The purpose of this site is for information and a record of Gerry McCann's Blog Archives. As most people will appreciate GM deleted all past blogs from the official website. Hopefully this Archive will be helpful to anyone who is interested in Justice for Madeleine Beth McCann. Many Thanks, Pamalam

Note: This site does not belong to the McCanns. It belongs to Pamalam. If you wish to contact the McCanns directly, please use the contact/email details campaign@findmadeleine.com    

2008: July key Events - Days (425-455) *

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NEWS REPORTS INDEX MCCANN PJ FILES NEWS MAY 2007
 
All the important events from July 2008

All the key events from July 2008
July 2007 (Days 59-89)
August 2007 (Days 90-120)
September 2007 (Days 121-150)
October 2007 (Days 151-181)
November 2007 (Days 182-211)
December 2007 (Days 212-242)
January 2008 (Days 243-273)
February 2008 (Days 274-302)
March 2008 (Days 303-333)
April 2008 (Days 334-363)
May 2008 (Days 364-394)
June 2008 (Days 395-424)
July 2008 (Days 425-455)
August 2008 (Days 456-486)
September 2008 (Days 487-516) 
October 2008 (Days 517-547)
November 2008 (Days 548-Date)
Date
Day
Event
Tuesday
01 July 2008
425
Three Portuguese newspapers report that the case files are expected to be archived. The UK media pick up on this and claim the case is about to be 'dropped'.
Read reports/watch videos by clicking here
 
*
 
Police chief is now free 24horas
 
Gonçalo Amaral retired since midnight, to "savour freedom of expression"
 
Tuesday 01 July 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
The controversial coordinator, who was removed from the Maddie case, says he "leaves proud" and that he is not "hurt". His last action was delivering the service mobile phone
 
The PJ's coordinator, Gonçalo Amaral, who was removed from the Maddie case over an opinion offence, is, from today onwards, a free man. At midnight, he went into retirement and, according to what he told 24horas yesterday, his first day "is going to be beautiful, with plenty to do and the ability to savour the plenitude of his freedom of expression".
 
Just enigmatic enough, Gonçalo Amaral, aged 49, had his last day at the PJ yesterday, "a perfectly normal day". He arrived early, finished the operation into the process that lead, over the weekend, to the apprehension of two and a half tons of hashish and the detention of six traffickers, and dispatched a few more cases. Before lunch, which lasted from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m., the controversial coordinator of criminal investigation delivered his duty pistol, his badge and his card at the Faro Directory. At the end of the day, around 5.30 p.m., he delivered his service mobile phone.
 
In the evening, he hosted an "intimate dinner, with two colleagues that came from Lisbon into the Algarve on purpose".
 
In the investigation
 
In a statement to 24horas, Gonçalo Amaral revealed that the future includes "continuing to work in the area of criminal investigation, maybe as a consultant". "But not as a detective", he guaranteed. At the same time, the coordinator who is now retired from the PJ is going to carry out a stay at an Algarvian law office, in order to "maybe exercise [law]" within a year.
 
Gonçalo Amaral is also going to take advantage of his retirement to "dedicate more time to his wife and children" and assured that, despite everything, he does not leave the PJ with hurt feelings, because the institution and its servants deserve him "the utmost respect". "I leave, proud of having served the PJ and of having worked with very good people, excellent professionals that still remain here".
 
This, despite him confiding to 24horas, in a reference to the controversial Maddie case, that "many people remained upset" with him in Portimão.
 
Maddie book "is ready"
 
Gonçalo Amaral, who spent 28 years at the Polícia Judiciária, which he entered as an agent in 1981, having passed through many different departments, revealed to 24horas that the book about the Maddie case "is ready". It was written during his brief holidays, before he returned to the PJ in May, to leave now into retirement. But the publication depends on the "judicial secrecy" which was not lifted yet. The book promises fabulous sales figures, both in Portugal and abroad, mainly in Great Britain.
 
Gonçalo Amaral speaks of pressures in the Maddie case 
 
RTP Video (Short 'taster' for 30 Minutos programme, Portuguese language)
 
2008-07-01 
 
Gonçalo Amaral speaks of pressures in the Maddie case
 
Former coordinator for the investigation of the Madeleine case said pressures existed around the process of the case for it never to be solved. Gonçalo Amaral says that the presence of the officer Clarence Mitchell is proof of that and argued that neither researchers nor directors should be afraid of working.
 
30 Minutos programme (Click 'Video WMV' link beside 2008.07.01)

Wednesday
02 July 2008
426
UK newspapers continue to report that the case files are expected to be archived. The Portuguese newspapers emphasise that no decision has yet been made whether to charge the McCanns. Read reports by clicking here
 
*

Método 3 launch new website www.metodo3.es/engl (English version)
 
The Spanish detective agency, hired by the McCanns in September last year, have, so far, been paid a substantial sum from Madeleine's Fund to find Madeleine and bring her home. The exact amount remains the subject of speculation.
 
On their newly revamped website, they state that 'The Directive Staff is composed by different and complementary profiles to provide maximum professionalism in every action field', yet not one director can boast any skill or experience in child abduction. Or, indeed, missing people of any age. Two of them do not even possess a Private Detective Licence.
 
The 7 directors of the company, and their declared specialities, are:
 
1. Marita Fernández Lado, is Método 3 founder. She is currently the General Manager, and also gives conferences and lessons, like "fight against the fraud" at the INESE, or a speech at the I Congress of Civil Responsibility at the Bar Association in Barcelona. Private Detective Licence Nº: 1.153,
 
2. Francisco Marco Fernández, is the Services and Quality Director. Doctor in criminal law by the Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, he is also member of the Intercomunitary Association of Private Detectives, Master specialist in laws for societies, speaker at many university lessons and author of several legal books for the Aranzadi Editorial. Private Detective Licence Nº: 769.,
 
3. Francisco Marco Puyuelo, is Método 3 Administration and Writing Director. Attorney member of the Madrid and Barcelona Bar Associations, he also graduated as a graphologist at the Modern School in Buenos Aires. He is currently working as the Administration Manager and Legal Consultant. Private Detective Licence Nº: 539,
 
4. José Luís Marco Llavina is Director of the financial department. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration, majoring in Finance, from Bentley College (Mass., USA) and a Master's degree in Business Administration – SAP from La Salle (Barcelona, Spain).,  
 
5. Antonio Tamarit Febrero, Master Specialist in Fraud Investigation and Director of the agency Método 3 in Madrid. He managed the company Tamesfor until he started working in Método 3 in 1998. Private Detective Licence Nº: 695
 
7. Elisenda Villena Barjau, Private Detective specialized in Criminology and Security Director. She created and directed the detectives agency EVB from 1989 to 2006, year of fusion with Método 3.
 
Eagle-eyed readers will notice that despite the final director being posted at No. 7, there are actually only 6 directors listed. One hopes that Método 3's accounts show greater attention to detail.
 
So, what services can Método 3 supply to their clients?
 
The following are listed: Insurances, Financial, Legal, Franchises, Frauds, Mutual (Fraud) and Fakes (Brand Fraud).
 
They declare: 'Our motto and objective is to invest all our efforts and dreams on the creation and development of a European detectives association to fight against fraud'.
 
The company may well be well meaning in their attempts to locate Madeleine but, it has to be said, if the McCanns had handpicked a detective agency that offered absolutely no obvious experience or skills in locating their missing daughter they could not have chosen better.
 
There is not one mention of Madeleine McCann anywhere on their site.

Thursday
03 July 2008
427
Madeleine case "is not closed" says Attorney General Portugal Resident
 
By Daisy Sampson 
03 July 2008
 
PORTUGAL'S ATTORNEY General has said no decision has been taken on the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
 
Fernando Pinto Monteiro said the case continued to be assessed, despite Portuguese media reports on Tuesday that police will close it due to lack of evidence.
 
Madeleine's parents, Gerry and Kate McCann, are both arguidos, or people of interest to the investigation, along with Briton Robert Murat.
 
Mr Monteiro said the final report from the Policia Judiciaria (PJ) had been received by prosecutors, and it "will be the object of careful analysis and consideration".
 
He added: "Public prosecutors will proceed to the overall analysis to determine whether or not other action is necessary or whether the conditions are sufficient to rule that the investigation be closed and a final ruling made."
 
The statement noted that the case remained covered by judicial secrecy until mid-August.
 
The Correio da Manha newspaper said on Tuesday that sources within Portugal's judicial police said they "do not have sufficient evidence to allow formal charges to be brought against the McCanns in the disappearance of their daughter".
 
The Jornal de Noticias said the police did not have enough evidence to charge either the McCanns or Mr Murat with any wrongdoing. "The police have not found the guilty," the paper added.

A spokesman for the PJ told The Resident: "We are aware of the situation. However, we do not know the origin of the information and claims in the Portuguese media. We are now looking into the claims."

Private searches

McCann family spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, told the BBC the family was awaiting confirmation of the latest media reports and if true, the Portuguese authorities "must lift their arguido status as a priority".

"If they are true, it's to be welcomed that Kate and Gerry are not to face any charges," he said. "It's quite right. They are innocent of any involvement in Madeleine's disappearance. They have suffered enough."
 
Mr Mitchell said the family wanted to know whether police planned to stop searching for Madeleine and if so, their information should be made public so the McCanns could continue their private investigation.

"What happens to all those leads, all those contacts? There are thousands of pieces of information in those files," he said.
 
The McCanns are due to go to the High Court on Monday to ask a judge to order some police files on the disappearance of their daughter to be released.

Robert Murat's lawyer, Francisco Pagarete, said he had heard nothing from the Portuguese authorities about the case being closed.
 
Asked whether he would welcome such a development, Mr Pagarete said: "Yes, we will, but it depends on the way it's going to be dropped. If it’s going to be dropped because there’s not enough evidence connecting my client to this case or if it’s going to be dropped because Robert hasn’t got any involvement in this case. Only the second way will make us happy."

The Resident contacted Robert Murat, who said: "If this is true it would be fantastic but nobody has told me anything," he said. "This has been said so many times to me we will just have to wait and see what happens."

Meanwhile, Gonçalo Amaral, the inspector formerly responsible for coordinating the Madeleine McCann investigation, retired on Monday. He told Portuguese news agency Lusa: "The only way I can acquire freedom of expression is to leave the police."
 
McCanns' new tecs to probe cop files Daily Star
 
By Jerry Lawton
3rd July 2008
 
THE McCanns have hired more private detectives.
 
They will analyse secret police files the couple are determined to get their hands on.
 
GP Kate and heart consultant Gerry's new Brit-based investigators will work alongside Metodo 3 – the Spanish-based agency employed to find their daughter Madeleine nine months ago.
 
Portuguese police have kept details of their 14-month probe secret.
 
But the McCanns' lawyers will demand case files are handed over if the police close the investigation. The lawyers claim the couple have a right to the files so they can conduct their own search for their daughter.
 
The files include all witness statements and evidence collected since three-year-old Madeleine's disappearance from her holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, on May 3 last year.
 
Detectives have passed them to prosecutors but, according to police leaks in Portugal, they do not have enough evidence to charge anyone.
 
They plan to archive the case as unsolved and keep details of their investigation secret in case new evidence arises and it is re-opened.
 
But the McCanns, both 40, from Rothley, Leics, insist they should be shown the files so they can carry on searching for Madeleine.
 
The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell last night told the Daily Star: "We are widening and deepening the investigative resources. Kate and Gerry will be doing everything within their power to get their hands on the police files they believe could help in the search for their daughter."

Friday
04 July 2008
428
McCanns listed to appear in court on Monday HMCS
 
Court 20
Before MRS JUSTICE HOGG
Monday, 7 July, 2008
At 10:30 AM
IN OPEN COURT
FD07P01121 McCann
Applications/Summonses in Court as in Chambers
FD06P01276
 
*
 
Related press report:
 
'The case is listed to be heard in open court on July 7 in the Family Division of the High Court in London, and is expected to be contested by Leicestershire Police, according to legal sources.' Telegraph
 
Madeleine McCann: I am convinced she is dead, says former Portuguese police chief Telegraph
 
By Nick Allen 
 
The former Portuguese police chief who led the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann has said he is "convinced" she is dead.
 
Goncalo Amaral said: "I am convinced of it, yes,"
 
Mr Amaral, 48, was removed from the case last October after publicly criticising British police.
 
He said today: "I am not saying that the English police were under the command of the McCanns, but they were influenced, as we were.
 
"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."
 
Mr Amaral retired earlier this week, saying he wanted to have "freedom of expression" over the case.
 
He described the decision to remove him from the investigation as "unjust and dangerous" and is expected to publish a book as soon as judicial secrecy restrictions are lifted, probably in mid-August.
 
Portuguese police have already closed their investigation.
 
The final case report has been passed to the Portuguese authorities who are due to review the completed file and decide if further action is required.
 
Madeleine went missing in May 2007, days before her fourth birthday, from a holiday flat in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz as her parents dined at a nearby restaurant.
 
The McCann family and the British media have strongly criticised the Portuguese judicial police's handling of the investigation and Amaral's lack of communication.
 
Amaral subsequently claimed that British police had "been investigating leads created and cultivated" by Madeleine's parents and had "forgotten that the couple are suspects in the death of their daughter."

Saturday
05 July 2008
429
McCanns will take British police to court Daily Mirror
 
By Rod Chaytor

Sunday
06 July 2008
430
Shameful The People
 
EXCLUSIVE Fury at Maddie smear Sick claim in cop's book
 
By David Jeffs Assistant Editor
6 July 2008
 
Madeleine McCann's parents last night angrily denied shameful allegations from a disgraced former Portuguese cop linking them to her death.
 
Ex-Chief Inspector Goncalo Amaral, who was leading the Maddie inquiry until he was sacked, said she died in the family's holiday FLAT.
 
And he claimed he was on the verge of bringing a potential key new WITNESS to Portugal on the day he was fired.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "It's a great shame that Mr Amaral is saying these things. He should have found Madeleine as the police officer in charge.
 
"They are angry. But it has got to the stage of weary resignation."
 
Amaral was kicked off the case after five months for criticising British police following the disappearance of Maddie, then three, in Praia da Luz on May 3, 2007.
 
In an amazing outburst, he said on Portuguese TV: "It's not that she was killed in the apartment, but she died there. The parents were suspects and there were indications which made them suspects." And Amaral, 48, also told the Portuguese newspaper Expresso yesterday: "On the day I was sacked, I was taking steps to bring a key witness to Portugal.
 
"The PJ (Judicial Police) had to pay travel and accommodation and that was being sorted. But afterwards the important witness never came to Portugal and was never interviewed."
 
Mr Mitchell hit back: "It's a great shame that people seem more interested in making money out of Madeleine's disappearance instead of helping the search for her."
 
Amaral has written a book about the investigation called True Lies, which he plans to publish once a judicial secrecy order is lifted.
 
It was also reported yesterday that doctors Kate and Gerry, both 40, from Rothley, Leics, could be charged with neglecting Madeleine.
 
Last week the couple said they hope to be cleared as arguidos (official suspects) following the end of the 14-month police investigation.
 
But prosecutors must legally consider bringing charges after receiving the final police report last week. Cops found NO evidence that the McCanns were involved in their daughter's disappearance.
 
But the 50-page report leaves the couple open to charges of abandonment, the newspaper Correio da Manha claimed. They could be jailed for five years if convicted.
 
The report points out that they left Maddie and twins Sean and Amelie, then two, alone while they went out for dinner.
 
And it claims there are inconsistencies in accounts of the evening by the McCanns and their friends - the so-called Tapas Nine.
 
Mr Mitchell commented: "We wait to hear from the prosecutor. It will be most vigorously defended if it ever comes to that."
 
The report is also said to reveal "new and serious" doubts about the McCanns' claim Maddie was abducted. They strenuously deny neglecting their children.
 
Kate and Gerry may learn tomorrow if they have won a legal bid for access to UK police case files to help their search for Maddie.
 
Police: Maddie did die in flat Metro
 
Sunday, July 6, 2008
 
Missing Madeleine McCann could not have been abducted, Portuguese police are said to have concluded.
 
The final police report suggests the youngster died in the family's holiday apartment in Praia Da Luz on the Algarve, it was claimed.
 
Police have no evidence the youngster's parents, Gerry and Kate McCann, were involved in the disappearance of their daughter on May 3 last year.
 
The couple, who strongly deny having a hand in her possible death, say they last saw Madeleine when they left the three-year-old sleeping in the flat while they went out for dinner.
 
But an exhaustive 13-month investigation showed it was 'theoretically impossible' the youngster was abducted, the newspaper Correio da Manha said.
 
Forensic tests on the apartment's window, through which an abductor might have carried Madeleine, revealed no traces of the girl.
 
