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: June key Events - Days(395-424) *

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

All the key events from June 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
Sunday 01 June 2008
395

Maddie cop rap The News of the World (No online link, appears in paper version only)

 

01/06/2008

 

BRITISH cops were blasted last night for refusing to interview a witness who saw a man matching a key suspect in the Madeleine McCann kidnap riddle.

Monday 02 June 2008
396

Gerry McCann candidate for election to board of BSCMR BSCMR

 

BSCMR Board Election 2008

 

There has been a BSCMR Board election taking place during the spring of 2008. The new Board will be in place from 1 June 2008-31 May 2010. The announcement of the new Board will take place at the BSCMR AGM on 3 June in Manchester. 

 

The aims of the BSCMR are to:

  • promote clinical practice and research into cardiovascular magnetic resonance and to disseminate the useful results of such research
  • further the advancement of education in cardiovascular magnetic resonance for the public benefit.

The BSCMR is a Charity and is affiliated to the British Cardiovascular Society (BCS).

*

 

Dr Gerald McCann was amongst 9 candidates nominated for a position on the board and this was put to the membership of the BSCMR (The British Society of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance).

Positions up for Nomination were:

Chairman Elect.
Treasurer.
Deputy Treasurer
Other members (3 Positions)

 

The full list of candidates:

Henry Dargle
John Greenwood
Grant Heatlie
Francisco Leyva
Gerry McCann
James Moon
Reza Razavi
Penny Sensky
Mark Westwood.

Three recommendations have been put forward:

Chairman Elect - Henry Dargie
Treasurer - Francisco Leyva
Dept. Treasurer - Reza Razavi

 

The voting paper made the following statement:

 

Gerry McCann.

Gerry graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1992. His interest in non-invasive cardiology began during an intercalated BSC in physiology and sports science, followed by lecturing in cardiovascular and exercise medicine. Gerry completed an MD on cardiopulmonary exercise testing in aortic stenosis. After moving to Leicester in 2000, Gerry developed an interest in cardiac imaging and was awarded a European Society of Cardiology clinical training fellowship in cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) undertaken in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. As well as receiving comprehensive clinical training, Gerry was involved in several research projects resulting in publication.

Gerry was appointed as a consultant cardiologist at Glenfield Hospital, Leicester, in 2005 and works closely with four radiologists on a dedicated CMR scanner offering a comprehensive clinical service. Our cardiac imaging fellow has recently secured a teriary consultant post in CMR. Gerry has been awarded a British Heart Foundation grant to assess the effects on left ventricular hypertophy in aortic stenosis on symptom development and funcional capacity, and other projects are under consideration.

Gerry is a member of the British Cardiovascular Society, the British Society of Echocardiography, the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance and the European Society of Cardiology working group on CMR. Last year he was the Royal College of Physicians' representative on the Health Protection Agency committee that produced a report on computed tomography scanning in asymptomatic individuals. He sees the BSCMR as the body to promote CMR training and research in the UK. We must work closely with the other imaging specialists, however, the BSCMR is an ideal organisation to promote multicentre trials in the CMR, to demonstrate the efficacy and cost effectiveness of CMR compared with other imaging modalties. As well as the accuracy of the test, cost-effectiveness and long term effects of radiation exposure must be considered as cardiac imaging continues to develop as an integral component in the patient management algorithm.

Tuesday 03 June 2008
397

Friends are the PJ trumps 24horas

 

Witnesses came to the Algarve to reinforce testimony that contradicts the McCanns

 

03 June 2008

Thanks to Joana Morais for translation

 

In a secret visit to Portugal, three people who had dinner at the Tapas Bar shattered the McCanns and Jane Tanner versions

 

Fiona Payne, her mother Dianne Webster, and the husband David Payne are the main trumps of the Public Ministry that will lead the parents of Madeleine McCann, the missing girl, on the 3rd of May 2007, from an apartment in Praia da Luz, Algarve, to be accused of the crimes of exposition and abandonment since they left the girl alone that critical night. It is a crime that is punishable up to ten years of prison and allows the respective preventive arrests, like 24horas announced last week.

These three witnesses returned to Portugal, on the 11th of July 2007, with travel paid by the Portuguese State, and were accommodated in a hotel unity of Portimão. They were questioned by Gonçalo Amaral’s team, the superior coordinator who was removed from the case, and they contradicted the McCann’s version regarding what went on in the night of the disappearance.

Remember that Kate, Gerry and the other two couples with whom they had dinner, assured that they were taking turns in the vigilance to the children. A fact that was contradicted to the authorities in the above-mentioned secret travel by Fiona Payne and that had already been put in question in two previous statements, given on the days that followed to Maddie's disappearance, by her mother and her husband.

Jane Tanner Contradicted

"Fiona Payne gave three statements to the authorities, as well as Matthew Oldfield and his companion, Rachel. Dianne Webster's statement [Fiona's mother] was very solid and there was no need to question her again”, revealed to 24horas a judicial person in charge connected with the process. In accordance to the same source, "other persons who had dinner with the McCanns - Jane Tanner, her companion, Russell O'Brien, Matthew Oldfield and his wife, Rachel – gave contradictory statements". And the judicial person in charge exemplifies: "Jane Tanner always said that she went out from the restaurant to see her oldest daughter. Fiona, David and Dianne guaranteed to the PJ that she never left the restaurant before the alarm was given by Kate. This information was corroborated by several workers of the Tapas Bar restaurant”. These witnesses also stated that Gerry McCann did not even go to check on the children, when he went away of the restaurant, and that he only stayed at the apartment of Praia da Luz entrance.

The only person who stayed in Tapas Bar

Dianne Webster, of 63 years old, mother of Fiona Payne (36 years), was one of three people who were available to return to Portugal to help the authorities in the reconstruction of the facts taken place on the 3rd of May 2007.

 

She was the only one that was quiet and calm when Kate McCann entered in the Tapas Bar shouting "they’ve taken her!". The authorities were suspicious of her attitude and she told them that she did not believe in the version of the McCanns. She also pointed out to the PJ that each couple was responsible for their own children and that no one entered in the apartment of the friends [in each other's apartments].

FACTS


SECRET. The McCannS organised a "secret" dinner with all the friends with whom they had dinner at the Tapas, in the Praia da Luz, Algarve, before the rogatory letters sent for England were carried out.

ACCUSATION. The accusation to the McCanns is almost concluded and it should be known before the 14th of July, the end date for the extended term to incriminate or not the British couple. The judicial authorities are still considering if they will not constitute more arguidos, since the McCanns were not the only ones leaving their children alone.

Wednesday 04 June 2008
398

Madeleine McCann's family to go on holiday a year after disappearance Telegraph

 

By Andy Bloxham 

Last Updated: 2:15AM BST 04/06/2008

 

The parents of Madeleine McCann are to go on their first holiday together since she was kidnapped in Portugal just over a year ago.

 

The parents of Madeleine McCann are to go on their first holiday together since she was kidnapped in Portugal just over a year ago, according to reports.

 

Kate and Gerry McCann, who are both 40, decided to take the break for the sake of their other children, twins Sean and Amelie, who are two, according to a family friend.

 

Madeleine was abducted from the family's apartment in the coastal resort of Praia da Luz, on the Algarve in Portugal, last May.

 

The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "It will be incredibly painful to contemplate going away without Madeleine but this is the reality they are faced with.

 

"Nothing has been booked yet, but one thing's certain – they won't be going to Portugal."

 

The family have spent only an occasional few days away from their home in Rothley, Leics, since returning from the Algarve on September 9, after Portuguese police made them official suspects.

