year-old.

When Rebelo replaced boozy chief Goncalo Amaral in October the McCanns thought his review of the case would back them. But they were stunned to find his report still keeps them in the frame.

And their anger was compounded when the pair heard police also want Robert Murat to remain an official suspect over claims he was involved in Madeleine's kidnap. A friend of the McCanns, both 39, said: "The police can't have it both ways."

Their spokesman Clarence Mitchell added: "They are frustrated and angry. They know they're innocent."

Madeleine vanished from Praia da Luz eight months ago today. Under Portuguese law arguidos can ask to be cleared or charged after that time.

But the McCanns fear they could now be left with a cloud of suspicion hanging over them for years after a new police file was handed to a judge claiming they were still in the frame - despite a lack of evidence.

Mr Mitchell added: "This latest report, if it exists, was an opportunity to move forward and for them to be cleared. They feel a degree of anger and upset because whenever such an opportunity arises it appears to be squandered."

National Union of Portuguese Judges president Antonio Martins warned the McCanns could face a lengthy wait to clear their name. He added: "The problem at the moment is that no one knows what type of crime was committed. For homicide, suspects can still be tried for up to 20 years after the crime was committed."

Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manha said the police file asked the judge to lengthen the "secrecy of justice" period in the case.

The couple's friend said: "As we understand it, the report talks about the police's continued belief that Madeleine died accidentally in the apartment and that is why Kate and Gerry remain arguidos. But it also talks about Murat remaining an arguido and it discusses the possibility of her being abducted." Expat Murat, 34, denies involvement.

Correio da Manha also claimed Kate and Gerry, of Rothley, Leics, could be charged with perjury and wasting police time.

They have been warned by their legal team they they may have to go to the European Court of Human Rights to get their arguido status lifted.
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