The McCanns, both 40-year-old doctors from Rothley, Leicestershire, were made suspects in the case in September. They were unavailable for comment.

Monday
07 July 2008
431
Carter Ruck will advise 'Tapas 7' The Independent
 
By Tom Peck and Robert Verkaik
Monnday, 7 July 2008
 
Four months after Gerry and Kate McCann won apologies and a £550,000 libel pay out from four newspapers for "grotesque and grossly defamatory" articles concerning the disappearance of their daughter, Madeleine, seven friends of the couple have employed the same lawyers to act against at least one national newspaper.
 
The Carter Ruck libel firm is advising the so-called "Tapas Seven" group who were with the McCanns on the evening of Madeleine's disappearance in May 2007 in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz. Matthew Oldfield, Rachel Oldfield, Russell O'Brien, Jane Tanner, David Payne, Fiona Payne and Diane Webster are in talks with the Carter Ruck partner Adam Tudor, with action expected within weeks.
 
Mr Tudor, who acted for the McCanns, yesterday commented: "I can confirm I and my firm are advising the seven friends." He declined to elaborate or specify which newspaper they were considering suing.
 
At the centre of possible action would be suggestions that the friends kept a "pact of silence" in their dealings with police, and that they refused to take part in a reconstruction of the night Madeleine disappeared.
 
Tears as Kate calls Maddie witness The Sun
 
EXCLUSIVE By ANTONELLA LAZZERI
Published: Today
 
THE mum of missing Madeleine McCann has made a tearful call to a holidaymaker who reported a man acting suspiciously before her daughter disappeared.
 
Paul Gordon, 32, said a “creepy” man asked him for cash when he was staying in Praia da Luz, Portugal, last year.
 
The man approached him when he was renting the flat from where Madeleine, then three, was snatched the next week.
 
Kate McCann, 40, begged him to give his evidence to the Spanish private investigators probing the case for her.
 
But the brewery manager, of Fareham, Hants, said no as he had already spoken to police.
 
Portuguese cops have refused to release Mr Gordon’s e-fit of the man, saying it may prejudice a future court case.
 
Meanwhile lawyers for Kate and husband Gerry, 39, of Rothley, Leics, will try to force British cops to release their information on Maddie at London’s High Court today.
 
No snatch of Maddie say cops Daily Mirror
 
Title later amended to: Portuguese police to rule out Madeleine McCann abduction theory
 
HUNT
 
By Stephen White
7/07/2008
 
Portuguese police have decided that Madeleine McCann could not have been abducted, it was claimed yesterday.
 
They believe the youngster died in her family's rented holiday flat in Praia da Luz.
 
The newspaper Correio da Manha said a 50-page report, handed to prosecutors last week, reveals "new and strong doubts" about Gerry and Kate McCanns' claim that their daughter was snatched.
 
But police admit they have no evidence the couple were involved in Madeleine's disappearance.
 
The report describes the steps police took trying to find Madeleine, who was three when she vanished last year.
 
That included studying hundreds of holiday photographs, investigating dozens of sex offenders and searching more than 400 houses.
 
The final report makes no recommendations to the public prosecutor.
 
McCanns may face neglect charge while Spanish police claim kidnap was 'impossible' Daily Mail
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 10:06 AM on 07th July 2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann could be charged with neglecting their missing daughter Madeleine, according to new claims.
 
A Portuguese tabloid newspaper says the final police report on the case leaves open the possibility of the McCanns being charged with abandoning Madeleine and their two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie.
 
The Correio da Manha newpaper says the report also claims it was 'theoretically impossible' for the toddler to have been snatched from the family's Algarve holiday apartment, as her parents insist.
 
The charge carries a maximum ten-year jail sentence, but only if it were proved the doctors from Rothley, Leicestershire, both 40, intended to neglect the children which they strenuously deny.
 
Madeleine disappeared on May 3 last year, nine days before her fourth birthday.
 
The McCanns had left the children in the apartment while they dined with friends at a tapas restaurant 50 yards away.
 
Four months after she vanished, both Mr and Mrs McCann were named official suspects or 'arguidos' by Portuguese police.
 
They have always denied having any involvement in her disappearance and have led an international campaign to find her.
 
Last week, it was reported that Portuguese detectives were set to close their investigation, with no charges brought against any of the three named suspects: the McCanns and Robert Murat, a British expat.
 
Meanwhile, the couple are going to the High Court in Britain today to try and force Leicestershire Police to reveal documents on the case.
 
They want the files so that their own private investigators can use them in their search for Madeleine.
 
The McCanns are not expected to be at the hearing because it is understood they are on their first family holiday with their other children, twins Sean and Amelie, since the fateful trip to Portugal last year.
 
Kate McCann's 'tearful call to witness, begging him to give evidence' revealed as couple make legal bid for police files Daily Mail
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 10:07 AM on 07th July 2008
 
The mother of Madeleine McCann made a desperate plea to a holidaymaker to give evidence about a man seen acting suspiciously before Madeleine appeared, it has emerged.
 
Details of the tearful phone call were revealed as Kate and Gerry McCann were taking their battle to force British police to release information on the three-year-old's disappearance to the High Court.
 
Kate McCann is said to have rung Paul Gordon in tears two weeks ago to beg him to give a statement to the private investigators she and husband Gerry hired to hunt for their daughter.
 
Mr Gordon, 34, who rented the same apartment in Praia da Luz as the McCanns a week earlier, confronted a stranger outside the flat who claimed to be a charity collector.
 
He gave a statement to police at the time and a photofit image compiled from his description of the man was created, but the picture was never released.
 
Mrs McCann allegedly wanted him to supply a fresh statement and photofit to private investigators searching for Madeleine but her request was apparently turned down.
 
A police source said Mr Gordon, from Fareham, Hampshire, had turned down the plea because he had already given a statement about the prowler to Leicestershire Police.
 
The source said Mrs McCann was 'apparently in tears during the whole conversation'.
 
His evidence is part of the details the McCanns hope Leicestershire Police will be forced to release by the High Court.
 
The couple, who are both 40, are not expected to attend today's hearing in London before Mrs Justice Hogg.
 
It is thought they and their twins, Sean and Amelie, have gone on holiday for the first time since Madeleine disappeared.
 
The hearing is scheduled to take place in the High Court's family division, although it will be held in open court.
 
Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns' spokesman, said: 'Kate and Gerry have made an application for the disclosure of certain documents relating to the case.
 
'It's clearly a matter for Mrs Justice Hogg to assess and decide, but we hope a decision will become clear during the hearing.'
 
Madeleine, then just three, vanished from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz on May 3 last year.
 
This section added at 10:13 AM update:
 
Four months later, her parents were both made formal suspects in her disappearance. They have always strenuously denied any involvement.
 
Last week, it was claims Portuguese detectives had ended their 14-month investigation and had found no evidence against the McCanns or the only other formal suspect, British ex-pat Robert Murat.
 
The couple demanded their names be cleared following the claims and were said to be hoping to be formally exonerated within days

Tuesday
08 July 2008
432
Documents handed over to the McCanns without informing the Attorney General Diário de Notícias
 
FILIPA AMBRÓSIO DE SOUSA
8th July 2008
Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
Investigation. The British police released 81 documents from the investigation into the Maddie case to the McCann family due to a decision from the High Court in London. A fact that was not made known to the Portuguese PJ or to the Republic's Attorney General, Pinto Monteiro

Pinto Monteiro and the PJ were not informed

The Republic's General Attorney, Pinto Monteiro, and the Polícia Judiciária (PJ) were not warned that the McCann couple would be given access to documents that concern the investigation into their daughter’s disappearance, on the 3rd of May 2007, in Praia da Luz.

"We have no official or officious confirmation concerning which documents were allegedly handed over by the British police", an official source from Pinto Monteiro's press cabinet explained. The same happened to the PJ. "We had no contact with the English police and we do not know which documents will be made available to Kate and Gerry McCann", a source from the Polícia Judiciária's new directory confirmed.

81 documents that will be handed over by the British police to Gerry and Kate McCann are at issue, following a decision from London's High Court. A sharing of information that neither the Attorney General, the most senior official in the investigation in Portugal, nor the PJ, which coordinates the investigation on the ground, had any knowledge about.

This is one more 'diplomatic incident' between Portugal and England, which now lands on the investigation into the disappearance of the British child, just over a month before the process' judicial secrecy is lifted.

News about this sharing of information started to be spread by the British press by the end of the morning, yesterday, and tells about the delivery of 81 documents from the process – which is still covered by judicial secrecy – from a total of 11 thousand elements that were collected by the investigation. "Those are 81 potential new leads", Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns' spokesman, clarified, "due to the fact that they concern the days following the disappearance and that may help the investigation that is being carried out by the detectives that were hired by Kate and Gerry", he underlined.

What is certain is that the access to these documents was accepted by a British judicial entity and after the McCann couple threatened to file a judicial action to force the police to give them access to the entire process. Yesterday, Clarence Mitchell admitted that the couple had desisted from using the courts and that they are "satisfied".

"We want to access the process so our private detectives can use the information", Clarence Mitchell defended last week, during a statement to Lusa agency. But the contents of said documents was not revealed.

Also last week, the PJ presented a final report that was delivered to the Public Ministry, with a list of all the diligences that were made during this investigation that has lasted for over one year.

The delivery of said report prompted news of a probable archiving of this investigation to be circulated by the press.

But the Attorney General's Office denied that the archiving of the case had been decided, and clarified that the PJ's final report had indeed been delivered and that is was being "the object of careful evaluation and pondering".

"The Public Ministry will analyse and globally evaluate the entire process (that contains tens of volumes) in order to determine whether other diligences are needed or not or if the necessary and sufficient conditions have been gathered to close the inquiry and to elaborate the final dispatch", the AG’s Office referred.

For the time being, Pinto Monteiro refuses to make any further comment about this decision from the British court.
 
EU unable to agree child alert system AFP
 
July 8, 2008 12:30 PM
 
CANNES, France (AFP) — European nations agreed Tuesday to cooperate more closely in the hunt for lost children but could not endorse a Europe-wide alert system sought by the parents of missing British toddler Madeleine McCann.
 
EU justice ministers ministers, at informal talks in the French Riveria resort city of Cannes, decided to set up national police centres to coordinate any international search when it becomes necessary.
 
Germany argues that alerting all 27 nations as soon as a child disappears and launching a massive media campaign would be pointless as most are found in the area where they went missing quite quickly.
 
"We shouldn't send out a European alert when a child has been gone for just a few hours," said German Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries. "The great majority of children return home after two or three days."
 
But the parents of Madeleine, Kate and Gerry McCann said in April that a swift EU-wide alert system could have helped locate their daughter, who disappeared from a Portuguese resort in May 2007.
 
Since their daughter went missing, not far from the Spanish border just before her fourth birthday, there have been reported sightings from Belgium to North Africa. No-one has been charged or arrested over her apparent abduction.
 
"Please don't wait until another child and family suffer as we have before agreeing to support the implementation of an alert system in Europe," said Kate McCann, who along with her husband was a suspect in the case.
 
EU Justice Commissioner Jacques Barrot urged the ministers to go further, saying that missing children were being found more quickly in European countries where a solid alert system is in place, like France and Greece.
 
"The ministers have to be more energetic and impose this alert service," he told reporters. "When a child has been abducted we have to move very, very quickly."
 
Luxembourg Justice Minister Luc Frieden supported the European-wide system, but said that, since agreement was not possible, small groups of countries could decide to forge ahead by themselves.
 
"We should try something European. We don't need very complicated legal texts. This is an aspect where police and legal authorities can work together," he said.
 
Brussels throws out McCann's appeal for European missing child alert system Daily Mail
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
 
By Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter
 
Gerry and Kate McCann have expressed their anger at the establishment of a fee-paying "club" dedicated to seeing them prosecuted over the disappearance of their daughter Madeleine.
 
A retired British solicitor, Tony Bennett, has set up a fund called The Madeleine Foundation, which aims to bring a private prosecution against the McCanns for alleged child neglect.
 
But Madeleine's parents fear members of the public will inadvertently donate money to it because they may mistake it for the McCanns' own Madeleine Fund, which pays for private investigations into her whereabouts.
 
Mr Bennett, 60, who has in the past worked with the family of Stuart Lubbock, the man found dead in Michael Barrymore's swimming pool in 2001, described his fund as a subscription-only members' club, charging a £10 annual fee.
 
Last year he tried unsuccessfully to launch a private prosecution against the McCanns, only to be told by magistrates in Leicester that they had no jurisdiction over the case, because Madeleine disappeared in Portugal.
 
Mr Bennett said: "Some of the money immediately raised will be used to pay for a barrister to give his or her opinion on how best to proceed with a legal action against the McCanns.
 
"We are a group of people, which is rapidly growing in number, who want to get to the truth of what happened to Madeleine.
 
"We will also campaign for changes to the law about parents who leave children on their own.
 
"If you go on the internet and look at some of the forums and blogs about Madeleine, there is a large and significant number of people who feel powerless and who want to do something about it."
 
Mr Bennett said the official website for the Madeleine Foundation, which will not have charitable status, is about to go live.
 
He said all the money raised would be used "in an above board way" and would be openly accounted for.
 
Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns' spokesman, said: "It is a great shame that Mr Bennett feels the need to make money out of Madeleine McCann. "He did not seek permission from Gerry or Kate to use Madeleine's name. This so-called foundation is in no way doing anything to help find Madeleine.
 
"It purports to be a foundation helping the search for Madeleine but it does nothing at all to help that search and goes against Gerry and Kate.
 
"Mr Bennett has already tried to take a private prosecution against Gerry and Kate but a court said it has no jurisdiction over something which allegedly happened in Portugal."

Wednesday
09 July 2008
433
Maddie case has to be decided by the 2nd of August Publico (no online link, appears in paper version only)
 
09 July 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation

Thursday 
10 July 2008
434
McCanns' Oprah windfall Daily Star
 
By Jerry Lawton
10th July 2008
 
MADELEINE McCann's parents are planning a big bucks interview with US chatshow queen Oprah Winfrey to boost their search fund.
 
It is understood Oprah, 54, would be willing to break the bank for a cosy chat with Kate and Gerry.
 
Up to now the couple have resisted offers to appear on celebrity chatshows but they are considering Oprah after the fund set up to find Madeleine plunged to £500,000 – less than half the original amount donated by the public.
 
Along with private eyes' bills, the cash has been spent on poster and advertising campaigns appealing for information about Madeleine and running an website.
 
The McCanns, who still haven't been officially cleared, sparked controversy when they dipped into the fund twice last year to fund mortgage payments on their home in Rothley, Leics.
 
The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell has admitted the couple need to top it up to maintain the hunt for their five-year-old daughter.
 
Earlier this week police agreed to let the McCanns, both 40, see 81 witness statements taken after Madeleine vanished from their holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May 2007.
 
McCanns welcome EU alert backing Guardian
 
Press Association
Thursday July 10 2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann have welcomed European Parliament backing for an EU-wide missing child alert system to help prevent child abductions across borders.
 
The parents of Madeleine McCann described as "wonderful news" the fact that a declaration supporting the couple's plea for action has now attracted sufficient MEPs' signatures to become a formal resolution.
 
It now has backing from at least 393 MEPs - achieving the minimum required support of half the 785 European Parliament members before a resolution is considered for legislation. And although the resolution has no legal force it now puts serious political and moral pressure on the European Commission and EU governments to adopt legally-binding measures to increase the chances of finding missing children.
 
A joint statement issued by the McCanns said: "This is wonderful news and we would like to thank every single MEP who has signed the declaration. By supporting such a European wide structure (a network of national child alert systems), each and every one is helping to make Europe a safer place for children.
 
"Hopefully this will mean that far fewer families have to suffer the sort of pain we are continuing to go through. We now urge the Commission to act swiftly in taking this forward in practical terms"
 
The McCanns visited MEPs in Brussels in April as part of their campaign to mobilise action following the disappearance of Madeleine during a family holiday in Portugal more than a year ago.
 
By then they had already visited Washington to see how a US "Amber Alert" early warning raised the alarm across state lines and lead to the safe return of hundreds of children. They asked for a similar network to be extended across the 27 EU countries.
 
Conservative MEP and European Parliament Vice-President Edward McMillan-Scott, who helped organise the McCanns' visit to Brussels and another to Strasbourg last month to keep up support, formally presented the resolution to EU Justice Commissioner Jacques Barrot.
 
He said: "I am very pleased that a majority of MEPs have backed this important initiative, started by Kate and Gerry McCann out of their personal tragedy. Now it has real impetus across the EU. Four hundred children have been saved in the USA in five years by this system."
 
Two years ago - before Madeleine disappeared - a similar initiative in the European Parliament failed to attract sufficient support to be taken up by ministers. But the publicity surrounding the case means the current French EU presidency is now likely to give the issue a big push in the next few months.
 