 

A friend of the family told the Daily Mirror: "Everyone needs a holiday – Kate and Gerry included.

 

"It's now 14 months since Madeleine was taken. Behind the scenes, there remains a lot of action to try and find her, but for Kate and Gerry life has returned as close to normality as they're likely to get.

 

"After all they've been through, they want to give the twins a decent break to try and enjoy time as a family."

 

Kate and Gerry McCann to go on first holiday since kidnap Daily Mirror

 

Exclusive

 

By Stewart Maclean

4/06/2008

 

Kate and Gerry McCann have made the difficult decision to go on holiday again - just over a year since their daughter Madeleine was snatched.

 

It will be the first break for the family since her disappearance in Praia da Luz, Portugal, and even arranging it will stir up painful memories.

 

But friends say the McCanns feel they should do it for the sake of their two-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie.

 

Madeleine was abducted last May from the family's apartment on the Algarve coast, just days before her fourth birthday.

 

The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said details of the weeklong holiday would remain secret.

 

He added: "It will be incredibly painful to contemplate going away without Madeleine, but this is the reality they are faced with. Nothing has been booked yet, but one thing's certain - they won't be going to Portugal."

 

The family have rarely spent more than a weekend away from their home in Rothley, Leics, since returning from Portugal on September 9.

 

And a friend of the couple, both 40, said: "Everyone needs a holiday - Kate and Gerry included. It's now 14 months since Madeleine was taken. Behind the scenes, there remains a lot of action to try and find her, but for Kate and Gerry life has returned as close to normality as they're likely to get.

 

"That includes taking a holiday and they're considering their options at the moment. The plan is to get away from it all for a few days this summer.

 

"After all they've been through, they want to give the twins a decent break to try and enjoy time as a family."

 

The couple were dining with seven friends at a poolside tap as bar when Madeleine was snatched from their apartment a short distance away.

 

They stayed in Portugal for several months after her disappearance, but returned here after Portuguese police made them official suspects.

 

McCanns plan to take first holiday since Madeleine vanished Daily Record

 

Jun 4 2008

 

KATE and Gerry McCann are planning their first family holiday since Madeleine vanished.

 

The couple told friends they are ready for a break with their twins Sean and Amelie, two - 14 months after their sister disappeared during their Algarve holiday last May.

 

A friend said: "Everyone needs a holiday, Kate and Gerry included.

 

"Behind the scenes, there remains a lot of action to try and find her, but for Kate and Gerry life has returned as close to normality as they're likely to get.

 

"That includes taking a holiday."

 

They plan to spend a week away during the summer to give the twins a normal family break.

 

It will be the first time Kate and Gerry have booked a holiday since Madeleine vanished from their flat in Praia da Luz.

 

Their spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "It will be incredibly painful to contemplate going away without Madeleine but this is the reality they are faced with.

 

"Nothing has been booked yet but one thing's certain - they won't be going to Portugal."

 

Mitchell also slammed as "absolute, ludicrous, lies" new Portuguese police claims that three of the so-called Tapas Seven had broken ranks to give evidence against them.

 

McCanns plan family holiday The Sun

 

By Staff Reporter

Published:Today 04/06/2008

 

GERRY and Kate McCann are planning to go on holiday again – for the first time since their daughter Maddie vanished.

 

The McCanns have refused to say where they are going but confirmed they will not be returning to Portugal where the toddler went missing.

 

Family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said no details of the McCann’s week-long holiday with their three-year-old twins Sean and Amelie would be released.

 

Mr Mitchell said: "Kate and Gerry have always felt that they did not want to have a holiday under the circumstances, but clearly at some point, as much for the twins as for themselves, they may choose to have a break.

 

"That decision, however, will remain entirely private.

 

Fight

 

"One thing I can say is that it will not be Portugal. It would just create a huge media bun fight, and they don’t want to do that."

 

But if a trip is being considered, it is "not imminent", said Mr Mitchell.

 

The McCanns were dining in a nearby tapas bar in a resort in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve, with friends when Madeleine disappeared from their apartment on May 3 last year.

 

Gerry and Kate, both doctors, stayed in the country while officials searched for the tot, but finally returned to their detached home in Rothley, Leicestershire, in September after being named as official suspects.

 

The McCanns have said they want to provide as normal an upbringing as possible for their other children.

 

That may now include taking the twins away - but the couple would be desperate to do so out of the media spotlight.

 

Mr Mitchell said: "If they choose to have a holiday that is their decision and they would obviously have privacy in the same way as you or I."

 

McCanns plan first family holiday since Madeleine vanished 'for the sake of twins' Daily Mail

 

Original version:

 

By Neil Sears

Last updated at 2:45PM on 04th June 2008

 

The parents of missing Madeleine McCann are planning to go on holiday again for the first time since she disappeared.

 

And although Gerry and Kate McCann are refusing to say where they are going, they have confirmed that the one place they will definitely not be visiting is Portugal.

 

The couple were on holiday in the country's Algarve region last May when Madeleine, then three, disappeared from the apartment bedroom she was sharing with her younger brother and sister, twins Sean and Amelie, two.

 

As the fruitless police investigation dragged on, the family remained in Portugal until September - when Mr and Mrs McCann, both doctors, then finally returned to their detached home in Rothley, Leicestershire, after being named as official suspects.

 

Yesterday the couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said no details of the family's week-long holiday would be released.

 

Mr Mitchell said: 'Everyone needs a holiday - Kate and Gerry included. It's now 14 months since Madeleine was taken.

 

'Behind the scenes, there remains a lot of action to try and find her, but for Kate and Gerry life has returned as close to normality as they're likely to get.

 

'That includes taking a holiday and they're considering their options at the moment. The plan is to get away from it all for a few days this summer.

 

'After all they've been through, they want to give the twins a decent break to try and enjoy time as a family.'

 

The McCanns went to Praia da Luz with a group of family friends, and were dining in a nearby tapas bar when Madeleine disappeared from their apartment.

 

They eventually fell under official suspicion themselves, but have fiercely denied any involvement in their daughter's disappearance.

 

Updated version:

 

By Neil Sears

Last updated at 10:41PM on 04th June 2008

 

The parents of Madeleine McCann are to take their first holiday since her disappearance 13 months ago.

 

Gerry and Kate McCann, both 40, refused to say where they were going.

 

But they confirmed it would not be Portugal.

 

The couple were on holiday there with their three children when Madeleine, then three, disappeared from a bedroom at the family's rented apartment in the resort of Praia da Luz.

 

She and her younger brother and sister, twins Sean and Amelie, had been left unsupervised while their parents went out to a nearby tapas bar for dinner with family friends.

 

The McCanns, both doctors, stayed on for months at Praia da Luz during the police hunt for Madeleine last summer.

 

They finally returned home to Rothley, Leicestershire, last September after police named them as official suspects in the case.

 

Yesterday the couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said no details of the week-long holiday would be released.

 

The McCanns will take the break with the twins, who are now three.

 

He added: 'It will be incredibly painful to contemplate going away without Madeleine, but this is the reality they are faced with.

'Nothing has been booked yet. But one thing's certain  -  they won't be going to Portugal.'

 

A friend of the family said: ' Everyone needs a holiday  -  Kate and Gerry included.

 

'It's now 13 months since Madeleine was taken.

 

'Behind the scenes, there remains a lot of action to try to find her. But for Kate and Gerry life has returned as close to normality as they're likely to get.

 

'That includes taking a holiday and they're considering their options at the moment.

 

'The plan is to get away from it all for a few days this summer.

