While the gofundme appeal buoying
“Maddie cop” Gonçalo Amaral in his legal
fight against the parents of Madeleine
McCann is being temporarily wound down
in Portugal, in UK news this week
centres on an alleged fraud within the
fund set up to find the missing child.
According to the
Sun newspaper,
whistleblowers have presented damning
evidence pointing to a “person connected
to the hunt” for Madeleine using “public
donations to fund his own lifestyle”.
The Find Madeleine Fund has consequently
been "ripped off" to the tune of over
£100,000 - which Portuguese newspapers
have translated as “almost €139,000”.
With the story echoing a similar fraud
uncovered years ago and centring on a
private detective hired by the McCanns,
this latest UK-generated Madeleine story
follows a weekend exposé in the Sunday
People, again covering ancient ground.
In Portugal meantime, the friends and
supporters of Amaral have decided to
pull the gofundme online appeal launched
six months ago by a single mother from
Birmingham who was only 14 when
Madeleine went missing.
The last donations are still flowing in
before the page is to be officially
closed on Wednesday, October 28, having
raised in excess of €73,000.
The official reason for closure was that
supporters felt there was “largely
sufficient” in the fund’s account to
“face eventual future expenses”.
A source has since confirmed to the
Resident that other forms of fundraising
remain open, as the way ahead will
almost certainly involve further
appeals.
For now, the decision by judges at
Lisbon’s Appellate Court on Amaral’s
appeal against the €500,000-plus damages
awarded against him in the civil action
taken out by the McCanns over his book
“A Verdade da Mentira” is due any day.
But the source explained to us that if
the appeal is upheld - that is, if
Amaral “wins” and at last sees his
assets unfrozen after six years of
litigation - “the McCanns will almost
certainly appeal”.
“The next step would be an appeal to the
Supreme Court, and then even to the
Constitutional Court,” said the source.
And should Amaral lose the fight, which
he feels centres on his right to freedom
of expression, then a new online appeal
will be needed to fund a case against
Portuguese justice in the European Court
of Human Rights.
As the Resident explained six months ago
when 22-year-old Leanne Baulch set up
the gofundme page, the British tabloid
press vilified the bid, saying it was
powered by “sick online trolls”.
Unpleasantness continued to the point
where Ms Baulch - the single parent of a
toddler - removed herself from the
process altogether.
It was then that the page transferred to
the friends of Amaral. But the
unpleasantness is understood to have
continued, with internet manipulation of
the appeal’s online code so that a few
weeks ago it virtually disappeared from
sight.
In their announcement to the 2,791
subscribers sent out last Thursday, the
group writing collectively said: “May we
use this moment to wholeheartedly thank
those who have expressed their support
for Gonçalo Amaral’s right to an
appropriate defence. Whether you have
contributed financially or by sending a
support message, you have made an
impact. You have made a difference.” |