McCanns get MEPs' backing The Sun
 
By STAFF REPORTER
Published: Today
 
THE parents of missing Maddie McCann today welcomed European Parliament backing for a missing child alert system to help prevent child abductions across EU borders.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann were delighted a declaration supporting their plea for action has now got sufficient MEPs' signatures to become a formal resolution.
 
It now has backing from at least 393 MEPs - achieving the minimum required support of half the 785 European Parliament members before a resolution is considered for legislation.
 
And although the resolution has no legal force it now puts serious political and moral pressure on the European Commission and EU governments to adopt legally-binding measures to increase the chances of finding missing children.
 
A joint statement issued by the McCanns said: "This is wonderful news and we would like to thank every single MEP who has signed the declaration.
 
"By supporting such a European wide structure (a network of national child alert systems), each and every one is helping to make Europe a safer place for children.
 
"Hopefully this will mean that far fewer families have to suffer the sort of pain we are continuing to go through.
 
"We now urge the Commission to act swiftly in taking this forward in practical terms."
 
The McCanns visited MEPs in Brussels in April as part of their campaign to mobilise action following the disappearance of daughter Madeleine during a family holiday in Portugal more than a year ago.
 
By then they had already visited Washington to see how a US "Amber Alert" early warning raised the alarm across state lines and lead to the safe return of hundreds of children.
 
They asked for a similar network to be extended across the 27 EU countries.
 
Conservative MEP and European Parliament Vice-President Edward McMillan-Scott, who helped organise the McCanns' visit to Brussels and another to Strasbourg last month to keep up support, today formally presented the resolution to EU Justice Commissioner Jacques Barrot.
 
He said: "I am very pleased that a majority of MEPs have backed this important initiative, started by Kate and Gerry McCann out of their personal tragedy.
 
"Now it has real impetus across the EU. Four hundred children have been saved in the USA in five years by this system."
 
Two years ago - before Madeleine disappeared - a similar initiative in the European Parliament failed to attract sufficient support to be taken up by ministers.
 
But the publicity surrounding the case means the current French EU presidency is now likely to give the issue a big push in the next few months.
 
Mr McMillan-Scott said all it needed was political will, because the cost would be minimal.
 
"The time has come to get on with it. Most countries have a severe weather alert system - all we need is to use the same mechanism for missing children."
 
So far France is the only EU country which has an Amber Alert system, but its worth has been demonstrated in America, where about 400 children have been recovered, 80 per cent within the crucial first 72 hours, since the system started in 2003.
 
In Europe, an existing patchwork of partial national monitoring systems needs bolstering by closer cross-border co-operation and data-sharing on child abduction, says the European Commission.
 
In France, a comprehensive system means authorities can flash up electronic missing child information on French motorway signboards within 30 minutes of a confirmed case of abduction. Belgium operates a similar but less well-established system.
 
The idea of a European system would be to identify the serious cases of potential abduction and use the alert network.
 
"About 130,000 children go missing in Europe every year, and it is up to the police to sift through them and sort out the abduction cases, and they need as much co-operation as possible," said Mr McMillan-Scott.

Friday 
11 July 2008
435
McCanns already have signatures 24Horas 
 
Couple criticised over campaign for the alert about missing children
 
11 July 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
Maddie's parents managed to collect 417 signatures for their petition. But it only comes to reinforce a project that was already in movement

The McCanns congratulated themselves yesterday, in a communiqué, about the "wonderful news" that they received from Brussels. What made Maddie's parents so happy was to know that 417 MEPs have already signed the petition that they promoted for the creation of a European alert system for missing children.

The collected signatures – 417 out of a total of 785 – are those necessary for a resolution to be appreciated within the European Commission. But, in Brussels, the McCanns' prominence within this project has already created antibodies. "What use will this petition be? There is already a European law proposal for the creation of that alert system, which will have to be approved by each member state", a source at the European Commission criticized to 24horas. "The McCanns associated themselves with an initiative that belongs to the European Commission, in a media manoeuvre", the source pointed out.

It doesn't change anything

Another source that knows the dossier well has an opinion that "the McCanns' petition doesn’t change anything". And explains: "The project, which already existed, has taken time to be approved because the 27 member states have different legislation".

The pressure on the EU was started by Paris. "In late 2007, towards the end of the Portuguese presidency of the European Union, France, which wanted to broaden its alert mechanism to the countries with a common border, raised the issues at the level of the European Commission", the source clarified.

"The McCanns went directly to the European Parliament, in April 2007, giving the idea that they were starting a project that had, in reality, already been started within the European Commission".

But the McCanns' spokesman considers that any criticism against an alleged appropriation of the European proposal by the couple is mere "viewpoints". "If the project was going to advance anyway, without the petition that was promoted by the McCanns, then how does one explain that 417 MEPs signed it?", Clarence Mitchell questions.

The McCanns' spokesman advanced that the resolution will now move into the European Commission, which will request a report on how to create an alert within the 27 countries.

Facts

Judiciária. In Portugal, in mid-June, the PJ's joint national director, Pedro do Carmo, was given the task by the Justice Minister to present a proposal for a swift alert system against child abduction. It was Portugal’s presidency of the EU, in 2007, that introduced the issue into the Informal Council for Justice and Internal Affairs.

Obstacle. According to what Clarence Mitchell told 24horas, it will be difficult to create a European alert system with a centre in Brussels because "Germany does not want the system to be centralised". The alternative may include the creation of alert systems that are common to neighbouring countries, he explained. There is still a long way to go…
 
Maddie case will be decided by the end of July Diário de Notícias 
 
JOSÉ MANUEL OLIVEIRA
11 July 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
Investigation. Archiving, accusation or new diligencies are the options
 
At a time when the speculation about the foreseen dates for a decision about the Maddie case increases, the office of Pinto Monteiro, the Republic's Attorney General, guaranteed to DN that the deadline that was imposed on the Public Ministry's prosecutors terminates at the end of this month.

During this week, some newspapers pointed at next week and at the 2nd of August for the Public Ministry to reach a decision about the process.

This decision may be the archiving of the process, the deduction of an accusation or the scheduling of new diligences, after the PJ delivered its final report about the investigation to the Public Ministry.

"There was no set deadline given" in that sense by Pinto Monteiro, Pinto Monteiro's office told DN. What was requested from the magistrates is that within a reasonable time frame, and before the end of the month, they concluded whether or not there is a need to carry out further diligences or if the process is ready for the final dispatch".

On the other hand, while many reinforce the idea that Gerry and Kate McCann, arguidos due to a suspicion of involvement in their daughter's disappearance, may be accused of the practice of the crime of exposure and abandonment of a minor, which is punished with a prison sentence of up to five years, the lawyer João Grade dos Santos, while having no knowledge of the process, is peremptory when he states to DN that "the crime of abandonment demands intent".

And "as long as intent is not proved, crime cannot be considered", the lawyer stressed, reminding that "it is only a crime when the person who abandons knows that under those circumstances the minor will be at risk".

And he exemplifies: "A father leaves a son at home and he knows that anything may happen. But if that never occurs to him, then it's not a crime anymore", he explains. "If someone grabs a child and takes her into the mountains and leaves her there overnight, then it is a crime, because the person knows that the child is at risk".
 
Agony for McCanns as they reveal details of their first holiday since Madeleine vanished Daily Mail 
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 12:26 PM on 11th July 2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann have spoken of the agony of holidaying for the first time without their missing daughter Madeleine.
 
The couple took their twins Sean and Amelie, two; away for a family break - the first since Madeleine disappeared from their holiday apartment in Praia Da Luz, Portugal on May 3 last year.
 
Gerry wrote of the family's experiences of their holiday without Madeleine as speculation continues over whether Portuguese police are preparing to close the case.
 
Writing on his online blog, Gerry said: 'We have recently managed to have a break visiting family.
 
'Sean and Amelie have had a brilliant time and it has been great for me to spend so much time with them.
 
'Although this has been a relaxing break, it has been incredibly difficult for Kate and me to have been on holiday without Madeleine - it is all too apparent what is missing.'
 
Turning his attention to the Portuguese investigation surrounding Madeleine's disappearance and the couple's status as 'arguidos' or suspects, Gerry said the family were waiting to hear confirmation of recent reports it had been closed.
 
He wrote: 'There has been a lot of speculation in the press over the last 10 days that the investigation in to Madeleine's disappearance has closed.
 
'We have not heard anything officially other than we know the files are with the prosecutor and the period of secrecy has been extended to 14th August.
 
Our independent investigation continues and we urge people going on holiday to remain vigilant and consider taking one of our posters with them - downloadable from the how to help section of the website.'
 
Meanwhile, the couple welcomed a European Parliament backing for a EU-wide cross-border missing child alert system.
 
The couple have been campaigning in Europe for a declaration for a US-style amber alert system to track missing youngsters faster.
 
Gerry said: 'We were very pleased to learn today that the written declaration calling for the introduction of an EU wide Amber alert system has been successful.
 
'More than half of the 786 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) were required to sign the declaration for it to be adopted as a full resolution of the European Parliament and as of today 417 had signed.
 
'This is a small step in the right direction and a lot of work will be needed to get National Amber alert systems implemented. The idea already has the support of the European Commission and this additional political impetus should speed up the implementation process.
 
'We would like to thank Edward McMillan-Scott and the other four sponsors of the declaration, all those MEPs who signed the declaration and all the members of the public who lobbied their MEPs.'
 
Portugal's attorney-general demands decision on Madeleine McCann by end of July Herald Tribune
 
The Associated Press
11th July 2008
 
LISBON, Portugal: Portugal's attorney general said Friday he has asked prosecutors to decide by the end of the month whether to close the investigation into the disappearance of British child Madeleine McCann.
 
Prosecutors are examining the final police report on the case of the girl who went missing in Portugal's Algarve region during a family vacation on May 3, 2007, a few days before her fourth birthday.
 
"I have asked magistrates at the Public Prosecutor's office — three of them — to carefully analyze the (police) report, which is enormous, and to present their conclusions to me by the end of the month, which is a reasonable period of time," Attorney-General Fernando Pinto Monteiro told reporters.
 
"Either there will be some more police work to do ... or there's nothing more to be done and the case will be closed. That will be known by the end of the month," he said.
 
The case has drawn worldwide interest. A few weeks after Madeleine vanished, Pope Benedict XVI blessed her parents and a photo of their daughter during his weekly general audience at the Vatican. Numerous reported sightings of the blonde-haired girl proved to be false.
 
If authorities decide to close the case, it could still be reopened if new evidence emerges.
 
Detectives have named the girl's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, and local man Robert Murat as formal suspects in the case. They all have denied involvement.
 
The official judicial secrecy period granting confidentiality to the police investigation ends in mid-August when the suspects' lawyers will be allowed to see the police case file.
 
The McCanns, who have waged an international campaign to find their daughter, have said that if the investigation were to be closed they expect the search for Madeleine to continue. They have also hired private investigators.

Saturday 
12 July 2008
436
Torment of Kate and Gerry McCann as they go on first holiday without missing Madeleine Daily Record 
 
Jul 12 2008 By Stephen White
 
MADELEINE McCann's parents have told of the torment of their first holiday without their daughter.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann flew back from Vancouver in Canada yesterday after visiting relatives.
 
Gerry said the trip had been extremely difficult both for him and Kate.
 
"We have managed to have a break visiting family," Gerry wrote on the website set up to try to trace Madeleine, who went missing on a holiday in Portgual in May 2007.
 
He added: "Sean and Amelie have had a brilliant time and it has been great for me to spend so much time with them.
 
"Although this has been a relaxing break, it has been incredibly difficult for Kate and me to have been on holiday without Madeleine - it's all too apparent what is missing.
 
"There has been a lot of speculation in the Press over the last 10 days that the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance has closed.
 
"We have not heard anything other than we know the files are with the pro secutor and the secrecy period has been extended to August 14."
 
The McCanns are still being investigated for possibly neglecting their daughter on the night she disappeared from their Portuguese holiday apartment.
 
The first published court ruling on the Madeleine case confirms the police inquiry covers homicide, abandonment, concealment of a corpse and abduction.
 
The reference to "abandonment" suggests that Portuguese detectives are investigating if there is evidence that Kate and Gerry McCann we re negligent in leaving their daughter alone on the night she went missing.
 
The charge carries a maximum 10-year jail sentence.
 
The couple, both doctors from Rothley, Leicestershire, have strenuously denied negligence and said they were just 50 yards away at the time their daughter was taken.
 
Wish you were here, Madeleine The Sun 
 
By ANTONELLA LAZZERI
Published: Today
 
MADELEINE McCann's parents have revealed their heartache after their first holiday since she vanished.
 
Doctors Kate and Gerry said they spent three weeks in Canada with twins Sean and Amelie for the sake of the three-year-olds.
 
But it was "incredibly difficult". Gerry, 40, confessed after the family's return to Rothley, Leics: "To have been on holiday without Madeleine – it is all too apparent what is missing."
 
Their daughter, then three, vanished 14 months ago in Praia da Luz, Portugal – where cops still regard the couple as suspects.
 
Yesterday Portugal's attorney-general revealed he had ordered prosecutors to decide by the end of the month whether to close the investigation.
 
Gerry, writing in his internet diary, said he and Kate, 40, were thrilled the EU is to adopt a system when kids go missing similar to America's Amber Alert – which the couple have crusaded for.
 
He said: "This is a small step in the right direction."
 
The couple went to Canada to stay with Kate's aunt in Vancouver.
 
A pal said: "They couldn't even contemplate going anywhere in Europe."
 
Murat, an arguido just because Expresso (no online link, appears in paper edition only)
 
Investigation English dogs' scent is the only evidence against the parents. Murat was made an arguido based on an English journalist
 
Saturday 12 July 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
Expresso discloses PJ's final report

Not even the reasoning of famous detective Sherlock Holmes – after eliminating the impossible, the hypothesis that remains, no matter how unlikely, must be the truth – can be applied to the case of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, on the 3rd of May 2007. In its final report, that Expresso had access to, the Polícia Judiciária (PJ) asserts that all possibilities were exhaustively investigated: abduction, murder, accidental death and even the child having left the apartment on her own. To no avail. "Did the girl go up in smoke?" Gonçalo Amaral, the former inspector who directed the investigation for five months, asked last week.

The complete disorientation of the investigation is exposed by the constitution of Robert Murat as an arguido: denounced by an English journalist, who found his curiosity towards the press strange, the judiciária considered that he reunited all the conditions to be presumed a suspect. Reasons? A set of unspecified pieces of "information", one of them related to Jane Turner [sic], one of the group's elements, who reportedly stated she saw a man carrying a child, walking into the direction of Robert Murat's house.

The PJ placed Robert Murat and other "individuals with whom he directly or indirectly interacted" under surveillance, they searched his house, excavated his garden. Result: "Despite the exhaustive and methodical investigation of Murat and the persons that are close to him, no elements were collected that would connect them to the crime that is under investigation".

The frailty of the collected indices does not only apply to Robert Murat. Also concerning Gerry and Kate McCann, the sole evidence that was collected over 13 months, which directly connects the parents to an eventual death of their daughter, is the scent of two English «Springer Spaniel» dogs that were in Portugal during the investigations. "One of the dogs was trained to detect cadaver odour and the other one to detect traces of human blood".

And what did they detect? One of them detected cadaver odour "in the couple's bedroom, in a corner, near the wardrobe, and in the living room, behind the sofa, near the side window of the apartment" that was rented by the couple at the Ocean Club, in Aldeia da Luz. The dog that specialises in detecting the odour of blood, marked a spot in the living room, precisely coinciding with the location that had been identified with cadaver odour.

The marking of cadaver odour followed into clothing and personal items: on two pieces of clothing that belong to Kate McCann, on another piece belonging to Madeleine, and on the soft toy that was habitually used by the child (here, the dog marked cadaver odour both in the inside and the outside of the apartment). The strange odours were further detected on the key and in the trunk of the car that was rented by the McCanns on the 27th of May 2007, 24 days after the evening of the disappearance. It was based on the dogs' performance that Gerry and Kate were made arguidos. The PJ says that, in Kate's case, her constitution as an arguida was due to "the mere possibility of her involvement with the eventual cadaver".

At the same time that thousands of sightings that reached the PJ, concerning supposed sightings of the minor, were being digested, the investigation elaborated a listing of the communications that were made by the mobile phones that were used in the area of the Ocean Club. The hundreds of crossings of phone calls yielded no results either. It should be pointed out, though, that the Public Ministry wanted to access the contents of 14 text messages that went through Gerry McCann's mobile phone on the 3rd and 4th of May, but the instruction judge, Pedro Frias, impeded said diligence. The biological residues that were collected from inside the car were analysed in Portugal and in England, but the results did not allow for a conclusion to be reached.