 

'After all they've been through, they want to give the twins a decent break to try to enjoy time as a family.'

 

The McCanns have always fiercely denied any involvement in their daughter's disappearance.

 

After returning to England Gerry McCann eventually resumed work as a hospital doctor.

 

Both parents continue to insist they have no reason to believe their missing daughter has died.

 

They say they are hopeful Madeleine, who would now be five, will one day be returned to them alive and well.

 

But in a recent TV documentary they admitted they were well aware that internet gossips and poison pen writers continue to blame them for Madeleine's disappearance and criticise them for everything they do.

 

The McCanns have repeatedly insisted they believed Madeleine, and the twins were safe in the apartment.

 

They were eating only 50 yards away with their friends, the socalled Tapas Seven, and say they checked on the children regularly.

 

Last week the McCanns pulled out of a planned reconstruction of Madeleine's disappearance because of suspicions about the motives of Portuguese police. 

 

*

 

Comment: The Mail very often rewrite their articles with updates but the change in this article is quite significant:

 

First version contains this paragraph:

'As the fruitless police investigation dragged on, the family remained in Portugal until September - when Mr and Mrs McCann, both doctors, then finally returned to their detached home in Rothley, Leicestershire, after being named as official suspects.'

In the second version, the paragraph above has been completely removed and replaced with these two:

'She and her younger brother and sister, twins Sean and Amelie, had been left unsupervised while their parents went out to a nearby tapas bar for dinner with family friends.

 

'The McCanns, both doctors, stayed on for months at Praia da Luz during the police hunt for Madeleine last summer.'

That is quite a shift of emphasis from the implied inaction of the 'fruitless' investigation, that was 'dragging on', to the description of the Portuguese police's active 'hunt' for Madeleine.

 

The updated version also contains veiled criticism of the McCanns for leaving their children unsupervised whilst they 'went out to a local tapas bar for dinner with friends'.

Thursday 05 June 2008
399

McCanns: We will never go back to Portugal Daily Star (No online link, paper version only)

 

By Ian Trueman

Friday 06 June 2008
400
* No relevant news published

Saturday 07 June 2008
401
* No relevant news published

Sunday 08 June 2008
402
* No relevant news published

Monday 09 June 2008
403
* No relevant news published

Tuesday 10 June 2008
404
* No relevant news published

Wednesday 11 June 2008
405
* No relevant news published

Thursday 12 June 2008
406
* No relevant news published

Friday 13 June 2008
407
Parents of Maddie in Strasbourg SOS Maddie (French language site)
 
Duarte Levy
13 June 2008, Thanks to 'FrenchEuropean' & 'Anne' for translation
 
Kate and Gerry McCann have confirmed this afternoon that they will make the trip next Tuesday to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, where the authors (the 5 MEPs) of a declaration calling for the creation of a European alert system for missing children will try to persuade 182 MPs to sign the document

The McCanns played no role in drafting the statement - an initiative of five parliamentarians - but the couple had made its submission to Brussels, despite protests from several MPs.

The document adds nothing new to the intentions of Parliament or the creation of a European warning system that has been under consideration for several years.

France, which took the rotating presidency in July, regardless of the statement made in Brussels on April 10, had already made known its intention to approve a European system similar to that which exists in France.

"Until now we have 211 signatures and we need the signature of 393 MEPs, a simple majority in Parliament," said the spokesperson of Kate and Gerry McCann, Clarence Mitchell.

The couple had planned to meet several MEPs in private before concluding their day with the usual press conference.

Introduced to Parliament by the Conservative Edward McMillan-Scott, vice-president of Parliament, Gerry and Kate McCann, arguidos in the investigation into the disappearance of their daughter Madeleine, had already been heavily criticised in Brussels by several parliamentarians, deeming the visit of the couple inappropriate.

Recently, the couple had found a way not to make the trip to Portugal to participate in the reconstruction of events surrounding the disappearance of their daughter Madeleine, as the Portuguese authorities had demanded.

The McCanns are there for nothing

A statement originally submitted on April 10 at the European Parliament in Brussels was not prepared or suggested by the McCanns but the parents of Madeleine, with the support of the British Government, have won the right to attend despite their status as arguidos in Portugal.

Edward McMillan-Scott, Roberta Angelilli, Glenys Kinnock, Evelyne Gebhardt, and Diana Wallis are the five MEPs who originated the document which proposes emergency cooperation between the member states of the European Union to find missing children.

The document calls on member states to conclude cooperation agreements with all the border states in order to give itself the means to launch early warning in the territories concerned.

Despite the importance of the guidelines proposed by the document, it is still far from an agreement among all member states.

Yesterday, France - a country where the device Abduction Alert has already proved its efficency, organized a mock abduction in collaboration with Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. The exercise was conclusive and allowed four organizers to test their reaction, but also working with the media.

The policies of Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Germany and the Czech Republic participated as observers. The United Kingdom, who were invited, chose not to participate

Saturday 14 June 2008
408
McCanns' new Euro MPs plea Daily Mirror
 
By Martin Fricker
14/06/2008 
 
Kate and Gerry McCann will go back to the European Parliament next week in a last-ditch effort to persuade MEPs to back their missing child alert system.
 
The couple visited Strasbourg in April and begged for support for a scheme that would automatically alert police in all EU states as soon as a child goes missing.
 
But only a quarter of MEPs have signed up so far - and they need at least half of the Parliament's 785 members if it is to become law.
 
And they need the signatures by the end of the month.
 
The McCann's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We remain confident we will get them. It's normal for MEPs to wait until the last minute to."
 
The family say Madeleine, four, who vanished in May 2007, may have been found if there had been alert system.
 
Get your MEP to sign by writing to them at European Parliament, Correspondence with Citizens, GOL03A012, L-2929 LUXEMBOURG.
 
McCann couple goes to Strasbourg for a last ditch stand Gazeta Digital
 
By Duarte Levy and Paulo Reis 
14.6.08 
 
Gerry and Kate McCann will be in Strasbourg next Tuesday in order to try to secure enough support from Members of the European Parliament for a "written declaration" concerning the creation of a European Amber Alert system covering all 27 EU states. But, in fact, this idea was originally proposed by the EU Commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security, Mr Franco Frattini, in 2006: a detail never mentioned by the McCanns, their media advisers nor by Clarence Mitchell. Mr Frattini proposed that each country should establish an EU alert system, but it was not an initiative for the European Parliament’s legislature.
 
However, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Richard Bryan, a UK top ranking police officer, who is the Association of Chief Police Officers head of missing people, told the media in May 2007 that "there was no need to emulate the US system of immediate information broadcasts once children have been reported missing."
 
According to the Times on-line edition, "Mr Bryan congratulated the McCanns on doing a 'sterling job' in raising the issue of how police deal with child abductions, but he said that police would rather use other investigative techniques to trace children before going public and potentially alerting abductors."
 
The UK already has a national alert system for missing children, as Richard Bryan told the Times, "that has been in place since 2003 in Sussex and it was rolled out nationally by 2006. We have only had to use it on three occasions."
 
Since 2006, Mr Frattini's initial idea has taken shape. In February 2007, the European Commission decided to ask all member states to reserve a dedicated set of national phone numbers starting with "116". The idea was that they should be used as a hotline in the event of a missing child. So far, 10 EU countries have adopted the idea, but the UK is not one of them.
 
On April 21, following a meeting with the McCanns, five Members of the European Parliament (Edward McMillan-Scott, Roberta Angelilli, Glenys Kinnock, Evelyne Gebhardt and Diana Wallis) submitted a written declaration to the European Parliament concerning "Emergency Cooperation in Recovering Missing Children." The declaration "calls on Member States to introduce a missing child alert system" and asks for the creation of a "common organisation to provide assistance and training" to police forces in the 27 EU countries.
 
