Here is a timeline of the key events
since she disappeared from Praia da Luz
in Portugal in 2007.
2007
May 3
- Kate and Gerry McCann, from Rothley,
Leicestershire, leave their three
children asleep in their holiday
apartment in Praia da Luz Praia da Luz
while they dine with friends at a nearby
tapas restaurant.
Nothing is amiss when Mr McCann checks
on the youngsters at just after 9pm, but
when his wife goes back at about 10pm
she finds three-year-old Madeleine
missing.
Jane Tanner, one of the friends eating
with the McCanns, later reports seeing a
man carrying a child away earlier that
night.
May 5
- Portuguese police reveal they believe
Madeleine was abducted but is still
alive and in Portugal, and say they have
a sketch of a suspect.
May 14
- Detectives take Anglo-Portuguese man
Robert Murat in for questioning and make
him an "arguido", or official suspect.
Officers also search the home he shares
with his mother in Praia Da Luz, just
100 yards from where the youngster was
snatched.
May 25
- Detectives finally release the
description of the man reported by Jane
Tanner three weeks earlier following
pressure from the McCanns, their legal
team and the British Government.
May 30
- Mr and Mrs McCann meet the Pope in
Rome in the first of a series of trips
around Europe and beyond to highlight
the search for their daughter.
August 6
- A Portuguese newspaper reports that
British sniffer dogs have found traces
of blood on a wall in the McCanns'
holiday apartment.
August 11
- Exactly 100 days after Madeleine
disappeared, investigating officers
publicly acknowledge for the first time
that she could be dead.
August 31
- The McCanns launch a libel action
against newspaper Tal and Qual over a
front-page story which claimed police
believe they killed their daughter.
September 7
- During further questioning of Mr and
Mrs McCann, detectives make them both
"arguidos" in their daughter's
disappearance.
September 9
- The McCanns fly back to England with
their two-year-old twins Sean and
Amelie.
October 2
- Goncalo Amaral, the detective in
charge of the inquiry, is removed from
the case after criticising the British
police in a Portuguese newspaper
interview.
October 9
- The case is taken over by Paulo
Rebelo, a senior detective with
Portugal's investigative Policia
Judiciaria normally based in Lisbon.
October 25
- The McCanns release a new artist's
impression drawn by an FBI-trained
expert showing the man described by Jane
Tanner.
November 1
- Mr McCann returns to work as a
consultant cardiologist at Leicester's
Glenfield Hospital.
December 22
- Mr and Mrs McCann send a public
message to their daughter, telling her:
"Our only Christmas wish is for you to
be back with us again."
2008
February 4
- Portugal's top detective, Alipio
Ribeiro, says in a radio interview that
police were "hasty" in making
Madeleine's parents suspects in her
disappearance.
March 19
- Mr and Mrs McCann accept £550,000
libel damages and front-page apologies
from Express Newspapers over allegations
they were responsible for Madeleine's
death.
April 7
- Three Portuguese detectives, led by Mr
Rebelo, fly to Britain to re-interview
the seven friends on holiday with the
McCanns when Madeleine vanished.
April 10
- Speaking in Brussels, Mr and Mrs
McCann call for a Europe-wide missing
child alert system.
But this is overshadowed by a leak of
the couple's first police interviews,
which reveals that Madeleine asked her
mother on the morning before she
vanished: "Mummy, why didn't you come
when we were crying last night?"
April 26
- In an interview for a BBC Radio 4
documentary, Mr McCann says he believes
his daughter is still "probably alive"
and that there is "absolutely zero"
evidence to suggest otherwise.
April 30
- An ITV documentary reveals that the
McCanns almost decided against leaving
their children behind when they went out
on the night Madeleine disappeared.
May 3
- A tearful Mrs McCann urges people to
"pray like mad" for Madeleine as she and
her family mark the first anniversary of
the little girl's disappearance.
July 17
- Mr Murat receives £600,000 in libel
damages from four newspaper groups over
"seriously defamatory" articles
connecting him with the child's
disappearance.
July 21
- The Portuguese authorities shelve
their investigation and lift the
"arguido" status of the McCanns and Mr
Murat.
July 24
- Mr Amaral publishes a book about the
case, entitled The Truth Of The Lie, in
which he alleges that the young girl
died in her family's holiday flat on May
3.
August 4
- Thousands of pages of evidence from
the Portuguese police files in the
exhaustive investigation into
Madeleine's disappearance are made
public.
They reveal details of the lines of
inquiry pursued by detectives, witness
statements and scores of previously
unknown sightings of the little girl.