On its way to the archive

In their final report, the PJ stresses the "magnitude" of the operation that was initially built to search for the minor. Something that "right from the outset, exceeded the dimension that is commonly applied to similar cases". But after 13 months, there is only one conclusion: "From everything that was done, and despite the efforts that were made and all lines of investigation having been explored, it results that it is not possible to obtain a solid and objective conclusion about what truly happened on that evening, and about the present location of the missing minor".

"This way, as we do not envision, at the moment, any diligence within the process that would be susceptible of producing a useful result for the present files", according to the document, the judiciária places the final decision on the case in the hands of prosecutor Magalhães e Menezes. According to what Expresso was able to establish, the Republic’s General Attorney, Pinto Monteiro, asked the Public Ministry's prosecutors that have been accompanying the case (Bilro Verão, the district prosecutor of Évora, and Magalhães e Menezes, who is directly responsible for the investigation) to produce a final decision before the end of this month.

----------------------------------

Excerpts from the PJ's report

Throughout these more than 13 months, the investigation followed all the credible indicia that concerned different hypotheses and tried to analyse, to correlate and to synthesize them in an impartial form.

From the 4th onwards – the day that followed the facts – the PJ was reached by thousands of sightings and locations that covered the entire national territory, the most diversified foreign locations, from neighbouring Spain until Indonesia.

It should be stressed that the entire apartment had been searched through and rummaged by an undetermined number of persons, with the contamination that it carries and the difficulty in collecting residues.

The PJ, probably unlike in no other investigation in Portugal, did not spare any efforts in the sense of providing exceptional technical, human and financial means to discover the minor.

The persons (the parents and the couple's friends) were questioned in a detailed and lengthy manner, on diverse occasions, with the purpose of collecting any relevant elements.

The degree of cooperation and understanding between the PJ and the Leicester Constabulary attained very high levels.

The witness Rachel Mampilly admits to having established contacts with British television station BBC at around 2 a.m. on the morning of the 4th [of May].

The forensic exams did not corroborate the canine markings, more precisely, cell material was collected that could not be identified as belonging to a determined person, and it was not even possible to establish the quality of that material.

It concludes that it is not possible to obtain a solid finding about what happened on that evening.

--------------------------------

"The life of a man was destroyed"
 
Robert Murat's lawyer reveals unknown episodes, advancing that he is preparing to sue the State

After one more day participating in the searches, Robert Murat was invited by two inspectors from the Polícia Judiciária to have a drink. It was a Sunday evening, and Murat accompanied them but, "for their misfortune, Robert is an Englishman who only drinks white coffee, because on Monday morning he was taken to the PJ and if he hadn't been sober, I don't know what his deposition would have looked like". The episode, one more in the last year of the Englishman's life, was told to Expresso by Francisco Pagarete, Murat's lawyer, who is preparing a complaint against the Portuguese state, following the more than likely archiving of the case.

"A man's life was destroyed". This was the Portimão lawyer's reaction when he was confronted by Expresso with the contents of the Polícia Judiciária's final report about the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. "What was done to this man was a profound injustice. As recently as this week, we were on a terrace and a group of people nearby got up whispering his name. The damages that were suffered by my client are incalculable", declared Francisco Pagarete, for who the archiving "is only at fault for being late". And it cannot be said that an archiving in the middle of an investigation is unheard of. The same happened to former Environment minister Luís Nobre Guedes in the so-called Portucale process. The investigation was only halfway through and the Public Ministry decided to archive the suspicions against the former head of CDS.

"It has to be taken into account that Robert was presented to the world as a suspect, after having spent 19 hours at the Polícia Judiciária without eating or drinking. His life was laid open, as well as the life of his family in England", Francisco Pagarete said. The lawyer said that he is only awaiting authorisation to access the process files in order to start preparing the suit against the State and "against some persons who witnessed things that are not true".

Archiving is "to be expected"

While stressing that he was not notified of any dispatch from the Public Ministry (PM), Rogério Alves, the McCann couple's lawyer, declared that taking into account the contents of the PJ’s document, an archiving dispatch from the PM is "absolutely to be expected". "I believe in the couple's innocence and the investigation could not find indicia of guilt against someone who is not guilty", Rogério Alves further commented.

--------------------------------------

Numbers

2000 diligences in the process into Maddie's disappearance

700 persons were inquired by the investigation

443 houses were rummaged by the inspectors on the days that followed the disappearance

300 persons participated in the mega-search operation

22 dossiers with "speculative or unlikely news, like psychic visions"

-------------------------------

Note from the Direction

An incredible despise

It is completely legal, and undisputable. But it is an unbelievable despise for individual rights. The PJ's report about the Maddie case leaves no doubts – Robert Murat was made an arguido, and has been kept that way for 13 months, over… nothing. Over absolutely nothing!

An English journalist found Murat to be suspicious and the Polícia Judiciária investigated him. They turned his house, his garden upside down, rummaged through his computer, his life, his friends. They found nothing. But they didn't say anything either, in the name of the holy 'judicial secrecy'.

What kind of Justice is this, which allows for a man to be under public scrutiny, a suspect, earning side glances, losing opportunities and business, when against him there is not the slightest indicium, as the PJ itself reveals? Without him being related, not even minimally, with the missing child?

And what kind of Justice is this, that lets the rumor run – in the newspapers, on tv, everywhere – that the parents could be guilty of the child's death without there being the smallest solid indicium against them?

The Maddie case is a shame for the Portuguese justice. It is necessary that all the possible lessons, in their entire extension, are taken out of this case. About the manner in which the police acted; about the ease with which arguidos were made; about the judicial secrecy. So the iniquity of a secret does never again overlay the necessary Justice.
 
'Missing Maddie case to close' News of the World
 
Portuguese police could drop McCann investigation
 
By Chris Pragnell
12 July 2008
 
MADELEINE McCann's parents were today awaiting official confirmation that Portuguese police are dropping the investigation into her disappearance.
 
According to reports in the Portuguese media, detectives have taken the decision due to lack of evidence.
 
A spokeswoman for Kate and Gerry McCann said today: "We are aware of it because we have heard about it on the grapevine.
 
"The team haven't heard officially so we are not in a position to make any comment.
 
"We know it's in the air but until we have had official confirmation we cannot make a comment."
 
Madeleine disappeared on May 3 last year.
 
The three-year-old had been on holiday in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz with her parents, from Rothley, Leicestershire, when she vanished from the family's apartment on May 3 last year.
 
During the investigation into her disappearance, detectives named Mr McCann, 39, and 40-year-old Mrs McCann, as formal suspects in the case.
 
Two Portuguese newspapers reported today that police were dropping the inquiry but could re-open it if new evidence emerges. The papers cited unidentified police sources.
 
Mr Mitchell said: "If the reports are true, it is to be welcomed that no charges are to be brought and it is entirely right because Kate and Gerry are innocent of any involvement in their daughter's disappearance and always have been.
 
"They have suffered for far too long in this process and the Portuguese authorities must now lift their arguido status."
 
He continued: "The police themselves must continue looking for Madeleine.
 
"We are concerned that if they are to simply shelve the case then what will happen to all of the information in their files?
 
"They must be made available to our investigators, who are working extremely hard to find Madeleine.
 
"If the police feel that they can no longer investigate the case that is a decision for them."
 
He added that the McCanns would give their view on the investigation after they had been told officially that it had been dropped.
 
The Expresso newspaper reported on its website that, according to a source in the Policia Judiciaria (PJ), the report on the investigation is only descriptive of the facts which have been verified and those that have not been ascertained in the case.
 
This means it has not reached any conclusions and does not say whether it is a case of abduction, homicide, or concealing of a body, the newspaper reported.
 
Another source told the newspaper: "In normal circumstances, with this sort of a report, the decision would have to be to shelve it in the hope of getting better evidence in the future."
 
The final report is to go the Ministerio Publico in Portimao, where a decision will be taken in the coming days, according to the newspaper.
 
Even if the case is shelved, the public prosecutor, Jose Cunha de Magalhaes de Menezes, could rule at any point to reopen it if new evidence were to emerge, it was reported.
 
Anglo-Portuguese property consultant Robert Murat, the first person to be made an arguido or formal suspect in Madeleine's disappearance, has heard nothing from the Portuguese authorities about the case being closed.
 
He did not want to comment on today's reports before being officially told he is no longer under suspicion.
 
Mr Murat, who lives with his mother in a villa near the McCanns' holiday apartment, strenuously protests his innocence.

Sunday
13 July 2008
437
Cadaver odour on the McCanns' car and clothes Diário de Notícias
 
FILIPA AMBRÓSIO DE SOUSA
NATACHA CARDOSO-ARQUIVO DN
July 13, 2008, Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
Maddie. Final report of the PJ says that Murat is arguido because of journalist suspicion.

In a total of ten vehicles, the cadaver dogs only signalled cadaver odour and blood scent in Kate and Gerry McCanns' car, rented 24 days after the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, on the 3rd of May 2007, in Praia da Luz, Algarve.

This is one of the conclusions of the final report of the PJ on the investigation that has lasted for more than one year, handed to the Public Ministry and that waits now for a decision. The Republic's Attorney General requested the end of this month as the deadline, so that the archiving or requests for new diligences are decided.

In the first approach done by the British laboratory, the Forensic Science Service and by the Portuguese Institute of Forensic medicine, it was registered a match of Madeleine's DNA profile with some of the collected evidences in the Renault car, rented by the couple.

In a second approach, done by both Institute of Forensic medicine and the English laboratory, the final results did not corroborate the canine markings in the places and Kate and Gerry McCann clothes.

As explained yesterday in an article published by Expresso, it was due to the mere possibility of the involvement of the McCann couple with the eventual cadaver that the PJ, in September of 2007, appointed Kate and Gerry as arguidos.

But, what exactly did the cadaver dogs detect? Cadaver odour in the room of the couple, in a corner, next to the closet, in the living room, behind the sofa, next to the side window of the apartment, in one of the flowerbeds outside the apartment, on two pieces of clothing belonging to Kate, on a piece of Madeleine's clothing, on the child's soft toy and on the key of the rented car.

Odour of blood was still detected on the same key of the rented car and inside the boot of the same.

For all of these reasons, the conclusion of this case will have to be one alone: archiving. The PJ considers that, in spite of all diligences that were done and that all investigation lines were followed, it was not possible to understand what effectively happened that night.

The same report assumes that any diligence done now will not help the discovery of the truth, regretting the fact that the reconstruction of the night of the disappearance, was not carried out as requested by the PJ at the end of May. One year after Madeleine disappeared from Praia da Luz.

Monday 
14 July 2008
438
 
Tuesday 
15 July 2008
439
 
Wednesday 
16 July 2008
440
Madeleine: Republic’s Attorney General Office will release "a solution" for the case on Monday Lusa
 
16 July 2008, 16:10
Thanks to 'astro' for translation

Lisboa, 16 Jul (Lusa) – The Republic's Attorney General Office will present "a solution" for the "Maddie case" on Monday, the Attorney General, Pinto Monteiro, announced today.

During statements to journalists upon exiting the inauguration ceremony of the president of the Appeals Court of Lisbon, Vaz das Neves, the Republic’s Attorney General announced that his Office will release a press note about the "Maddie case" on Monday.

"This means that the 'Maddie case' will have a solution on Monday which will be communicated to you", Pinto Monteiro said.

When questioned by the journalists about what solution will be announced concerning the "Maddie case", the Attorney General refused to anticipate an answer, merely saying that it will be "the one that will be read out to you".
 
D-Day for Madeleine McCann case looms msn.uk 
 
pa.press.net - 16.07.2008 18:34
 
Portugal's attorney general is to announce on Monday what he intends to do about the police investigation into Madeleine McCann's disappearance.
 
Prosecutors have been reviewing the final police report into what happened to Madeleine, who went missing in the Algarve in May last year, a few days before her fourth birthday.
 
After receiving their recommendations, Attorney General Fernando Pinto Monteiro will decide whether to bring charges, ask police to undertake further inquiries or close the case.
 
Mr Pinto Monteiro said he intended to issue a statement giving his decision.
 
Portuguese promise 'solution' in Madeleine McCann investigation Guardian 
 
Press Association
7.30pm BST Wednesday July 16, 2008
 
Portugal's attorney general today said he would announce a "solution" to the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann on Monday.
 
Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro's comments raised the prospect of Kate and Gerry McCann finding out whether they will be formally cleared of involvement in their daughter's disappearance.
 
Monteiro's words also fuelled speculation that the case could finally be drawing to a close.
 
He told reporters in Lisbon today: "The Maddie case will have a solution on Monday and you will hear of it."
 
Reports suggested he would announce whether the case would be closed, charges would be brought or more inquiries made.
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said the family, whose daughter went missing from their holiday apartment on May 3 last year, had not been contacted by the Portuguese authorities.
 
"We've heard nothing official and our lawyers have heard nothing official," he said. "It may well be true, but we can't comment because we haven't heard. We're not going to prejudice anything."
 
Kate and Gerry McCann could be cleared on Monday Telegraph
 
By Daily Telegraph Reporter
Last Updated: 8:21PM BST 16/07/2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann could find out on Monday if they are to be formally cleared of involvement in their daughter's disappearance.
 
Portugal's attorney-general has said he will announce a "solution" to the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
 
Fernando Pinto Monteiro's comments also fuelled speculation that the case could finally be drawing to a close.
 
Mr Pinto Monteiro said in Lisbon yesterday: "The 'Maddie Case' will have a solution on Monday and you will hear of it."
 
Reports in Portugal suggested he would announce whether the case would be closed, charges would be brought or the police would be asked to undertake further inquiries.
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said the family, whose daughter went missing from their holiday apartment on May 3 last year, had not been contacted by the Portuguese authorities.
 
"We've heard nothing official and our lawyers have heard nothing official," he said.
 
"It may well be true, but we can't comment because we haven't heard. We're not going to prejudice anything."
 
Portugal's law chief says he will announce 'solution' to Madeleine McCann case next week Daily Mail
 
By DANIEL BATES
Last updated at 10:13 PM on 16th July 2008
 
Portugal's law chief says he will announce a 'solution' next week to the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
 
Attorney-general Fernando Pinto Monteiro's words raised the prospect of Kate and Gerry McCann finding out if they will be formally cleared of involvement in their daughter's disappearance.
 
Although Mr Pinto Monteiro failed to elaborate on what he meant, his comments reinforce speculation the 14-month investigation is finally drawing to a close.
 
Speaking to Portuguese reporters in Lisbon, Mr Pinto Monteiro said: 'The "Maddie Case" will have a solution on Monday and you will hear of it.'
 
Prosecutors have been reviewing the final investigation report on Madeleine's disappearance and it would appear Mr Pinto Monteiro will be making his decision early next week, based on their recommendations.
 
Reports suggested he would announce whether the case would be closed, charges would be brought or the police would be asked to undertake further inquiries.
 
Madeleine disappeared on May 3 last year, nine days before her fourth birthday.
 
The McCanns left her, and her twin siblings Sean and Amelie, alone in the flat while they dined with holiday companions at a tapas restaurant 50 yards across their holiday complex in Praia Da Luz.
 
Madeleine's parents, both doctors from Rothley in Leicestershire, were subsequently designated by Portuguese police as official suspects.
 
When the case is wrapped up the couple, who have denied any wrongdoing, could be cleared.
 
However according to reports in a Portuguese tabloid, the Correio da Manha, they could face neglect charges.
 
The paper said although the 50-page final police report on the case concludes there is no evidence the couple were involved in the disappearance of their daughter, it leaves open the possibility that the McCanns could be charged with abandoning Madeleine and the twins, then aged two.
 
The charge of abandonment carries a maximum ten-year jail sentence in Portugal, but only if prosecutors can prove the McCanns, both 40, intended to neglect Madeleine.
 
Ex-pat Robert Murat was the only other individual made an official suspect by Portuguese police. He also has denied any wrongdoing and, if the case concludes, will find out if he will be cleared or face further investigation.
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said the family had not been contacted by the Portuguese authorities.
 
"We've heard nothing official and our lawyers have heard nothing official," he said.
 
"It may well be true, but we can't comment because we haven't heard. We're not going to prejudice anything."
 
He earlier made it clear the family would 'vigorously' defend any neglect charges.
 
Last week a High Court Judge made an astonishing appeal for Madeleine's abductor to 'show mercy and come forward'.
 
Speaking as she ordered Lancashire Police to hand over details of 81 potential witnesses to the disappearance, Mrs Justice Hogg called for an end to Kate and Gerry McCann's suffering and said she prayed Madeleine would be found alive soon.

Thursday 
17 July 2008
441
Former co-ordinator of the PJ launches 'Maddie' before the secrecy of justice is lifted 24 Horas 
 
Book launches CONTROVERSY
 
17 July 2008 
Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
Gonçalo Amaral says that his book can help to discover the truth
 
Gonçalo Amaral, removed of the inquiry, guarantees that the book does not compromise the current investigation.