In order to have the "written declaration" sent to the EU President and published, the McCanns still need the signatures of 182 more Members of the European Parliament to reach the required number of 393. The "written declaration" is just a way to "launch or relaunch a debate on a subject that comes within the EU's remit", but it has no legal implications for the EU state members.
 
'Maddie' alert bid The Sun
 
Published: 14 Jun 2008 
 
THE McCanns are to visit the European Parliament to bolster support for their child alert scheme.
 
Doctors Kate, 40, and Gerry, 39 – whose daughter Madeleine, five, has been missing for 13 months – will visit Strasbourg on Tuesday to promote the Europe-wide campaign.
 
Spokesman Clarence Mitchell said yesterday: "They want to be there in person to give it the extra push to get it through."
 
The scheme, which already operates in America, alerts the public and emergency services when a child is snatched.
 
So far 211 MEPs have pledged support but another 182 are needed to get the motion before the European Parliament.
 
The pain gives them strength 24horas
 
Kate and Gerry McCann want to improve the European system against abductions
 
Text: Luis Fontes
14 June 2008, Translation by 'salsa'
 
The McCanns want to change the way Europe fights against abductions. And they continue to search for their daughter using the Spanish Metodo3

The McCann couple are going, on Tuesday, to the European Parliament, in Strasbourg, to support the creation of an European alert system for missing children.
 
"They don't want other parents to go through the situation they are going through. They feel that they are doing something positive with this initiative. The pain of the disappearance of their daughter gives them strength not to lower their arms [give up]" says Clarence Mitchell, the spokesman of Maddie's parents.

Even because they still have hope of finding their daughter alive. "The Spanish agency M3 continues to work with other European investigation agencies searching for clues that may lead to Madeleine McCann", says Clarence Mitchell.
 
And the findmadeleine.com fund is not short of money. "The fund is healthy with the money paid by the British papers as compensation. It is that money that makes it possible for us to pay the lawyers and the search teams" explains Clarence.

Convincing members of the European Parliament
 
The trip to Strasbourg will last just one day - Tuesday - when they will try to convince 182 members of parliament to sign. "Up to now we have 211 signatures and we need 393, which means quite simply a Parliament majority" says Mitchell.
 
During the trip, the couple will meet privately with some European members of Parliament and will appeal to those who haven't signed yet to do so.
 
"Kate and Gerry are confident that they will succeed in obtaining the remaining 182 signatures they need" says the spokesman.
 
The written declaration was presented by the McCanns and a group of euro-MEP's on April 10th in Brussels and urges the UE member states to activate an alert system for missing children at the European level, similarly to what happens in the US and some European countries.
 
Proposal for the 27
 
The alert system would make it possible for the police forces to use the media in the search for the missing child and would establish cooperation agreements with the neighbouring member states to allow for a quick response at the countries' borders.
 
Since April, the McCanns and other organisations that support this idea have been writing to European MEPS to enlist their support.
 
The MEPS have 2 other Parliamentary sessions, each lasting 4 days, to undersign the document, since if they don't sign it then the motion may expire.
 
If the necessary number of signatures is obtained, says Mitchell, the text "will proceed to the [European] Commision, which has the formal duty of moving the proposal forward to the 27.
 
FACTS:
 
HOLIDAYS: The McCann couple will go on holiday after the visit to Strasbourg. "The days and location will not be disclosed " says the spokesman.

THE CASE: The McCanns believe that only in mid-August will the secrecy of justice be lifted and they will stop being arguidos.

Sunday 15 June 2008
409
* No relevant news published

Monday 16 June 2008
410
* No relevant news published

Tuesday 17 June 2008
411
McCanns will be able to see all the evidence 24horas
 
Maddie process becomes public in July 
 
Text: Carlos Tomas
17 June 2008, Translation by 'astro''
 
From July onwards, the [Maddie case] process will stop being under judicial secrecy and can be consulted by all the interested parties. The statement was made yesterday to 24horas by Pinto Monteiro, the Republic’s General Prosecutor.

The most senior officer responsible for the investigations into the disappearance of the little British girl, on the 3rd of May 2007, from an apartment in Praia da Luz, near Lagos, in the Algarve, only failed to name the precise date: "I don’t know the exact day, but in July the process stops being covered by the judicial secrecy". According to what 24horas was able to establish, it will be on the 14th of July that the process becomes public – one day before the judicial holidays.

The prosecutor also insisted in adding that this fact will not affect the investigations. "We won't rest until the child is found. The fact that the judicial secrecy is lifted has nothing to do with the development of the investigations", he stated, adding: "Until there is, either from the Public Ministry or from the judicial magistracy, a decision towards an accusation or an archiving, the process will continue, and so will the mission that has been given to the Polícia Judiciária, to clarify the case".

In practical terms it will be August

Meanwhile, Rogério Alves, the McCanns' lawyer, does not hide his pessimism: "I'm not going to comment on the case, but the information that we have is that we will only have access to the process in August."

He may be correct, given the fact that the judicial holidays begin on the 15th of July and end one month later. During that period, the courts work only with shift judges. Which means that only the priority processes, with detained arguidos, will be forwarded.

"The Maddie case is not a priority. There are no detained persons. There are indices of a crime of neglect and child abandonment, but that accusation can wait", said a senior officer at the Court in Portimão, where Maddie's disappearance is being investigated.

Deadlines have run out

The process about the disappearance of Madeleine McCann is being run at the Criminal Court in Portimão. The judicial secrecy on the case expires, according to what 24horas was able to establish, on the 14th of July, and according to the new legislation, cannot be extended any further, given the fact that such has already happened twice – 90 days each – at the request of prosecutor Magalhães e Menezes. He is one of the persons that are responsible for the investigation, which is being carried out by the PJ.

Judicial authorities that were heard by 24horas admit that with the deadlines on the judicial secrecy running out, the general prosecutor in Évora, Luís Bilro Verão, who was nominated to direct the process, has nothing solid in his hands that will allow for the child to be traced…
 
Madeleine's parents take child abduction alert campaign to Europe 24dash.com
 
Published by Jon Land for 24dash.com
Tuesday 17th June 2008 - 11.59am
 
Missing British toddler Madeleine McCann's parents embarked on a series of meetings with MEPs in Strasbourg today in a renewed effort to secure backing for a Europe-wide child abduction alert system.
 
Gerry and Kate McCann have until July 24 - the close of the plenary session - to collect the signatures needed to ensure that their proposal, in the form of a written declaration, is sent to the EU President and published.
 
They have chalked up 225 signatures so far, leaving them another 168 to collect.
 
Among those the couple were due to lobby were members of the UK Independence Party (UKIP).
 
The Euro-sceptic party refuses to sign declarations on a point of principle, but Mr and Mrs McCann hope it will make an exception in their case.
 
Speaking after their arrival at the parliament building, Mr McCann said: "This is an important issue and Europe needs to work together. We want to get as many signatures as possible but there's limited time left."
 
The couple, from Rothley in Leicestershire, launched the drive for a United States-style Amber Alert in April but now fear time is running out in their bid to achieve formal recognition of the scheme.
 
Such a declaration carries no legal weight in the European Union but the McCanns believe it would help them win the moral argument over whether such a cross-border system is needed.
 
Madeleine went missing from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, on May 3 last year.
 
The McCanns believe a European version of Amber Alert - which notifies the public via media across the US when police confirm a child has been abducted - would have helped the search for their daughter in the crucial hours after her disappearance.
 