2009
January 13
- Mr McCann returns to Portugal for the
first time since coming back to the UK
without his daughter.
January 29
- Nearly £2 million was raised for the
official fund to find Madeleine in the
first 10 months after she went missing,
Companies House accounts show.
March 24
- The McCanns launch a localised new
appeal for information focused on the
area in the Algarve where Madeleine
disappeared.
April 4
- Mr McCann goes back to Portugal to
help film a reconstruction of the events
on the night his daughter vanished for a
new Channel 4 documentary.
April 22
- The McCanns fly to the US to record an
interview with celebrated chat show host
Oprah Winfrey to mark two years since
Madeleine's disappearance.
May 16
- The McCanns announce they will sue Mr
Amaral over comments he made in the
media.
May 22
- It emerges that British convicted
paedophile Raymond Hewlett is being
investigated in connection with
Madeleine's disappearance. He is later
ruled out.
September 23
- The McCanns return to Portugal
together for the first time in more than
two years. They meet lawyers and a PR
agency in Lisbon but do not visit the
resort where they last saw their
daughter.
A Portuguese judge grants an injunction
temporarily banning sales and further
publication of a book by former police
detective Goncalo Amaral, Maddie: The
Truth about the Lie, which was
originally published in July 2008.
October 21
- Shirts emblazoned with pictures of
Madeleine are handed out ahead of
Everton FC's Europa League tie with
Portuguese team Benfica in Lisbon. The
words "We're Still Looking For You" are
printed on them.
November 3
- A one-minute video message - produced
in seven languages - is launched by
Britain's Child Exploitation and Online
Protection Centre, showing new images of
how the girl might look more than two
years older.
December 13
- The McCanns return to Praia da Luz,
the resort they were staying at when
Madeleine disappeared, while visiting
Portugal for a court case over a book
claiming she is dead.
2010
January 28
- A video of the McCann's search for
Madeleine is shown at a fund-raising
event in London in January to mark the
1,000th day since Madeleine's
disappearance.
February
- Mr Amaral fails to overturn a ban on
his book about Madeleine. Mr McCann says
new information was not being followed
up by Portuguese police.
April 28
- Near the third anniversary of
Madeleine's disappearance, Mr McCann
says it is "incredibly frustrating" that
police in Portugal and the UK had not
been actively looking for Madeleine "for
a very long time".
March 6
- The McCanns criticise the release of
previously unseen Portuguese police
files on their daughter's case to
British newspapers. The 2,000-page
dossier details dozens of possible
sightings of Madeleine since she
disappeared.::
May 2
- The McCanns release a video online
which shows the couple trying to find
their missing child over the past three
years. It was originally shown in
January.
August
- Kate and Gerry McCann hold private
talks with Home Secretary Theresa May.
October
- A court in Lisbon overturns a ban on
the book Goncalo Amaral in which he
questioned the couple's accounts of
their daughter's disappearance.
November
- The McCanns sign a publishing deal to
write a book about their daughter's
disappearance. They also launch a
petition calling for a full review of
the case by the UK and Portugal.
2011
May 3
- The McCanns mark the fourth
anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance
with family and friends.
May 12
- In an open letter in the Sun
newspaper, the McCanns ask the Prime
Minister to launch an "independent,
transparent and comprehensive" review of
all information relating to the
disappearance of their daughter.
They publish a book, entitled Madeleine,
which the couple hope will prompt people
holding vital information about what
happened to Madeleine to come forward.
Sale proceeds will go towards the Find
Madeleine fund.
May 13
- Prime Minister David Cameron writes to
the McCanns telling them the home
secretary will be in touch to set out
"new action" involving the Metropolitan
Police.
July 28
- The Mccann family spokesman dampens
speculation of a possible breakthrough
in the search for missing Madeleine
after a sighting was reported in India.
November
- Giving evidence to the Leveson
Inquiry, Mrs McCann describes feeling
"violated" and like "climbing into a
hole and not coming out" when her
intensely private journal appeared in
the News of the World on September 14,
2008.
2012
April 17
- Spanish police search for Madeleine in
a Costa del Sol holiday resort following
a tip-off from colleagues in Portugal.
April 24
- British police conducting an ongoing
review into Madeleine's disappearance
say their investigation offers the “best
opportunity” to solve the mystery.
Detectives say it is the first time
information from all sources has is
pooled. They also release an age
enhanced image of how the youngster
would look now.
July 4
- Scotland Yard reveals it has
identified 38 persons of interest
including 12 Britons as it announces its
two year review is being upgraded to a
full scale investigation. Detectives say
there is every chance Madeleine remains
alive. |