The much anticipated book "Maddie, the Truth of the Lie" ["Maddie, a Verdade da Mentira"], of the former co-ordinator of the PJ Gonçalo Amaral, is going to be presented in a week, in Lisbon, but the launch, before the secrecy of justice is lifted -predicted alone for middle of August- is creating controversy. Amaral, retired since the beginning of the month, guarantees that, "in no circumstance the book compromises the current investigation or the work of the colleagues of the Judiciary Police". And "the decision of launching 'Maddie' at this time is not mine, but of the publisher", he said, in declarations to 24horas.

In his turn, Mário Sena Lopes, editor of Guerra e Paz, the publishing company of the former SIC director Manuel Fonseca, that now publishes "Maddie, the Truth of the Lie", said to 24horas that he "does not make any declarations till the day 24", when the book of the former co-ordinator of the PJ is presented by former PJ General Director Marques Vidal. This one when contacted by 24horas, did not want to comment: "Put there that I, to the customs, said nothing" [translators note: don't get the meaning of this expression even in Portuguese, maybe the journalist did a mistake and what Marques Vidal said was something like: : "Put there that I, as per usual, said nothing"]. He only revealed that he was reading the proofs and going in the page 109.

Professional secrecy

But, besides the secrecy of justice, which includes for the time being the Maddie case, Gonçalo Amaral risks, with this book, another secret: the professional. "I am not bothered", he assured. For this secrecy there are different opinions. According to Francisco Moita Flores, former PJ inspector, well known criminalist and current Mayor of Santarém, "Gonçalo Amaral is obliged only to the secrecy of justice". Also the former PJ inspector Paulo Pereira Cristóvão, author of the books "Star of Joana" ["Estrela de Joana"] and "Maddie's Star" ["Estrela de Maddie",] states that "the professional secrecy is only violated when the official reveals specific techniques of the investigation, which deserve the whole reserve". Besides, "in the case of a retired investigator, if proved and substantiated, the violation of the secrecy is punished by a financial fine".

Gonçalo Amaral, 48 years, was removed of the investigation of the case Maddie, for a crime of opinion. "I understood, then, that it was time to do my public defence and asked immediately the retirement in order to reacquire the plenitude of my freedom of expression", affirmed the former co-ordinator, according to whom "this book has the greater purpose to contribute to the discovery of the material truth and the achievement of justice".
 
Maddie Case will be archived next Monday Correio da Manhã 
 
17 July 2008 
Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
The process relative to Madeleine McCann disappearance will be available for consultation to the lawyers from next week. The secrecy of justice was not extended and the Public Ministry is getting ready to conclude the final report.
 
Pinto Monteiro, the Attorney General, announced yesterday that on Monday new phases of the process will be known which goes through a limited consultation of the legal proceedings[autos]. This week some selective scannings were done, for specific consultations for the legal representatives.

Everything indicates that the case will end with archiving waiting for better evidence [to substantiate the crime] and will never be really open to the 'public poll'. A situation that the law predicts, since there are in question fundamental rights, like the reserve of the private life. It is probable that some files attached, like the one that contains Kate's diaries, will be ordered to be destroyed because of not being considered relevant.

Kate, Gerry and Robert Murat will stop being arguido after the archiving of legal process.
 
Madeleine parents want files if Portuguese case closed: lawyer AFP 
 
17 July 2008
 
LISBON (AFP) — Madeleine McCann's parents believe any decision by Portuguese investigators to close their case would free-up details for use in their private search, their lawyer said Thursday.
 
Portuguese court officials said this week that a "solution" will be announced on Monday in the case of the missing British girl -- who disappeared in May 2007 in Portugal -- when they will reveal if further action will be taken.
 
A lawyer for Kate and Gerry McCann said that while an end to the official probe would not offer closure to the parents, it could make information available for use in a private investigation they have been funding.
 
"The only (meaningful) solution would be an explanation for what happened to the girl. That's what her parents want," lawyer Carlos Pinto de Abreu told Lusa news agency.
 
Any decision to close the case on Monday would "only be useful in that it would allow the parents, their lawyers and other investigators to access elements from the case file to continue looking for the girl," he stated.
 
On Monday, the public prosecutor's office could decide to close the case, draw up charges or ask police to investigate further.
 
Portuguese media speculation has suggested that officials are preparing to close the case due to insufficient evidence.
 
Madeleine McCann went missing before her fourth birthday, from a holiday apartment in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz as her parents -- made formal suspects in the case last year -- dined at a nearby restaurant.
 
Robert Murat -- a British resident of Praia da Luz -- on Thursday accepted six-figure libel damages from a number of newspapers over allegations that he was involved in her abduction.

Friday 
18 July 2008
442
McCanns are no longer suspects The Sun 
 
By VERONICA LORRAINE
Published: 18 July 2008
 
KATE and Gerry McCann's torment as suspects in their daughter's disappearance will end on Monday – but with the fresh hell of Portuguese cops scrapping the search for little Madeleine.
 
The couple will be officially told there is NOTHING to implicate them, The Sun can reveal.
 
Their status as "arguidos" – or suspects – will formally be lifted. But 14 months after Maddie vanished on holiday their greater nightmare will go on.
 
Blundering cops will reveal they have NO clue whatsoever to what happened to the youngster. And after a fruitless probe costing millions the case will effectively be CLOSED.
 
Incredible
 
The shock move emerged a day after Portugal's attorney general Fernando Pinto Monteiro vowed: "The Maddie case will have a solution on Monday."
 
Sources close to the police inquiry revealed to The Sun the "solution" is to give up on the investigation.
 
Lawyers for the McCanns – named suspects ten months ago and dogged by wild official leaks alleging DNA evidence linked them – will be given access to the case files.
 
A source at the attorney general's office told The Sun: "It is incredible. There have been absolutely no breakthroughs."
 
Madeleine was three when she is feared to have been snatched from her family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz.
 
But an agonising 441 days on, doctors Kate and Gerry, both 40 from Rothley, Leics, face the horror of learning the investigation is back to square one.
 
Expat Robert Murat, 34, last night remained a suspect, but wants his arguido status lifted shortly.
 
The McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "All Kate and Gerry want is to be allowed to keep looking for their daughter and this weight of guilt by association removed from their shoulders."
 
Madeleine McCann: police case set to be dropped Telegraph 
 
By Caroline Gammell
Last Updated: 11:18PM BST 18/07/2008
 
The police investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann is expected to be shelved on Monday and the three formal suspects linked to the case - including her parents - cleared of any suspicion.
 
Sources claim that Kate and Gerry McCann, as well as British expat Robert Murat, will have their arguido status lifted after the Portuguese attourney-general promised a "solution" to the case.
 
It is now more than 15 months since the three-year-old girl vanished from her family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz in the Algarve.
 
Mr Murat was made a formal suspect two weeks after her disappearance while her parents, both 40, from Rothley in Leicestershire, were added to the list in September.
 
It is understood that the Policia Judiciaria (PJ) do not have enough evidence to charge anyone and do not have any more leads in the case.
 
Detectives in Portugal delivered their final report at the start of this month for prosecutors to consider whether to bring charges, request further inquiries or close the case.
 
Last week, attourney general Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro said in Lisbon: "The 'Maddie Case' will have a solution on Monday and you will hear of it."
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said the couple had heard nothing official from their lawyers in Portugal.
 
"Kate and Gerry are waiting to see what the Attourney General has to say on Monday like everyone else," he said. "They are well aware of the reports suggesting that the case may about to be closed.
 
"If that is the case they would hope that it is made very clear that their arguido status is lifted and their own investigators will be given access to the police files.
 
"That is what is most important - to find Madeleine."
 
The couple will continue the search for their eldest child through a number of private investigators - including the Spanish agency Metodo 3 - paid for by the Find Madeleine Fund.
 
There is an estimated £500,000 left to help them find their daughter.
 
Madeleine McCann: Police discuss what evidence will be made public Timesonline 
 
David Brown 
July 18, 2008
 
British police involved in the hunt for Madeleine McCann have met a Portuguese prosecutor to discuss what evidence should be made public at the end of the investigation.
 
A request from Leicestershire Constabulary to withhold results of DNA tests on samples taken from a car used by Madeleine's parents is reported to have been rejected.
 
There is increasing speculation that Kate and Gerry McCann, from Rothley, Leicestershire, will be officially cleared next week of involvement in their daughter's death. Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro, Portugal's attorney-general, has indicated that a decision on the future of the investigation will be announced on Monday.
 
Leicestershire Constabulary confirmed today that officers had held discussions about how evidence in the investigation will be disclosed at the end of the case.
 
A Portuguese newspaper reported that the British officers had tried to stop the release of certain information, including results of a DNA test on a sample from the McCanns' Renault Mégane hire car.
 
The samples are reported to have led to the Portuguese police believing that Madeleine's corpse could have been carried in the car more than three weeks after she died. This has been strenuously denied by Mr and Mrs McCann.
 
The request to withhold the DNA evidence was refused by the public prosecutor, Jose Cunha de Magalhaes e Meneses, at a meeting in the Algarve town of Portimaõ on Thursday, according to Correiõ da Manha. Detective Superintendent Stuart Prior, the officer in charge of the British end of the inquiry, was among those at the conference, the paper said.
 
A Leicestershire police spokeswoman refused to comment on the report and would not confirm which officers were in Portugal.
 
"Representatives from Leicestershire Constabulary are currently in Portugal to better understand how the disclosure process works following a criminal investigation in Portugal," she said. "This has included a meeting with the public prosecutor."
 
The British officers will return to the UK within the next few days.
 
Mr and Mrs McCann, both 40, from Rothley, Leicestershire, remain arguidos, or formal suspects, in their daughter's disappearance.
 
The Portuguese authorities' investigation into Madeleine's disappearance from the Algarve holiday resort of Praia da Luz on May 3 last year appears to be coming to an end. Detectives handed over their lengthy final report at the start of this month for prosecutors to consider whether to bring charges, request further inquiries or close the case.
 
In recent weeks Portuguese newspapers, citing anonymous sources, have repeatedly reported that the investigation would be shelved shortly, but could be reopened if new evidence emerged.
 
If the Portuguese authorities do shelve the case, the McCanns want their own private investigators to be given access to detectives' files so they can continue the search for Madeleine.
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said today: "Obviously they are aware of numerous reports suggesting that the case is about to be shelved.
 
"If that is the case they hope that it is made very clear that their arguido status is revoked and they hope to gain access to the police files so that their private investigators can continue the search for Madeleine."
 
Despite a huge police investigation and massive coverage in the Portuguese and British media, the young girl has not been found.
 
The third arguido in the case, the Algarve property consultant Robert Murat, 34, received £600,000 in libel damages from four newspaper groups yesterday over "seriously defamatory" articles. Two other people wrong accused of being involved in Madeleine's disappearance received what have been described as "substantial six figure sums".
 
Mr Murat and the McCanns all strenuously deny any involvement in Madeleine's disappearance.

Saturday 
19 July 2008
443
British police failed to stop DNA evidence in McCann case from being made public Daily Mail 
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 12:51 AM on 19th July 2008
 
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.

Last year, the McCanns were the subject of allegations in the Portuguese press over DNA allegedly found in the boot of the car.

The couple hired the car almost a month after Madeleine, then aged three, vanished while on a family holiday in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz.

The McCanns, both 40, from Rothley Leicestershire, have always insisted that if such traces were found, there were wholly innocent explanations for it. They deny any involvement in Madeleine's disappearance.
 
Some of the forensic testing was done at the Forensic Science Service laboratory in Birmingham for Leicestershire police.

Last night, Leicestershire police refused to discuss the details of a meeting between public prosecutor Jose Cunha de Magalhaes e Meneses and the officers.

The force confirmed that officers held discussions about how some evidence would be disclosed at the end of the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance, but refused to comment on the newspaper report.

Speculation is mounting that the McCanns will be officially cleared of having anything to do with their daughter's disappearance. They remain 'arguidos'- or formal suspects - but it is expected this status will be lifted next week.
 
Portuguese police have already filed a report for prosecutors. It will advise lawyers to bring charges, request further inquiries or close the case.

On Wednesday, Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro, Portugal's attorney-general, said: 'The Maddie Case will have a solution on Monday and you will hear of it.'

Sunday 
20 July 2008
444
Evidence of death convinces the PJ but fails in court Diário de Notícias
 
20 July 2008
Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
Tests. On the day before the likely announcement by the Attorney General of the archiving of the Maddie case, DN knows from sources that are close to the process that the analyses from hair that was found in the McCanns' car revealed that 16 out of 18 markers match the child's genetic information

Judge mistrusts evidence used in an isolated manner

Tests that were performed on hair that was collected from the boot of the car that was rented by the McCanns in the Algarve have determined that 16 out of 18 markers match Madeleine's genetic information. The information, which was released to DN by a source from the PJ, joins the results in the preliminary report from the Birmingham lab, in England, where it is verified that "15 out of the 19 genetic markers that were found in a residue that was collected from the couple's car boot are a match" with the child.
 
"The evidence is unequivocal for the investigators", the PJ source guarantees. "We are talking about a tuft of hair that was found in the spare tyre well, in the car boot, which could not have fallen from the siblings' clothes or have ended up on that spot by other means. The issue is that in order to make a solid proof in court, one has to reach 18 markers. But with 16, the investigators have no doubts left", the policeman recognises.

But for a judge that was contacted by DN, there is no reason for such certainties. "It depends on which markers are missing and if I had to decide only with a basis on that element of proof, I would not take a case to court, because the chances for success would be very small. This type of evidence always has to be articulated with other elements."

Another source that is well positioned near the process, and with forensics knowledge, sustains the PJ agent's version by defending that "these tests are like the collection of fingerprints, where a piece of evidence in court needs to detect 13 points, but from 11 onwards the police is already certain".

For DN's source, the conclusions from the tests that were performed on the hair that was found inside the Renault Scénic that was used by the McCanns were not included in the PJ's final report merely because "if the evidence was not going to be used in court, the police did not want the Public Ministry to say that there is a persecution of the child's parents".

Although he mistrusts this isolated type of evidence, the judge that was heard by DN argues that there is matter to take the parents of Maddie McCann to court. "They could be judged over the crime of endangering a minor, because leaving their daughter alone inside a hotel room while they go to dinner is not acceptable within the social patterns, and over obstruction of justice. It is better to remember that the childs parents called the televisions before they called the police."
 
Cleared McCanns vow TV onslaught The People
 
We'll savage bungling cops on Oprah show
 
By Nick Dorman
20 July 2008
 
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."
 
I'll never have my life back The People
 
By Joshua Layton
20 July 2008
 
Maddie suspect Robert Murat has told how he fears he will never be able to rebuild his life - even though he hopes to be cleared tomorrow.
 
The former property developer said: "I don't know if I will ever be able to shake off the stigma of being 'that Maddie man'.
 
"People say there is no smoke without fire and there may always be some who still doubt me. I have to live with that for the rest of my life."
 
Speaking through a relative, Murat, 34, said: "I want my old life back as it was 14 months ago but that's just not possible."
 
Murat hopes Portuguese cops will drop his "arguido" status at the same time as Maddie's parents are cleared. He said: "I'm determined to move on and feel I have a future. But at the moment I have no idea which direction it will take me."
 
Murat was awarded £600,000 libel damages last Thursday for stories claiming he was involved in Maddie's abduction.
 
But he said: "I don't feel elated and this is not something to be celebrated. I'd have preferred not to have gone through this nightmare in the first place."
 
Murat's girlfriend, Michaela Walczuch, 33, and IT consultant friend Sergey Malinka, 23, also won High Court damages.
 
Divorced Murat, who is half Portuguese, offered to translate for police after Maddie was snatched in Praia da Luz.
 
He was made a suspect after claims that he was seen near the McCanns' flat the night the tot vanished. His mother said he was home all night.

Monday 
21 July 2008
445
The Portuguese Attorney-General's office announced that the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance was to be archived, pending further evidence.
 
The arguido status of the three suspects; Gerry McCann, Kate McCann and Robert Murat was lifted.
 

Tuesday 
22 July 2008
446
The dodgy DNA evidence that lead to the McCanns being made suspects Daily Mail
 
By VANESSA ALLEN
Last updated at 6:51 AM on 22nd July 2008
 
The forensic evidence which led to Kate and Gerry McCann being named as suspects was misunderstood by Portuguese police, it was claimed yesterday.
 
Detectives wrongly believed the work of British experts supported their theory that Madeleine had died in her parents' rented holiday apartment, when in fact the DNA analysis was inconclusive, it was suggested.
 
The claims come from leaks from inside the Portuguese investigation, based on an initial British forensic report into the case.
 