Speaking ahead of today's meeting, their spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said: "It's a chance for Gerry and Kate to be updated on the progress of the declaration so far. While talking to supportive MEPs, it's also an opportunity to reinforce the importance of such a system being introduced to those who have not already signed."
 
MEPs from Bulgaria, Cyprus, France and Finland were among those members set to meet the couple. 
 
A number of MEPs approached the McCanns after a parliament vote to express their support for the written declaration, which sat on a table by the entrance of the debating chamber waiting for members to sign up.
 
French member Alain Lamassoure, of the European People's Party, is writing a report on the co-operation of the police and judiciaries across member states.
 
He said: "I will sign it because it's a very painful issue and clearly a far better co-operation between the judiciary and police of member states could help prevent or solve these kinds of issues."
 
Ireland's Fianna Fail party is backing the proposal.
 
Fianna Fail member Liam Aylward said: "It's a heart-tending case and it captured the imagination of people around the world.
 
"If we can influence anybody, we will do."
 
Finnish MEP and former world rally drivers' champion Ari Vatanen said: "I am a father of four children. I will support it."
 
McCanns to finally find out what evidence Madeleine police have against them Daily Mail
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 12:15pm on 17th June 2008
 
Gerry and Kate McCann will finally be told what evidence police have against them next month, Portugal's most senior law officer revealed today.
 
The couple will be given full access to the confidential case files.
 
The development will be a massive boost to the couple as they arrived in Strasbourg to urge MEPs to back their campaign for a Europe-wide alert system.
 
Gerry and Kate believe such cross-border co-operation would have helped police find their daughter when she went missing from their holiday flat on the Algarve in May last year aged three.
 
Attorney general Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro told daily newspaper 24 Horas: "From July the (Madeleine) case will cease to be covered by judicial secrecy, and will be available to consultation by all parties involved.
 
"I do not know which date, but in July the case ceases to be covered by judicial secrecy."
 
Access to the confidential police files will allow the McCanns to begin building a defence - and demand that they are cleared.
 
24 Horas speculated the judicial secrecy will end on July 14 - more than 10 months after the couple were named suspects.
 
The McCanns, both 40-year-old doctors from Rothley, Leics, were made official suspects last September but have never been arrested or charged and vigorously deny any wrongdoing.
 
Their official spokesman Clarence Mitchell has previously described the endless delays in the process as "inhumane." Judicial secrecy is normally lifted in Portugal after eight months.
 
But investigating judge Pedro Frias has previously granted extensions to the period after state prosecutor Jose Magalhaese Menezes argued the case is "exceptionally complicated".
 
Madeleine disappeared from family's rented holiday apartment in the Ocean Club, in Praia da Luz, on May 3 last year.
 
Her parents left Madeleine and twins Sean and Amelie, now two, sleeping while they dined at a nearby restaurant with seven holiday friends.
 
The McCanns still face the possibility of charges of neglecting their daughter, who was three when she went missing.
 
Court documents revealed last month confirmed they could face "abandonment" charges, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years.
 
It is understood for such a charge to succeed prosecutors would have to show the McCanns intended to neglect their daughter.
 
The police inquiry also covers possible abduction, homicide and concealment of a corpse.
 
Today a source at the court in Portimao told 24 Horas the case was not a priority.
 
The source said: "The Maddie case is not a priority. Nobody has been arrested. There is evidence of neglect or abandonment of the children, but that prosecution can wait."
 
The Portuguese authorities have previously been accused of using the secrecy laws to cover up their incompetence.
 
The President of the Portuguese Order of Lawyers, Antonio Marinho e Pinto, said: "There are strong reasons to fear that judicial secrecy is being used to conceal the fact that the police have gone down a blind alley and don't have a way out."
 
The McCann's lawyer Rogerio Alves reacted cautiously to the attorney general's statement, saying he understands he will not have access to the files until August.
 
Portugal's courts take a month long summer break from July 15.
 
Mr Alves told 14 Horas: "I'm not going to comment on the case, but the information we have is that we will only have access to the case in August."
 
Kate and Gerry McCann to be told why police made them suspects in disappearance of Maddy Timesonline
 
By David Brown
June 17, 2008
 
Madeleine McCann's parents will be told next month what evidence the police have to make them official suspects in her disappearance, it was announced today.
 
Portuguese Attorney-General, Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro said Kate and Gerry McCann will be given full access to the case files relating to their daughter’s disappearance last May.
 
The police inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance shortly before her fourth birthday covers homicide, abandonment, concealment of a corpse and abduction. All evidence in the investigation has until now been covered by strict laws of judicial secrecy.
 
However, Mr Monteiro told the 24 Horas newspaper today: "In July, the process stops being covered by the judicial secrecy."
 
This will mean that the thousands of pages of witness statements and other evidence will be made available to the McCanns and their lawyers before being opened to the press and public.
 
Mr Monteiro said that the disclosure of the evidence would not affect the ongoing investigations or possibility of changes.
 
"We won't rest until the child is found," he said. "The fact that the judicial secrecy is lifted has nothing to do with the development of the investigations."
 
The opening of the files will be welcomed by Mr and Mrs McCann, from Rothley, Leicestershire. They have insisted there is absolutely no evidence against them and the police should concentrate their investigation on stranger abduction.
 
Mr and Mrs McCann were dining with a group of British friends at a tapas restaurant on the Ocean Club resort in Praia da Luz when Madeleine was reported missing from her bedroom.
 
The couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire, hope the release of the files will lead to the lifting of their status as arguidos (official suspects) imposed last September. Robert Murat, 34, the other official suspect, will also have access to the evidence which he hopes will clear his name.
 
However, the release of the information could be delayed for several weeks as Portuguese judiciary starts a month-long holiday in the middle of July.
 
The announcement came as Mr and Mrs McCann embarked on a series of meetings with MEPs in Strasbourg in a renewed effort to secure backing for a Europe-wide child abduction alert system.
 
The couple have until July 24 - the close of the plenary session - to collect the signatures needed to ensure that their proposal, in the form of a written declaration, is sent to the EU President and published.
 
They have chalked up 225 signatures so far, leaving them another 168 to collect.
 
Mr McCann said: "This is an important issue and Europe needs to work together. We want to get as many signatures as possible but there’s limited time left."
 
The couple launched the drive for a United States-style Amber Alert in April, but now fear time is running out in their bid to achieve formal recognition of the scheme.
 
Such a declaration carries no legal weight in the European Union but the McCanns believe it would help them win the moral argument over whether such a cross-border system is needed.
 
The couple believe a European version of Amber Alert - which notifies the public via media across the US when police confirm a child has been abducted - would have helped the search for their daughter in the crucial hours after her disappearance.

Wednesday 18 June 2008
412
McCanns lose their calm 24horas
 
Kate and Gerry at the European Parliament, to speak about missing children
 
Text: Rute Coelho, 18 June 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
The McCanns were in Strasbourg yesterday to take care of a petition and ended up reacting, in an irritated manner, to questions from the journalists about the evening of the 3rd of May 2007
 
Kate and Gerry were in Strasbourg yesterday, where they convinced 225 MEPs to sign the petition for the creation of a European alert system for missing children. The problem, for the McCanns, was the press conference that they gave in the late afternoon. The journalists' favourite dish was not the petition, but rather the couple's behaviour on the evening of the 3rd of May 2007, when Madeleine disappeared in Praia da Luz, Algarve.