Detectives apparently believed that scientists found Madeleine's DNA and blood in the apartment and in the McCanns' hire car, which they did not rent until 25 days after her disappearance.
 
Armed with that 'evidence' and the knowledge that dogs supposedly found the 'scent of death' on Mrs McCann's clothes, they decided to name the couple as suspects.
 
But the final report from the Forensic Science Service in Birmingham several weeks later said that the DNA evidence in the case was inconclusive, and did not support the police's theory.
 
The report, handed over a month after the McCanns were made suspects, said scientists could not be sure if the samples had come from Madeleine, her younger sister Amelie, or even from her mother.
 
The samples were said to be tiny, badly degraded and heavily contaminated.
 
The dogs' reaction was also questioned following claims that they were unreliable and had been criticised in a U.S. trial.
 
Police also failed to realise that Mrs McCann, who is a GP, had come into contact with six patients who died before she went on holiday.
 
The collapse of the key elements of the investigation led to the police inquiry stalling, and eventually to yesterday's decision to clear the McCanns as suspects.
 
It was said to have led to an angry clash between Portuguese detectives and British forensic officials during a visit to Leicester in December. Officers arrived expecting to hear details of the DNA evidence, and had pinned their hopes on it solving their investigation.
 
Sources said there was a ' standup row' when they were told that the evidence was inconclusive.
 
FSS officials have angrily denied any suggestion that a blunder by their scientists could have been to blame.
 
Lawyers representing the lab flew to Portugal last week to try to block plans to make their findings public.
 
Mark Williams-Thomas, a former police officer who claims to have had access to the Portuguese case, said the police had pinned their case on the DNA evidence.
 
'It was a key element of the decision to make the McCanns suspects, along with the cadaver dogs and supposed discrepancies between the statements of the Tapas Seven (the group of friends who dined with the McCanns on the night Madeleine vanished).
 
'There were two reports from the FSS lab, one in September and one in December.
 
'The first was thought to be conclusive but the second one wasn't.'
 
Mr Williams-Thomas questioned whether the Portuguese police had fully understood the first, preliminary report from the FSS.
 
'We don't know the level of expertise within the Portuguese police to interpret the results,' he said.
 
A source close to the Birmingham based forensic lab added: 'There is absolutely no question of the reports being contradictory.
 
'The way the scientists work is utterly focused on facts and accuracy. Everything they find is checked, sent off to other scientists and checked again.
 
'There were no mistakes made. When the case files are made public, this will become obvious.'
 
Madeleine Cops File Leaked On Web Sky News Exclusive
 
Martin Brunt, Sky News crime correspondent
12:56pm UK, Tuesday July 22, 2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann have to wait a week to see the police files on the Madeleine case, but a summary has already been leaked to a Portuguese website.
 
It explains why the couple were made arguidos... because of the "scent of death" detected by the cadaver dog and their own reluctance to answer police questions.
 
According to the leak, the dog found the smell of a corpse in the couple's bedroom at apartment 5a and behind a sofa in the living room.
 
The dog detected the same on Madeleine's soft toy Cuddle Cat and on the key fob in the family's hire car.
 
The police report says the couple were made arguidos "due to the slight possibility of connection to a corpse".
 
The second animal - a blood dog - found traces of Madeleine's blood behind the couch, on two items of Kate McCann's clothes and on the key fob and in the car boot, according to the leak.
 
It also says there was a DNA match to Madeleine's on samples taken from the car but later forensic results did not confirm that initial finding.
 
Robert Murat was made a suspect after a British Sunday newspaper reporter gave his name to police because of his "inquisitive" behaviour.
 
Suspicions were fuelled by friends of the McCanns who claimed he helped in the search for Madeleine on the night she vanished, contradicting his alibi that he was at his nearby home with his mother all night.
 
The report says detectives found no one else who saw him on the night and telephone wires and searches provided no evidence of his involvement.
 
In a fascinating glimpse of the kind of information fed to police, one witness said he had overhead Gerry McCann talking into his mobile phone in nearby Lagos and saying "please don't hurt Madeleine".
 
Detectives did cell site analysis on Gerry's phone and established he was elsewhere at the time. The witness was wrong.
 
Police report into Madeleine's disappearance is leaked online as McCanns threaten to sue police over bungled probe Daily Mail 
 
By VANESSA ALLEN, DAVID WILKES and NIALL FIRTH
Last updated at 2:36 PM on 22nd July 2008
 
The police file of the investigation into disappearance of Madeleine McCann was leaked online today.
 
A 57-page report dated June 20, 2008 and written by an Algarve-based inspector with the Policia Judiciaria  was placed on the website of the well-regarded Portuguese newspaper Expresso today.
 
The apparent leak comes just a day after the McCanns were cleared of any involvement in their daughter's disappearance.
 
The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell criticised the leaking of the document.
 
He said: 'As always we simply will not comment on anything that appears to be from the usual anonymous sources.
 
'If any elements of the police report are being placed online, that would not only be wrong, you have to ask yourself who is behind it and why.
 
'Gerry and Kate's lawyers in Portugal will be applying formally for access to the complete file and they will be analysing everything in it in their own time without making elements public at this stage."
 
Earlier it was revealed that the McCanns may sue the Portuguese police over the bungled investigation into the disappearance of their daughter Madeleine.
 
As their relief at having their 'arguido' status revoked turned to anger, the McCanns have said that have not ruled out initiating legal proceedings.
 
The couple's spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said: 'By the end of this week, lawyers will have complete access to everything.
 
'They will have 20 days to assess the work of the police and what has been done and what hasn't been done. If they feel legal action is necessary, we could press charges.'
 
He added: 'It's going to be a long, slow process, both for the lawyers in examining the volumes and for Kate and Gerry to be informed of their contents and whether there's any need for legal redress.
 
'The priority has always been finding Madeleine so the investigative work is first and foremost.
 
'If there are any leads from the files, for instance new sightings, that's what the private investigators will focus on in the first instance.
 
'The question of legal action remains an option but that is not the priority right now. It is something Kate and Gerry will take advice on from the British and Portuguese lawyers.'
 
Mr McCann, speaking last night after he and his wife were cleared, also did not rule out taking legal action, although he said it would come second to finding Madeleine.
 
'We don't have any immediate plans to return to Portugal at the moment. Obviously we want to digest the statement and also to get access to the files to see what can still be done,' he said.
 
The couple's lawyers have already started the legal process to get their hands on the full police files into the fruitless investigation.
 
They are said to be using international investigators including Spanish-based agency Metodo 3 and British-based private detectives.
 
Their Portuguese lawyer Carlos Pinto de Abreu was lodging an application for access to the files today and they are expected to be released by the end of the week.
 
The McCanns will then have 20 days to appeal against the Portuguese attorney general's decision to drop the case, although this is unlikely.
 
Hours after they were officially cleared by Portugal's Attorney General yesterday, the couple appeared side by side last night in their home town of Rothley, Leicestershire, Mrs McCann, struggling to keep her emotions in check, spoke of the terrible effect the police decision to make them 'arguidos' has had on them and the search for Madeleine.
 
Trembling and clutching a child's pink rucksack with her daughter's favourite toy Cuddle Cat inside, she said: 'It is hard to describe how utterly despairing it was for us to be named as arguidos and subsequently portrayed in the media as suspects in our own daughter's abduction and worse.
 
'It has been equally devastating to witness the detrimental effect this status has had in the search for Madeleine.'
 
The couple fear that potential witnesses who might have come forward with vital information were deterred when they were named arguidos in September.
 
They held a brief news conference at a hotel near their home after Portuguese officials admitted they had found no evidence against them, lifted the suspect status and announced they were shelving the investigation.
 
Since being made arguidos - official suspects - ten agonising months ago, the McCanns have not commented on the state of the investigation or aired their views about the police because they were gagged by Portugal's strict judicial secrecy laws.
 
As her husband clutched her hand tightly for support, Mrs McCann, looking pale and close to tears, added: 'We can assure you we will never give up our search for Madeleine.'
 
Their official spokesman Clarence Mitchell said the couple had been 'wrongly accused' and 'now the world will see that they (the Portuguese police) were wrong.'
 
They said that while they welcomed the lifting of the arguido status and the Portuguese attorney general's admission that police had failed to find any evidence that they had committed any crime, it was 'not a cause for celebration'.
 
Glasgow-born Mr McCann and his wife, both 40, had not ruled taking legal action against the Portuguese authorities for the way they have been treated.
 
They said they hope that now their lawyers are allowed access to the police file, it will give them new leads in their private investigators' search for Madeleine, who went missing just before her fourth birthday in May last year.
 
Mrs McCann said: 'We are looking forward to scrutinising the police files to see what has actually been done and more importantly to see what can still be done as we leave no stone unturned in our search for our little girl.'
 
The files are believed to include thousands of leads, hundreds of witness statements and alleged DNA links between missing Madeleine and her parents. They also contain the supposed evidence for making them suspects.
 
The couple have fought long and hard to gain access to the masses of information. Earlier this month they won a legal battle against Leicestershire Police for access to 81 pieces of information.
 
The news that they will now be able to look at the complete set of police files came as an unexpected bonus to the couple, friends say.
 
Attorney general Jose Cunha Pinto Monteiro's announcement yesterday raised immediate questions about why the McCanns were forced to endure months under the cloud of suspicion, and to live with the constant threat that they could face charges over the disappearance.
 
Yesterday it was claimed that forensic evidence which led to the McCanns being named as suspects could have been misunderstood by Portuguese police.
 
Detectives wrongly believed the evidence supported their theory that Madeleine had died in her parents' rented holiday apartment when in fact the DNA analysis was inconclusive, it was suggested.
 
Mr Monteiro was careful to highlight the fact that the McCanns and fellow arguido Robert Murat were no longer under suspicion of any crime.
 
There had been widespread speculation that the couple might have faced child neglect charges over their decision to leave their three youngsters alone in their rented holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, while they had dinner with friends at a tapas bar nearby.
 
The attorney general said: 'The investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann has been archived as no evidence was discovered of any crime committed by the arguidos.
 
'Hereby the condition of arguido of Robert James Queriol Eveleigh Murat, Gerald Patrick McCann and Kate Marie Healy ceases, and the bail measures imposed upon them have expired.'
 
He said the case could be reopened if fresh evidence is uncovered, and said the McCanns' legal team and Mr Murat's lawyers would be allowed to see the case files once a few legal formalities had been completed.
 
Mr Monteiro's long-awaited decision to shelve the 15-month police investigation came as a huge relief to the McCanns, but their spokesman said there could be no sense of jubilation while their daughter was still missing.
 
'They welcome this news but the whole thing has been an unnecessary distraction since September,' said Mr Mitchell.
 
'The main thing now is to get everything back to finding Madeleine. The only thing they care about is finding Madeleine.
 
'We hope that the Portuguese authorities will continue to co-operate with their private investigation.'
 
Murat: I'm free to rebuild my life
 
Robert Murat told of his relief yesterday as he was formally cleared as a suspect.
 
The Briton, who lived near the flat where Madeleine disappeared, spent almost 15 months as an arguido after he was questioned on May 14 last year.
 
Mr Murat, 34, said he wanted to rebuild his life as a property consultant in the Algarve.
 
Asked if he was still in shock, he said: 'I think if you spend 15 months under a cloud of suspicion none of this feels entirely real.'
 
He told Sky News: 'There's a little girl still missing out there, so it's a time for relief but not for celebration.
 
'I hope in the future something comes out that proves that I had nothing to do with this. I do hope they keep on investigating and they find out what happened.'
 
Former police chief: I still believe she's dead
 
The former head of the Madeleine police investigation yesterday told why he still believes she is dead.
 
Goncalo Amaral said all the evidence suggested she had died inside her parents' rented holiday apartment on May 3 last year - the night of her disappearance.
 
Mr Amaral, who is publishing a book about the case on Thursday, denied he had led a 'persecution' against Kate and Gerry McCann.
 
He told the BBC: 'The evidence that we had gathered by the time that I left the case pointed to the girl being dead - and having died inside the apartment.
 
'I don't know what happened next. I can't say. We'll have to wait for the case files to be made public.'
 
Mr Amaral led the police investigation but was removed from the case in October after he accused British police of checking only leads which helped the McCanns.
 
He was widely criticised for focusing solely on the theory that Madeleine died in her parents' care and that they disposed of her body to cover up her accidental death.
 
But he insisted he was not acting alone when he decided to name them as suspects.
 
'In this case, it wasn't purely and simply a decision taken by police officers - Portuguese and British police. There were others involved.
 
'There was no persecution. The police don't want to persecute anyone, just to investigate what happened in a given case.'
 
Mr Amaral said that he retired recently because he wanted to be able to speak freely. He denied he was seeking to profit from Madeleine's disappearance by publishing his 224-page book, The Truth of the Lie.
 
'People can say what they like,' he said. 'I'm trying to contribute to the discovery of the truth.
 
'I worked 27 years as a police officer - and my conscience can't accept that this is the first case that slipped through my fingers.'
 
Friends of the McCanns have warned that their legal team will study the book and have not ruled out bringing libel proceedings against Mr Amaral.
 
He is also facing a perjury trial over claims that he helped to cover up the alleged torture of the mother of another missing girl in the Algarve by some of his officers.
 
Madeleine inquiry report leaked Metro
 
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
 
Portuguese detectives made Madeleine McCann's parents suspects on the "slightest chance" they could have been involved in her disappearance, a leaked report revealed.
 
An official 57-page summary of the massive final dossier assembled by the Policia Judiciaria (PJ) - Portugal's CID - was apparently posted online.
 
The leak came as Gerry and Kate McCann considered taking legal action against the Portuguese authorities after the couple had their suspect status formally lifted.
 
The police report, dated June 20 2008 and written by an Algarve-based PJ inspector, was placed on the website of the Portuguese newspaper Expresso.
 
Detectives named the McCanns as "arguidos", or formal suspects, last September in the light of sniffer dog searches and initial DNA test results, according to the document. This was because inquiries had flagged up the "slightest chance of their involvement with a possible corpse" in their holiday flat and hire car, it said.
 
The leaked report said a "cadaver dog", trained to sniff out dead bodies, picked up a scent in the McCanns' apartment and on clothes belonging to Mrs McCann and Madeleine. The animal also apparently scented death on the key of the Renault Scenic hire car rented by the McCanns 24 days after the little girl went missing.
 
Preliminary forensic analysis on samples recovered from the McCanns' hire car raised the possibility of a match with Madeleine's DNA profile, the report said. But final DNA test results could not match the material to any particular person - or even establish whether it was blood or another type of body fluid.
 
When Mr and Mrs McCann, both 40, were interviewed on September 6 and 7 they denied having anything to do with their daughter's disappearance, the document noted.
 
Madeleine was nearly four when she vanished from her family's holiday apartment in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz on May 3 last year as her parents dined with friends nearby.
 
The leaked PJ report details the numerous leads Portuguese detectives pursued fruitlessly - including psychic visions and thousands of reported sightings of Madeleine from as far away as Indonesia and Singapore.
 
Madeleine police report 'leaked on internet' The Independent 
 
PA 
Tuesday, 22 July 2008
 
Portuguese police's final report on their investigation into Madeleine McCann's disappearance was apparently leaked online today.
 
The lengthy document was posted on a newspaper website the day after prosecutors shelved the case and formally lifted the suspect status of the little girl's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann.
 
The couple's lawyers in Portugal are still awaiting official notification that they can now examine the police files in detail.
 
It is hoped they will gain access to the dossier, thought to stretch to 13 volumes, by the end of this week.
 
A 57-page report dated June 20, 2008 and written by an Algarve-based inspector with the Policia Judiciaria - Portugal's CID - was placed on the website of the Portuguese newspaper Expresso today.
 
McCann family spokesman Clarence Mitchell criticised the apparent leaking of the document.
 
He said: "As always we simply will not comment on anything that appears to be from the usual anonymous sources.
 
"If any elements of the police report are being placed online, that would not only be wrong, you have to ask yourself who is behind it and why.
 
"Gerry and Kate's lawyers in Portugal will be applying formally for access to the complete file and they will be analysing everything in it in their own time without making elements public at this stage."
 
The leaked document appears to be a summary of the huge police dossier which was handed to prosecutors at the start of this month.
 
It details the many leads that Portuguese detectives followed up - including interviews with resort staff, witness sightings and house-to-house inquiries at 443 properties in the village where Madeleine went missing.
 
The McCanns, from Rothley, Leicestershire, hope the opening of the files will provide fresh leads in their own private investigation into their daughter's whereabouts.
 
Mr and Mrs McCann will "bide their time" before speaking out on the police inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance, Mr Mitchell said today.
 
Legal action against the Portuguese authorities is an option, but that is not the couple's priority, he added.
 
Mr Mitchell said: "It's going to be a long, slow process, both for the lawyers in examining the volumes and for Kate and Gerry to be informed of their contents and whether there's any need for legal redress.
 
"The priority has always been finding Madeleine so the investigative work is first and foremost.
 
"If there are any leads from the files, for instance new sightings, that's what the private investigators will focus on in the first instance.
 
"The question of legal action remains an option but that is not the priority right now. It is something Kate and Gerry will take advice on from the British and Portuguese lawyers."
 
Madeleine was nearly four when she vanished from her family's holiday apartment in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz on May 3 last year as her parents dined with friends nearby.
 
The leaked police report reveals that detectives made the McCanns "arguidos", or formal suspects, in September in the light of sniffer dog searches and initial DNA test results.
 
This was because their inquiries had flagged up the "slightest chance of their involvement with a possible corpse" in their holiday flat and hire car, it says.
 
The couple denied the allegations in their interviews, the report notes.
 
A "cadaver dog", trained to sniff out dead bodies, picked up a scent in the McCanns' apartment and on clothes belonging to Mrs McCann and Madeleine, according to the document.
 
It also scented death on the key of the Renault Scenic hire car rented by the McCanns 24 days after the little girl went missing, it says.
 
A second dog apparently detected blood on the key and in the boot of the car, as well as in the apartment.
 
Preliminary forensic analysis on samples recovered from the McCanns' hire car raised the possibility of a match with Madeleine's DNA profile, according to the leaked report.
 
But the final results could not match the material to any particular person - or even establish whether it was blood or another type of body fluid.
 
The document also suggests that Madeleine was left crying in her family's holiday flat for more than an hour while her parents were out, two days before she went missing.
 
Pamela Fenn, a retired British ex-pat who lives upstairs from the McCanns' apartment in Praia da Luz, said she heard the child wailing from about 10.30pm to about 11.45pm on May 1 last year.
 
Mrs Fenn said Madeleine only stopped crying after she heard the sound of the door when her parents came back.
 
This "calls into question" the McCanns' insistence that they checked on their children every half an hour, the report says.
 
Dogs prompted McCanns police move BBC News
 
By Alison Roberts, BBC News, Portugal
Page last updated at 21:12 GMT, Tuesday, 22 July 2008 22:12 UK
 
Kate and Gerry McCann were declared suspects in their daughter Madeleine's disappearance because of the reaction of sniffer dogs, a police report says.
 
The BBC has seen the final Portuguese police report into her disappearance, the day after the case was shelved.
 
The report says police were "obliged" to make Mrs McCann, of Rothley, Leics, a suspect on the "merest possibility" she had been in contact with a corpse.
 
The couple and Briton Robert Murat are no longer formal suspects in the case.
 
Madeleine disappeared on a holiday with her parents in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve, on 3 May 2007, aged three.
 
The report for prosecutors says it was the reactions of the British-based sniffer dogs, one trained to find human blood, the other the presence of a corpse, which led to police declaring the McCanns as formal suspects last September.
 
Samples analysed
 
According to the police report, the dogs reacted at various points in the McCanns' holiday apartment, in the car they hired several weeks after Madeleine's disappearance, on two items of Mrs McCann's clothing and on at least one item of Madeleine's.
 
The British-based laboratory that analysed samples from these sites initially "found the possibility that Madeleine's DNA profile matched some of the samples collected", the police report says, but the same lab later found that they could not be identified as belonging to anyone in particular.
 
But, when Mrs McCann was questioned in September, the report continues, police were obliged to declare her an "arguido", with the extra legal rights this gave her, "in view of the mere possibility of her having been in contact with the possible corpse".
 
It was only after this questioning that the British lab rowed back from its initial findings, according to the police report.
 
Regarding Mr Murat, the first person to be declared arguido in the case, suspicions "initially" arose when a British journalist reported him acting strangely, the report says.
 
This contradicts what police told media, including the BBC, at the time, which was that detectives had already had their eye on him.
 
The document confirms earlier media reports that a woman staying upstairs from the McCanns recalled hearing a child crying for over an hour in the family's apartment, on the eve of Madeleine's disappearance.
 
The report also says a reconstruction of the night Madeleine disappeared - when her parents were eating at a nearby restaurant with friends - could have established whether the timeline was consistent with abduction by a stranger, as police had difficulty doing this on the basis of the group's testimony.
 
The reconstruction did not take place after some of the McCanns' seven holiday companions declined to take part.
 
'Defensive tone'
 
The 57-page final report, complemented by appendices detailing police actions and findings, at times takes a defensive tone.
 
And it is only a portion of the mass of documentation relating to the case.
 
It stresses the thousands of man-hours put in by over 100 detectives from early on in the investigation, working round the clock.
 
It reveals the hundreds of house searches carried out and the thousands of leads phoned in by the public that they had to sift through, most of which, it says, were found not to be credible.
 
Meanwhile, the Portuguese authorities have dismissed suggestions that they have been incompetent or that they were washing their hands of the case.
 
In written answers to questions put by the BBC, the attorney general's office said police had taken all steps that "any good police force in the world would and will continue to take them until it can obtain a satisfactory result."
 
The investigation, it said, "will always remain open and all action taken that proves necessary to find out what really happened".
 
It cited as examples of new facts that could prompt the files to be reopened "a confession, a telephone conversation [or] a new credible witness".
 
The Portuguese police's national director, José Maria Almeida Rodrigues, speaking on Portuguese radio, said his detectives would "follow all leads" that might come up in the case but "with restraint and discretion".
 
The McCann family spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said: "Gerry and Kate's lawyers in Portugal will be applying formally for access to the complete file and they will be analysing everything in it in their own time."
 
On Monday, Portugal's attorney-general, Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro, said the 14-month investigation into Madeleine's disappearance had uncovered no evidence of a crime by any of the arguidos.
 
As a result, the case has been shelved and the McCanns' and Mr Murat's status as suspects ended.

Wednesday 
23 July 2008
447
Madeleine hunt will be taken 'to the ends of the earth' even though case has been shelved, says Portugal's top policeman Daily Mail 
 
By VANESSA ALLEN and DAVID WILKES 
Last updated at 8:36 AM on 23rd July 2008
 
Portugal's top police officer has vowed to search "to the ends of the Earth" for Madeleine McCann - even though the case has been officially shelved by prosecutors..
 
National director of the Judicial Police, Almeida Rodrigues, insisted his detectives would chase up every lead until the mystery is solved.
 
He insisted the case would remain open and that officers would never give up on the hunt.
 
He told newspaper 24 Horas: "The Judicial Police will continue to chase up every credible lead we receive and we will travel to the ends of the Earth if needs be.
 
"As with other unexplained disappearances, there are some cases that are always open.
 
"The fact that the criminal process has been archived does not mean the case is closed.
 
"A case only stops being investigated if there is a successful criminal trial."
 
Mr Rodrigues spoke after attorney general Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro announced the archiving of the case on Monday.
 
A leaked police report stated yesterday that Kate and Gerry McCann were made police suspects because of the 'mere possibility' they were involved in their daughter's disappearance.
 
The couple endured ten months of agony as the prime suspects in the Madeleine McCann investigation despite police having no real evidence against them.
 
In a leaked copy of Portuguese police's final report on their 14-month £2.5million investigation, detectives admitted they found nothing to support their suspicions against the McCanns.
 
The Madeleine investigation was formally shelved on Monday and the couple, both 40, were told they were no longer arguidos - formal suspects.
 
Later this week, their lawyer will be given access to the estimated 11,000 documents in the police files.
 
It is hoped the files will contain clues that could help find Madeleine, who was three when she went missing from her family's rented holiday apartment in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz on May 3 last year.
 
The Portuguese newspaper Expresso claimed to have a leaked copy of the police's final report, which was handed to prosecutors last month.
 
The newspaper said the 57-page report provides details of the chain of events which led to the police decision to name the McCanns, of Rothley, Leicestershire, as arguidos.
 
The report said detectives had acted on the belief that forensic tests in the couple's apartment and hire car supported 'the possibility of a corpse'. It added: 'They (the McCanns) were made arguidos due to the mere possibility of their involvement.'
 
The report admitted police had not found any evidence against the other named suspect, British expat Robert Murat, 34. He was also cleared on Monday.
 
It concluded: 'It was not possible to obtain a concrete and objective conclusion about what truly happened that night, or the current whereabouts of the missing child.'
 
Goncalo Amaral, the former head of the investigation who is due to publish a book on the case tomorrow, insisted the accusations against the McCanns could be resurrected 'at any moment'.
 
Mr Amaral said: 'The [Portuguese] attorney general does not say they are innocent... It is not a statement of innocence of Madeleine's parents.'
 
Kate and Gerry McCann threaten legal action over Madeleine book Telegraph 
 
Kate and Gerry McCann have threatened legal action over the publication of an explosive account of the investigation into their daughter's disappearance by the former detective in charge of the case.
 
By Fiona Govan in Lisbon
Last Updated: 9:03PM BST 23 Jul 2008
 
Goncalo Amaral, who led the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance until he was sacked last October, has chosen to speak out about the case within days of it being shelved and the parents cleared of any involvement.
 
In the book, which will appear in bookshops across Portugal on Thursday, the detective reveals details of first five months of the investigation and presents his theories on what happened to the girl who disappeared shortly before her fourth birthday from a holiday apartment in the Algarve.
 
The McCanns, both 40, were said to be appalled at the contents of the book after excerpts were leaked to Portuguese newspapers and preparing to sue.
 
Mr Amaral, 48, also criticises elements of the probe, including contamination of the crime scene at a very early stage by his own officers.
 
"Gerry and Kate are going to sue over this book," said a source close to the family.
 
The book reveals intimate details about the life of the couple in the days after their daughter's disappearance.
 
Clarence Mitchell, the family's spokesman, said: "People should bear in mind that Amaral is a discredited former police officer who was removed from the case for criticising Leicestershire police.
 
"His own Attorney General ... on Monday, made it very clear there is absolutely no proof that any criminal offence was committed by Kate or Gerry."
 
He accused the detective of shamelessly attempting to cash in on Madeleine's plight.
 
"Amaral is seeking to make money out of Madeleine's situation and is seeking publicity – it's quite disgusting," he said admitting that legal advice had been taken.
 
"The libel lawyers who are representing Kate and Gerry and their friends are assessing every word of this book very closely, and they will not hesitate from taking legal action against Amaral if any passage requires it."
 
The former chief inspector, who retired from the force earlier this month following criticism over the way he handled the case, explained his motivation to write the book.
 
"I feel the time has come to restore my reputation after it was publicly sullied and I had no recourse within the institution that is the Policia Judiciaria," he wrote in an author's statement released with the book.
 
"I also want to contribute to finding out the truth and seek justice for Madeleine," he added.

Thursday 
24 July 2008
448
Gonçalo Amaral launches his book 'A Verdade da Mentira' ('The Truth of the Lie') in Lisbon. It is greeted with a furious reaction from the McCanns and the UK press.
 

Friday 
25 July 2008
449
Madeleine Team Hope To See Files Sky News 
 
8:11am UK, Friday July 25, 2008
 
Lawyers acting for the parents of Madeleine McCann expect to be granted access to police files later today.
 
On Monday, police in Portugal decided to close the case into the disappearance of four-year-old Madeleine, who went missing in Praia da Luz in May 2007.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann were formally cleared of involvement in Madeleine's disappearance when prosecutors lifted their status as "arguidos", or formal suspects.
 
Madeleine vanished from her family's holiday apartment in the Algarve resort as her parents dined with friends nearby.
 
Despite a huge police investigation and massive coverage in the Portuguese and British media she has not been found.
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said the couple's lawyers in Portugal had applied formally for access to the complete police file and they would "be analysing everything in it in their own time without making elements public at this stage".
 
The McCanns, from Rothley, Leicestershire, are hoping that the files will provide fresh leads in their own private investigation.
 
The dossier is thought to stretch to 13 volumes.
 
Mr Mitchell said: "It's going to be a long, slow process, both for the lawyers in examining the volumes and for Kate and Gerry to be informed of their contents and whether there's any need for legal redress.
 
"The priority has always been finding Madeleine so the investigative work is first and foremost.
 
"If there are any leads from the files, for instance new sightings, that's what the private investigators will focus on in the first instance."
 
Press Association National Newswire
 
By Sam Marsden, PA Chief Reporter
25 July 2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann's lawyers are still awaiting access to the Portuguese police files in the disappearance of the couple's daughter Madeleine, their spokesman said today.

Their legal team in Portugal had expected to be granted official permission to look at the massive dossier of documents by the end of this week.

But despite the leaking of a detailed 57-page summary of the file on Tuesday, the McCanns' lawyers have so far not heard from the authorities.

Family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We are waiting for notification from the court. We are very hopeful it will be early next week."

Meanwhile, it is understood the couple will definitely take legal action against the former detective in charge of the Madeleine case over his new book.

Goncalo Amaral maintains the young girl died in her family's holiday flat in A Verdade da Mentira - The Truth Of The Lie - which was published in Portugal yesterday.

The McCanns, both 40, from Rothley, Leicestershire, were formally cleared of involvement in Madeleine's disappearance on Monday, when prosecutors lifted their status as "arguidos", or formal suspects.

They say they will continue to believe their daughter is alive until given firm evidence to the contrary, and their lawyers are now scrutinising Mr Amaral's book.

Mr Mitchell said the McCanns' legal team would "take their time" to go through the text.

He refused to comment on Portuguese newspaper reports that the book is to be published in English and that its film rights have already been sold.

"We are not talking about Mr Amaral and his book. We are not giving him any oxygen of publicity," he said.

"All I will say is I hope he and his publishers, and the newspapers reporting his libellous allegations, are very brave because action will be taken if required at a time of our choosing."

Mr Amaral, who was removed from the case in October after reportedly criticising British police, argues in his book that investigators made the "mistake" of treating the McCanns "with tweezers".

He also criticises British officers, claiming they held back a potentially important lead for six months and questioning their relationship with the McCanns.

Leicestershire Police, which worked with Portuguese detectives on the inquiry, declined to comment on Mr Amaral's allegations.

Madeleine was nearly four when she vanished from her family's holiday apartment in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz on May 3 last year as her parents dined with friends nearby.

Despite a huge police investigation and massive coverage in the Portuguese and British media, she has not been found.

On Monday Portuguese prosecutors announced they were shelving the case and lifting the arguido status of the McCanns and Algarve resident Robert Murat.

Mr and Mrs McCann may give further interviews in the coming weeks, but they are said to be "worn down" by this week's emotionally draining developments.

Saturday 
26 July 2008
450
Robert Murat Sues McCann Friends SOL 
 
By Felícia Cabrita and Margarida Davim
26 July 2008
Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
Robert Murat is going to prosecute two friends of the McCann couple for perjury in a confrontation ordered by the judge. Also the Portuguese State will be prosecuted, for allegedly "ruining his life". A curiosity: in the thorough searches to his house, Roman ruins were discovered.

Francisco Pagarete, Murat's Lawyer, does not know the evidence that the English gave during the investigation. However, he was present at the confrontation that - months after Murat had been constituted as arguido - was done between his client, Rachel Oldfield and Fiona Payne. The lawyer guarantees to SOL: "They lied in front of us, with the clear intention of incriminating my client".

Pagarete explains that, as soon as the case ends being under the secrecy of justice, he is going to consult 12 thousand pages of the process to find other evidences: "According to what I read in SOL, it was a British journalist who did the first accusation to the English Police. I will check if that is in the process".

Sunday 
27 July 2008
451
Kate and Gerry McCann: Portuguese cops' hunt for Maddie "pathetic" Sunday Mirror 
 
Headline to article in paper edition:
 
Number of doors knocked on by British cops hunting missing Shannon Matthews: 5000
 
Number of doors knocked on by the Portuguese cops hunting Madeleine McCann: 443
 
By Lori Campbell
27 July 2008
 
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 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."
 
*
 
Note about relative population figures:
 
'In Praia da Luz, whose population is still little more than 1,000 even after decades of foreigners settling in what once was a fishing village, some locals say they will never be able to feel the same way about it again.' BBC News
 
'According to the 2001 census, the Dewsbury urban sub-area had a population of 54,341.' Wikipedia
 
And a reminder of the press coverage of the British police hunt for Shannon Matthews:
 
Police 'ignored' crucial clues in Shannon hunt Guardian
 
Detectives were alerted very quickly to suspicions about Mick Donovan, the uncle of the missing girl's stepfather. Yet locals say they failed to act on the tip for weeks. David Smith and Andrew Russell examine a case that could have far-reaching effects on future investigations
 
David Smith and Andrew Russell
The Observer, Sunday March 16 2008
 
Police faced growing questions last night over why it took 24 days to find missing schoolgirl Shannon Matthews when her alleged kidnapper, Mick Donovan, was a relative who had been reported by neighbours as suspicious.