One of the questions was why they left their daughter alone on the fateful night. The McCanns reacted with a bad temper. The "real issue", they underlined, is the abduction. "We did not abandon or neglect Madeleine. Someone entered the apartment and took a child. That is the issue. To go over that matter is very boring", Gerry McCann said. Kate supported her husband, with the same irritation: "The real issue is that a child was abducted and there is a criminal who is still out there".

Gerry insisted. "We need to focus on the real issue. Continuously raising that question is unhelpful. Nothing has changed over the last 14 months and I don't understand why we are talking about that, again".

The couple only calmed down when they were allowed to speak again about the issue that was on their agenda: the petition to create a European alert system for missing children. Kate and Gerry thanked the 225 MEPs that have already signed the petition, and exhorted others to do it.

They remembered that 393 signatures are necessary, half of the hemicycle, until the end of July, in order for the text to be sent to the European Commission and for the communitarian executive to present a proposal in that sense to the Council. In Brussels' hallways, there are some who accuse the McCanns of a "media manoeuvre" with this initiative.

"What is the use of this petition? There is already a European law proposal for the creation of such an alert system. It is on its way to being approved in Strasbourg, and then to be taken before the European Commission. That proposal, which has been worked upon for quite some time, will then have to be approved by each member state", a source in Brussels criticized.

"Media manoeuvre"

The same source remembered that the McCanns have "associated themselves to an initiative that belongs to the European Commission, in a media manoeuvre".

One of the main promoters of that initiative was Margarida Sousa Uva, the wife of the president of the European Union, Durão Barroso.

In March, Sousa Uva alerted in Brussels to the "lack of political will" within the 27 to create an effective alert system. One month later, in April, the McCanns met with a group of MEPs that wrote the text about the European alert. It was then that they started speaking about the petition.

Numbers

14 of July is the date from which the Maddie process ceases to be covered by the judicial secrecy. The McCanns heard about that date through 24horas, yesterday.

4 is the number of European Union member states that have an alert system: Germany, France, Greece and the United Kingdom. The proposal intends to widen it on 27.

Thursday 19 June 2008
413
* No relevant news published

Friday 20 June 2008
414
Madeleine McCann: parents' court bid for information Telegraph
 
By Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter
Last Updated: 7:26PM BST 20/06/2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann are to ask a High Court judge to order the release of police documents which they hope will kick-start the search for their missing daughter Madeleine, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

The McCanns hope their application to Mrs Justice Hogg will result in Leicestershire Police opening their files on scores of reported sightings of Madeleine, most of which have been passed on to them by police in Portugal, where the four-year-old disappeared in May last year.

Until now police in Leicestershire, the McCanns' home county, have refused the couple's requests for information about sightings, saying they are bound by the terms of an agreement with Portuguese police.

But Mr and Mrs McCann, who retain the services of a Spanish-based detective agency, are anxious to make sure that every possible lead has been checked out, which they believe the Portuguese police, whose investigation is gradually being wound down, may not be able to do.
 
The Telegraph can also disclose that Madeleine was made a ward of court last summer at the request of the McCanns, to empower judges to act in her best interests in any legal dispute such as the case which is about to be heard.

Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns’ spokesman, said: "I can state that on the instigation of Gerry and Kate McCann Madeleine is a ward of the High Court of England and Wales.

"An application has been made on Madeleine's behalf by her parents for disclosure of certain documents. The hearing is currently scheduled for July 7 in the High Court in London.

"It has been the stated intention of Gerry and Kate McCann to leave no stone unturned in doing everything necessary to search for their daughter, as would any parent.

"This application is just part of their search for Madeleine."

Madeleine's status as a ward of court has never been disclosed by her parents' who quietly made a wardship application in the High Court just weeks after she went missing.

The couple's legal team had advised them to ask for Madeleine to be made a ward of court because wardship status gives the courts certain statutory powers to act on her behalf in legal disputes such as the one which has arisen with Leicestershire police.

They still believe their daughter is alive and hope the police files may contain information which could yet lead to a breakthrough.

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.

Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns' spokesman, said: "Kate and Gerry have always said that they will do whatever is necessary to find Madeleine and that they will leave no stone unturned in their search for their daughter.

"They will take whatever legal steps are necessary if there is information out there that can assist their private investigation into finding Madeleine. Beyond that I cannot make any comment."

Mr Mitchell said the hearing would not involve any attempt by the McCanns to clear their names by proving they were not involved in their daughter's disappearance from a holiday apartment in Praia da Luz. They remain official suspects, or arguidos, in Portugal.

In recent months the couple have become increasingly frustrated at the slow progress of the Portuguese investigation, and they suspect that many possible sightings of Madeleine have not been followed up at all.

If they are given access to the police files on reported sightings, each one will be looked into by private investigators retained by the couple.

For the past year the McCanns have employed Metodo 3, a Barcelona-based detective agency, to carry out an investigation in parallel with the Portuguese police inquiry.

The agency has checked out sightings as far afield as North Africa and South America – all of which have proved to be false – using either its own staff or affiliated firms, which it says it can do far more quickly than the police.

In one instance earlier this year, the agency ruled out a sighting of Madeleine in Chile within three hours of receiving a tip-off, by employing local investigators to track down the girl concerned. The agency argues that police would have taken days to achieve a similar result because they would have been hampered by bureaucracy and official procedure.

Earlier this week Portugal's Attorney General suggested that police files may be opened up at the end of July, but the McCanns fear his comments may prove to be another false dawn.

Their case is being heard in the Family Division because it involves the welfare of a child. Mrs Justice Hogg, a specialist in child welfare cases, is the sister of former cabinet minister Douglas Hogg and the daughter of former Lord Chancellor Lord Hailsham.

Saturday 21 June 2008
415
McCanns asked for missing Madeleine to be made ward of court Daily Mail
 
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 2:01 AM on 21st June 2008
 
Kate and Gerry McCann will ask a High Court judge to order police to release documents which they hope will help in the search Madeleine.
 
It emerged last night their missing daughter was made a ward of court last summer at her parents' request so judges could act in her best interests in any legal dispute.
 
The McCanns have now applied to the court to consider ordering Leicestershire Police to disclose their files on scores of reported sightings of their missing daughter - many of which have been passed on to them by police in Portugal.
 
The four-year-old disappeared on a family holiday in Praia da Luz last year, sparking a world-wide search.
 
Until now the McCanns' local police force in the UK has not provided the couple with information about sightings, because they are understood to be bound by an agreement with Portuguese police.
 
Mr and Mrs McCann, who have retained a Spanish-based detective agency to work on Madeleine's disappearance, want to make sure every possible lead has been followed-up.
 
They hope the police files will contain information about sightings, or leads which may lead to a breakthrough.
 
The case will be heard in the High Court on July 7 in the Family Division. However, it is not known if it will be heard in open court because Madeleine is a minor, and has protected status as a ward of court.
 
Clarence Mitchell, the McCann's spokesman, said: 'It has come to our attention that some details of court proceedings concerning Madeleine have been made public. This is regrettable.'
 
He added: 'At the instigation of Kate and Gerry McCann, Madeleine was made a ward of the High Court of England and Wales.
 
'An application has been made on Madeleine's behalf by her parents for disclosure of certain documents.
 
'Kate and Gerry have always said that they will do whatever is necessary to find Madeleine and that they will leave no stone unturned in their search for their daughter.'
 
The McCanns remain official suspects, or arguidos, in Portugal. They have become frustrated at the slow progress of the Portuguese investigation and they are concerned possible sightings of Madeleine have not been followed up.
 
If they are given access to the police files details of possible leads could be passed to Metodo 3, the investigators hired by the McCanns, to follow-up.
 