As Shannon's relieved mother returned home and said she 'just couldn't stop crying' when she saw her nine-year-old daughter again, there were calls for a review of the police investigation and an overhaul of procedures for dealing with missing children

Shannon was found on Friday concealed in the base of a divan bed in Donovan's first-floor flat in Batley Carr, just a mile from her home on an estate in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire. Donovan, the uncle of Shannon's stepfather Craig Meehan, was being questioned by detectives last night. Residents in the tightly knit community claimed they tipped off police about him but he was not confronted until last Friday, more than three weeks after Shannon went missing, despite the force mounting its biggest investigation since the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper 30 years ago.

Edward McMillan-Scott, Conservative MEP for Yorkshire and the Humber, said with statistics showing that 'in more than three out of four cases like this a family member is involved', police should have conducted a 'thorough search [of all family members that] would have included the suspect in this case'.

McMillan-Scott said, although he did not want to criticise police without knowing the full facts about the case, he had requested a meeting with officers in West Yorkshire.

He called for a system such as the 'amber alert' used in America, France and Belgium. The system sees information put out on television, radio stations and motorway signs as soon as children go missing. McMillan-Scott added: 'I have no doubt at all that with a similar system, Shannon would have been recovered within hours.'
 
(article continues...)

Monday 
28 July 2008
452
Kate's Maddie diaries leaked The Sun
 
Published: Today (28 July 2008)
 
EXCERPTS from Kate McCann's diary covering the first agonising weeks after daughter Maddie vanished have emerged.
 
They show that the desperate mum left messages asking PM Gordon Brown to "increase political pressure" to aid the search. After he phoned 40-year-old Kate and husband Gerry, she noted that Mr Brown was "nice and supportive" — but that she "felt a bit emotional after".
 
The pages were obtained from police files by a Portuguese paper.
 
Maddie, now five, went missing in the Algarve in May 2007. Disgraced police chief Goncalo Amaral, 48, has made fanciful claims in his new book that it was impossible to conduct the inquiry due to political pressure brought by the McCanns.
 
Family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said last night the claims were "distorted and ridiculous".
 
Meanwhile, shameless Amaral said yesterday he may write another book about the case.

Official FindMadeleine.com website hacked
 
28 July 2008
 
The official FindMadeleine.com website has been breached by the hacker known as: 'C1c4Tr1Z', who took the opportunity to use the 'News and Press Releases' section to post various messages, some to a fellow hacker known as 'K1u'. The first message that appeared, replaced before a screenshot could be taken was:
 
I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z. Date Released: 21/07/2008 23:03:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z. Date Released: 10/07/2008 22:29:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z. Date Released: 12/04/2008 23:06:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z. Date Released: 19/03/2008 20:52:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z.
Date Released: 19/03/2008 11:00:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z.
Date Released: 13/06/2008 23:00:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z. Date Released: 02/02/2008 14:44:00

I hope you find madeleine! C1c4Tr1Z. Date Released: 01/02/2008 13:00:00
 
'C1c4Tr1Z' is an Argentinian hacker who describes himself, on his brag site, as a 'WebAppSec & Hacking Enthusiast!'. 'K1u' also has his own website.
 
'C1c4Tr1Z' reads CICATRIZ, which means scar. So this hacker calls himself 'SCAR'.
 
The first entry appeared 28 July 2008 00:27am
 
Screenshots (click images to enlarge):

hackscreenshot1.jpg
28 July 2008 00:29am

hackscreenshot2.jpg
28 July 2008 00:54am

hackscreenshot3.jpg
28 July 2008 01:00am

hackscreenshot4.jpg
28 July 2008 01:05am

hackscreenshot5.jpg
28 July 2008 01:10am

Thanks to PAMALAM from www.gerrymccannsblogs.co.uk for screenshots
 
*
 
Update 29 July 2008
 
Site now completely gone and replaced with a maroon band across a blank page. A hackers code of 'Cc4Tr1Z' appears in the top left corner of the page.

hackscreenshot6.jpg
29 July 2008 09:16am

Further update, 29 July 2008: Site now appears to be operational again.

Tuesday 
29 July 2008
453
Maddie's parents set for Irish visit Irish Herald
 
By Geraldine Gittens
Tuesday July 29 2008
 
KATE and Gerry McCann are set to return to Ireland later this year.
 
The couple and their young twins are expected to make the journey this autumn and plan to make a television appearance while they're in the country. The couple's visit will be their first time to arrive in Ireland since their four-year-old daughter Madeleine went missing last year.
 
Thanks
 
Kate and Gerry are expected to take up on an open invitation to appear on The Late Late Show to address the nation and thank the Irish for their "incredible support".
 
One source for the Friday night chat show revealed to the Herald yesterday that "they are coming".
 
"It'll be at the end of September or early October," the source added.
 
The couple and their children were regular visitors to Ireland prior to Madeleine's disappearance in Praia de Luz in May 2007 while on holiday. And it is believed they want to return to meet and thank the Irish people for their support.
 
RTE bosses are hoping that the McCanns will come on the show and reveal first-hand the terrible trauma they've experienced. However, programme bosses are remaining tight lipped until closer to the scheduled visit.
 
Larry Masterson, executive producer of The Late Late Show confirmed that the interview remained "a possibility".
 
Mr Masterson is hopeful that the couple will appear on the Irish chat show after their spokesperson hinted that they would do so.
 
"We had their solicitor/spokesperson on The Late Late Show last season and he stated on the show that if they were coming to Ireland they'd come on the show."
 
The couple are said to be hugely grateful for the love and care the Irish public has given them since their oldest daughter's disappearance.
 
"Ever since Madeleine disappeared, the number of letters and Mass cards sent to them has been phenomenal," said family spokesman Clarence Mitchell.
 
"In fact there have been more messages from Ireland than any other country in the world."
 
The trip to Ireland will be the family's first visit with their three-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie, since Maddie was abducted in Portugal last summer.
 
The family are expected to stay in St Johnston, Co Donegal while they're in Ireland.
 
Painful
 
The autumn trip will be a painful reminder for the McCanns of their last visit to Donegal with their three children in March, 2007 -- just weeks before Maddie was taken from Praia da Luz on May 3.

Wednesday 
30 July 2008
454
 
Thursday 
31 July 2008
455
Police search for Madeleine is still on Euro Weekly News   
 
31 July 2008
 
THE National Director of the Judicial Police (PJ) has vowed to search "to the ends of the Earth" for Madeleine McCann even though the Attorney General's Office has announced that the process has been archived.

Almeida Rodrigues said PJ detectives will continue to follow all new leads that come up until the case is solved.

"The fact that the criminal process has been archived does not mean the case is closed. A case only stops being investigated if there is a successful criminal trial," he told Portuguese television RTP.

These remarks were made as a reaction to a newspaper opinion article written for Diario Economico by Alipio Ribeiro, his predecessor at the command of the PJ, in which he considered the archiving of the case to be hasty, stressing that a case of a missing child should not be closed after such a short period of time just because investigators did not find evidence enough to file charges against any of the suspects.

He also wrote that he believes that perhaps it would be more reasonable to lift the 'arguido' (formal suspect) status from the three suspects and keep the case open and continue with the investigations.

Almeida Rodrigues answered by saying: "Dr Alipio [Ribeiro] was never recognised for being a particularly gifted investigator." On another development connected to the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, last week, Goncalo Amaral, the former head of the investigation, published a book on the case. The book was sold out in just a few hours. The McCann family spokesman said libel lawyers were assessing every word of the "Maddie The Truth of the Lie" book and will not hesitate in taking legal action if any passage requires it. The Sun newspaper quoted a source close to the McCann family as having said that they plan to take legal action against Amaral, Portuguese newspapers which reprinted parts of the book and bloggers who discussed it.

With the process archived and the controversy in the bookshops, the Maddie case keeps on causing several reactions. The most recent came from former President Jorge Sampaio, who told TV station TVI he believes that if the suspicions presented in Amaral's book are true, they should have been used to reopen the process and not to write a book.

The former president also criticised Alipio Ribeiro, saying that it is "truly unheard of, from the point of view of institutions and of the prestige that we must defend before foreign countries, that the former director of the PJ, a joint prosecutor [Alipio Ribeiro], came out to criticise the archiving [of the process of the disappearance of Madeleine] when it was him who managed that process, and I also presume that the constitution of 'arguidos' [of Kate and Gerry McCann] was not entirely unknown to him. I think this is an amazing thing in terms of pulling the rug from under the feet of the colleague that succeeded him in his post. There is no democracy that justifies this," Sampaio said.
 
McCanns viewing police case files BBC News   
 
Page last updated at 12:18 GMT, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:18 UK
 
Lawyers acting for the parents of Madeleine McCann have started examining Portuguese police files on the investigation, their spokesman says.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann were told they could begin to study some 20,000 pages filed by police in Portimao.
 
The couple hope information within them could help their own private investigators continue the search.
 
Madeleine disappeared aged three on a holiday with her parents in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve, on 3 May 2007.
 
McCann family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "This is an important step forward in the search for Madeleine."
 
The police inquiry into her disappearance was wound up because of a lack of evidence on 21 July.
 
*
 
1st Update (2 paragraphs added to end) 
 
Page last updated at 12:29 GMT, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:29 UK
 
Police also announced that the McCanns and a third British national, Robert Murat, were no longer formal suspects when they closed the case.
 
The McCanns, both 39, and Mr Murat, 34, all strongly denied having had any involvement in what happened to Madeleine.
 
*
 
2nd Update with extended quote from Clarence Mitchell
 
Page last updated at 14:21 GMT, Thursday, 31 July 2008 15:21 UK
 
Lawyers acting for the parents of Madeleine McCann have started examining Portuguese police files on the investigation, their spokesman says.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann were told they could begin to study some 20,000 pages filed by police in Portimao.
 
The couple, both 39, of Rothley, Leics, hope information within them could help their own private investigators.
 
Madeleine disappeared, aged three, on a holiday with her parents in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve, on 3 May 2007.
 
'Important step'
 
McCann family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said the examination of the files was "an important step forward" in the search for Madeleine.
 
He said: "Kate and Gerry have long wanted to know what was in the police files and what was and wasn't done in terms of the search for their daughter.
 
"They will be taking their time, along with lawyers, to assess the thousands of pages of information in detail before they make any comment."
 
Any critical information will go to detectives to act on, he added.
 
The lawyers are also assessing whether files would support legal action against police over the way they conducted the inquiry.
 
The police inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance was wound up because of a lack of evidence earlier this month.
 
Police also announced that the McCanns and a third British national, Robert Murat, were no longer formal suspects when they closed the case.
 
The McCanns and Mr Murat, 34, all strongly denied having had any involvement in what happened to Madeleine.
 
McCann lawyers gain access to Portuguese police files Independent
 
PA
Thursday, 31 July 2008
 
Lawyers acting for the parents of Madeleine McCann today began trawling through the Portuguese police files on the investigation into how their daughter disappeared, the couple's spokesman said.
 
Gerry and Kate McCann's legal team received notification from the authorities in Portugal that they could begin to study some 20,000 pages filed by police in Portimao, Clarence Mitchell said.
 
He said: "This is an important step forward in the search for Madeleine."
 
Rogerio Alves, the McCanns' top lawyer in Portugal, contacted the family today to say he had received official notification that the volumes can now be examined.
 
He will travel from Lisbon to the Algarve next week to supervise colleagues. In effect, the team will have August to leaf through the thousands of pages of information collected by detectives since May last year.
 
Much of the information will already be familiar to the lawyers, including statements made by the Leicestershire couple.
 
But the McCanns were largely kept in the dark about the official inquiry because of Portuguese laws governing police investigations.
 
It is hoped the couple, from Rothley, and the private detective agency working on their behalf, will unearth fresh leads to help their own search for Madeleine.
 
Mr Mitchell said: "Kate and Gerry have long wanted to know what was in the police files and what was and wasn't done in terms of the search for their daughter.
 
"They will be taking their time along with lawyers to assess the thousands of pages of information in detail before they make any comment.
 
"They and I will not be giving a running commentary. Any critical information will go to their investigators to act on."
 
As well as potential leads, the McCanns' lawyers will be assessing whether the files would support legal action against Portuguese police for the way they conducted the inquiry.
 
The opening of the files was permitted after the couple and expat Robert Murat were told earlier this month that they were no longer arguidos, or formal suspects, in the case.
 
Public Ministry makes process available from Monday onwards Lusa   
 
31 July 2008
 
Faro, 31 Jul (Lusa) – The Public Ministry makes the Madeleine McCann process, whose inquiry was archived on the 21st of this month and which prompted the lifting of arguido status from the child's parents and from Robert Murat, available to the media on Monday.

The document starts being made available to the journalists that requested access to the process, starting on Monday at the Public Ministry's Office that operates with the Portimão Court, an official source informed today.
 
The prosecutor closed the investigation into the disappearance of British girl Madeleine McCann on the 21st of this month and lifted the arguido status of the parents of the child, Kate and Gerry McCann, and the Portuguese-British citizen Robert Murat, stressing that they can reopen the process in the event that "new evidence" is reported.

The decision of the Attorney General's Office (PGR) was followed by silence from the authorities who acted on the ground during the last 15 months.

While the Department of Criminal Investigation of Portimão of the Judicial Police (PJ), coordinated by Paulo Rebelo, declined to comment on the decision, the director of the PJ of Faro also declined to speak to journalists because, allegedly, he was in a meeting.

Inhabitants and tourists who were in Praia da Luz, Lagos, when the announcement of the PGR was made, criticised the judicial authorities decision to close the case into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, while the girl is still missing, considering that the case "is badly compiled."

The parents of Madeleine McCann welcomed, in turn, the fact that they were no longer arguidos in the investigation into the disappearance of their daughter and felt that the fact they were made arguidos was "harmful" to the search operations.

The British girl Madeleine McCann, three years old, disappeared on May 03, 2007 from the tourist resort of Ocean Club in Praia da Luz, Lagos, Algarve, whilst she was in the apartment with twin siblings, also children, and their parents were dining at the nearby restaurant in the company of a group of English friends.

The mystery of the disappearance of the child and the apparent lack of motivation and solid clues to explain what happened have helped to transform this case into one of the most media covered ever.
 
Minster (sic) praises GNR performance during Maddie case The Portugal News   
 
Dated: 2/8/2008, Appeared online: 31/7/2008
 
Portugal's Home Affairs Minster (sic), Rui Pereira, told the country this week he believed the GNR police had acted in an "exemplary" fashion during the Madeleine McCann investigation, and in "close collaboration" with the PJ police.
 
Refuting criticism that the GNR police had contaminated the scene of crime before the PJ started their investigation, the government representative guaranteed that there was communication between the two.
 
In his book ‘Maddie, The Truth of the Lie', PJ ex-inspector Gonçalo Amaral criticises that GNR's behaviour during the investigation in Praia da Luz, where the then three-year-old Madeleine McCann went missing from her bed in a holiday apartment belonging to the Ocean Club Resort.
 
He accuses the officers of disturbing the investigators' work, and maintains the child died in the apartment where she was on holiday with her family, who he suspects hid her body following a "tragic accident".
 
Edition: 970
 
Madeleines disappearance starts taking its toll on Praia da Luz The Portugal News   
 
Dated: 2/8/2008, Appeared online: 31/7/2008
 
According to reports in the Portuguese press this week, the Ocean Club Resort in Praia da Luz, from where toddler Madeleine McCann went missing last year on May 3rd, has laid off at least half a dozen employees following poor occupational rates, said to be half the number registered 12 months ago.
 
At least six long-term employees have been contacted to negotiate the annulment of their contracts and respective compensation.
 
Most of the holidaymakers there at present booked their holiday packages last year. Furthermore, newspaper Diário de Notícias claims travel company Mark Warner have stopped sending tourists to that resort, and in fact intend severing all ties with the Ocean Club by the end of the year.
 
While the international economic crisis is being given as the main explanation for the drop in visitors, tour guide António Santos believes the 'Maddie Case' has also had an effect.
 
"As much as people may argue to the contrary, it has contributed", to the current state of affairs, he said.
 
"Until the child is found, dead or alive, there will always be a feeling of doubt and unease amongst the English, who think there have been lots of errors in the way the Portuguese police lead the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance."
 
He added, "Even many of the retired British residents in Praia da Luz are leaving".
 
Lagos GNR officers guarantee they patrol the area every day, but, António Santos says, "It is still not enough to transmit an image of real safety".
 
On the other hand, he stressed, "Portugal has become a destination that is too expensive for the English, due to the weakening of the pound, who have started to look to other destinations like Spain, Cuba and the Dominican Republic, which are more attractive and cheaper".
 
Edition: 970

With thanks to Nigel at McCann Files

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