The couple made an application for Madeleine to be made a ward of court weeks after she went missing on May 3 last year.
 
They were advised to do this because wardship status gives the courts certain statutory powers to act on her behalf in legal disputes, such as the one that has arisen over the police files.
 
Earlier this week it emerged the McCanns will finally be told what evidence police have against them next month.
 
The couple will be given full access to the confidential case files on the disappearance of their daughter Madeleine.
 
Access to the files will allow the McCanns - desperate to clear their status as 'arguidos' or official suspects - to begin building a defence and demand that they are cleared.

Sunday 22 June 2008
416
Fearful McCanns get panic alarms The People
 
EXCLUSIVE Security beefed up after evil threats
 
By Tom Latchem and Tracey Kandohla
22 June 2008
 
Maddie McCann's anguished parents have installed panic alarms at their home after a wave of vile threats.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann got offensive and menacing letters and emails - including two that threatened to kill them.
 
The couple have installed a state-of-the-art security system at their £600,000 detached home.
 
The gear, costing "several thousand" pounds, is understood to include CCTV and panic buttons in most rooms to alert cops in an emergency.
 
Police are examining the threats in a bid to track down the senders. One of the most disturbing messages suggested an intruder would target five-year-old Maddie's bedroom.
 
Doctors Kate, 40, and Gerry, 39, have left the room unchanged since their daughter vanished from their holiday flat in Praia da Luz, Portugal, nearly 14 months ago.
 
A source close to the couple said yesterday: "They have had threats made against them which they find both very worrying and upsetting.
 
"Unfortunately there are some lunatics out there. There have been lots of offensive and vicious letters, with at least two talking about killing them.
 
"Security surrounding Kate and Gerry has been reviewed.
 
It means they can sleep better at night. They will not let these people break them down."
 
There was a surge in abusive mail arriving at the McCanns' home in Rothley, Leics, after they appeared in an ITV documentary last month.
 
The source said it is feared the couple's high-profile visit to Strasbourg last week will trigger more.
 
Kate and Gerry were in the French city to campaign for a Europe-wide alert system for abducted children. The strain of the couple's ordeal was obvious in Kate's gaunt features.
 
A Leicestershire police spokesman said: "Several letters have been passed to us.
 
We are investigating threats made against the McCanns."

Monday 23 June 2008
417
McCanns make High Court files bid BBC News
 
Page last updated at 14:17 GMT, Monday, 23 June 2008 15:17 UK
 
The parents of Madeleine McCann will ask a High Court judge to order police files on the disappearance of their daughter to be released.
 
Leicestershire police have so far agreed with officers in Portugal not to disclose information on the case.
 
Kate and Gerry McCann hope the hearing on 7 July will give access to details of reported sightings of Madeleine.
 
Madeleine, of Rothley, Leicestershire, disappeared aged three in the resort of Praia da Luz, Portugal, on 3 May 2007.
 
'No stone unturned'
 
The McCanns have made Madeleine a ward of court, which allows a judge to act in the best interests of a child in a legal dispute.
 
The application to Mrs Justice Hogg is listed for the Family Division of the High Court.
 
The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "An application has been made on Madeleine's behalf by her parents for the disclosure of certain documents.
 
"The case and the judgment may be in public and this will be a matter for the court to decide.
 
"It has been the stated intention of Gerry and Kate to leave no stone unturned in doing everything necessary in the search for their daughter, as would any other parent.
 
"This application is just part of their search for Madeleine."
 
A Leicestershire police spokeswoman said the force was aware that a court hearing was scheduled and it would be inappropriate to comment further.
 
McCanns To Ask Judge To Rule On Files Sky News
 
Updated:22:03, Monday June 23, 2008
 
Gerry and Kate McCann are to ask a High Court judge to order the release of police files on their daughter's disappearance.
 
Madeleine McCann went missing from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May last year.
 
Portuguese secrecy laws have since left her parents in the dark on much of the police investigation.
 
The McCanns and the private detective agency they are employing want to examine the potential lines of inquiry as part of their own search.
 
However, police in their home county of Leicestershire, who lead the British arm of the official investigation, have so far stuck to an agreement with their counterparts in Portugal on the non-disclosure of information.
 
The couple made their daughter a ward of court, which empowers judges to act in Madeleine McCann's best interests in a legal dispute.
 
They hope their application to Mrs Justice Hogg, listed for the Family Division of the High Court on July 7, will give them access to the police files on various reported sightings.
 
Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns' spokesman, said: "I am limited in what I can say as matters are sub judice and relate to a minor.
 
"I can state that, on the instigation of Gerry and Kate McCann, Madeleine is a ward of the High Court of England and Wales.
 
"An application has been made on Madeleine's behalf by her parents for the disclosure of certain documents.
 
"The case and the judgement may be in public and this will be a matter for the court to decide.
 
"It has been the stated intention of Gerry and Kate to leave no stone unturned in doing everything necessary in the search for their daughter, as would any other parent.
 
"This application is just part of their search for Madeleine."

Tuesday 24 June 2008
418
McCanns want evidence 24horas (No online link)
 
Maddie's parents have asked a British court to have access to documents
 
24 June 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
Kate and Gerry want to consult the process, in order to find out everything about the sightings. The British High Court will decide.
 
The McCanns can't be bothered to wait for the date on which the Maddie process becomes public and have advanced a special request to the British judicial system. The request will be analysed on the 7th of July in the family section of the British High Court and essentially targets the access to documents that are related to sightings of Maddie.
 
According to what 24horas was able to establish, the McCanns intend to pass the information about the sightings on to the detective agency that they hired, Spanish Metodo 3.
 
If the court decides that the release of said documents does not harm the investigation, it will then be the Leicestershire police that will deliver the data to the McCanns.
 
Until now, the police in this city – the region in central England where the couple live – has not made any details of the process public, at the request of the Portuguese Polícia Judiciária. According to what was revealed by the site of British channel Sky News, this diligence by the McCanns was only possible because Kate and Gerry placed the case of their missing daughter under the guardianship of the High Court, which confers the judges the right to act in the child's best interest.
 
Normally, this decision is made when a child is at risk, but in this case, the process was started at the request of Madeleine’s parents, several months ago.
 
"Leave no stone unturned"
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, has confirmed the date of the hearing to Lusa Agency (July 7) and that the couple has requested access to "certain documents". He refused to offer any further details.
 
"It was always Gerry and Kate McCann's intention to leave no stone unturned in order to do the necessary to find their daughter", Mitchell underlined. "This request is only a part of their search for Madeleine".
 
The 5-year-old girl disappeared on the 3rd of May of 2007, while sleeping in a bedroom at a hotel in Praia da Luz, Algarve, while her parents dined in the nearby Tapas Bar. Kate and Gerry McCann remain arguidos.
 
One year later, the Public Ministry has not produced any accusation against them.
 
Secrecy is ending
 
The McCanns' diligence with the British justice is practically useless, because the judicial secrecy on the Maddie case will be lifted in July, according to what the Republic's General Prosecutor himself, Pinto Monteiro, has confirmed to 24horas (in the edition of June 17, 2008). According to the calculations that we did, at that time, it will be on the 14th of July that the process becomes public – one day before the judicial holidays.

According to what Rogério Alves, the McCanns' lawyer, told us then, the couple is only counting on access to the process in August, which could be due to the judicial holidays – which are from July 15 until August 15. During that period, the courts function only with shift judges. Which means that only priority processes, with detained arguidos, are worked upon. "The Maddie case is not a priority", a senior official at the Portimão court has guaranteed.

Wednesday 25 June 2008
419
Street of Shame Private Eye (No online link, appears in paper version only)
 

It's Groundhog Day at the Daily Express and Daily Star. Four months after settling a libel action from Kate and Gerry McCann by giving them £550,000 in damages plus an amazing front-page apology, Dirty Des's rags are facing another legal complaint over their coverage of the Madeleine saga.

Last week they received solicitors' letters from the so-called "Tapas 7", the McCanns holiday companions, threatening to sue "in relation to a number of articles".

Once again Dirty Des's legal department has issued an urgent edict that all Maddy-related material on the papers' websites must be "removed forthwith". And once again, hacks are bracing themselves for a bumper payout annd an abject grovel.

Thursday 26 June 2008
420
Gerry McCann elected to board of BSCMR BSCMR
 
The British Society of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance(BSCMR) was formed in 2004 and the Founding Board of Officers consists of the following leading physicians in the field:
  • Professor Henry Dargie, Western Infirmary, Glasgow - Chairman-Elect
  • Dr John Greenwood, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds
  • Dr Francisco Leyva, Good Hope Hospital, Sutton Coldfield -Treasurer
  • Dr Gerry McCann, Glenfield Hospital, Leicester
  • Dr James Moon, The Heart Hospital, London
  • Professor Stefan Neubauer, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford - BSCMR Chairman
  • Professor Dudley Pennell, Royal Brompton Hospital, London - Past- Chairman
  • Professor Reza Razavi, Guy's Hospital, London - Deputy Treasurer

The new Board will be in place from 1 June 2008-31 May 2010. 

The aims of the BSCMR are to:

  • promote clinical practice and research into cardiovascular magnetic resonance and to disseminate the useful results of such research
  • further the advancement of education in cardiovascular magnetic resonance for the public benefit.

The BSCMR is a Charity and is affiliated to the British Cardiovascular Society (BCS).

Friday 27 June 2008
421
* No relevant news published

Saturday 28 June 2008
422
* No relevant news published

Sunday 29 June 2008
423
McCanns boosted by fresh leads Sunday Star (No online link, appears in paper version only)
 
Sunday 29 June 2008
 
Kate and Gerry Mccann have been boosted by a series of fresh leads in the hunt for missing daughter Madeleine.
 
They have been told of 'several' potential new sightings of the five year old, who vanished without trace while on holiday in Portugal in May 07.
 
It has led to a 'widening and deepening' of the private investigation into Madeleine's disappearance.
 
Last night the family's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said Kate and Gerry remain hopeful that "a breakthrough" is near.
 
He said "following the documentary at the anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance there were a lot of calls, which are still being followed up.
 
"These include new information, potential sightings , although  I cant go into any details."
 
The privately funded probe into Maddie's disappearance from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz on May 3, 2007 has become "wider and much more sophisticated" according to sources.
 
Metodo 3 the Spanish agency which took on the investigation is being aided by other agencies across the globe.
 
In addition, doctors Kate and Gerry, both 40, from Rothley, Leics. hope their status as arguidos or suspects - will be lifted in the next few weeks.
 
Police files on the case are due to be shared with third parties next month, which could signal an end to the suspicion which hung over the couple since last year.
 
Last night Mr Mitchell said the McCanns still believe Maddie is alive.
 
He added "they continue to work on the  assumption that Madeleine is being held somewhere.
 
"There is no evidence she has been hurt or killed".

Monday 30 June 2008
424
Algarve: Gonçalo Amaral leaves the PJ in order to achieve "plenitude of freedom of expression" and to defend himself Lusa
 
Cecília Malheiro, Agência Lusa
30 de Junho de 2008, 15:37
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
Faro 30 June (Lusa) - The former coordinator at the Polícia Judiciária for the "Madeleine McCann" case, inspector Gonçalo Amaral, told Lusa today that he is retiring from the PJ mainly to attain "plenitude of freedom of expression" and to consequently be able to defend himself.

Gonçalo Amaral, aged 48, started working as a civil servant at the age of 14, and today lives his last day at the service of the Polícia Judiciária, after recently having been the most exposed PJ inspector in the Portuguese and British media, for having coordinated the case of "Madeleine McCann", the little English girl that disappeared in the Algarve on the 3rd of May of 2007.

In an interview to Lusa, Gonçalo Amaral explained that he is retiring at the age of 48 in order to "have plenitude of freedom of expression".

"Why do I leave? I leave because I understand that the only way to acquire the plenitude of my freedom of expression is to leave the police. Because at this moment, to defend myself, I have to reacquire my freedom of expression", he said.

The exercise of that freedom of expression starts this month, with the publication of a book about the Maddie case, in case – as it is foreseen – the judicial secrecy on the process is lifted.

Inspector Gonçalo Amaral, who also coordinated the case of the homicide of the child Joana Cipriano, told Lusa that he intends to publish a book about the "Maddie" case, as soon as this month.

"Everything depends on whether or not the judicial secrecy on the [Madeleine McCann] case is lifted", the inspector observed.

Gonçalo Amaral refers that it is not extraordinary to retire at the age of 48.

"It's not from another world, that I retire at the age of 48. I started working as a civil servant at the age of 14, I did the maths and I used to tell my colleagues at the [PJ formation] course that I would retire earlier than them. My calculations pointed at retiring from the police at the age of 46, but the rules were changed and it ended up not happening like that", he said.

Gonçalo Amaral carried out his last mission as a PJ agent last Sunday, in Faro, within an investigation that had been going on for three months, through the Faro directory.

The result was the apprehension of approximately two-and-a-half tons of hashish in Faro, the equivalent to five million individual doses, at a location known as Praia dos Estudantes.

During the operation, in which Gonçalo Amaral participated one day before he retires, six men were also arrested and two sports boats were apprehended, which transported the hashish to land from the "mother boat", of a fishing type.

About his professional future, the inspector says that "the secret is the soul of the business".

The police agent did nonetheless reveal to Lusa that he would like to do a stay at a lawyers office in the Algarve, given the fact that he has a degree from the Law Faculty of Lisbon, but never had an opportunity to do a stay and to apply for the Bar.

"My life will pass through the Algarve. I'm an adopted Algarvian. Since 1986 that I have practically been living in the Algarve", he said, guaranteeing that his professional life will always be situated in the Algarve.

Gonçalo Amaral was born 48 years ago in the village of Torredeita, located 10 kms from Viseu, which he left aged three months, to go to live in Lisbon. He has also lived in Barreiro.

At the age of 22, while studying electronics engineering at the Instituto Superior Técnico, in Lisbon, he opted to enter the course for PJ agents, where he was positioned in 12th place among a total of 40 candidates.

The first position was held by "doctor Almeida Rodrigues, a celebrity within the Polícia Judiciária", Gonçalo Amaral remembered.

In 1997, Gonçalo Amaral started his night studies for a law degree, finishing with a medium score of 12.

In 1998, after 15 years of profession, he entered the course for sub-inspector, with over 100 candidates, all from within the PJ, and was classed in first place.

In 2000/2001, he entered the course to become a coordinator with 20 candidates, and within the interns, he finished in the second position.

The last day for Gonçalo Amaral, the former coordinator of the "Madeleine McCann" case, at the Polícia Judiciária is today. On Tuesday, he says, he will enjoy the "freedom to speak".

A source with the PJ's Public Relations Cabinet, in Lisbon, has reported to Lusa that Gonçalo Amaral does not have a substitute yet, but that there is "no obligation for him to be replaced", as Gonçalo Amaral was not positioned in a leading post anymore.

With thanks to Nigel at McCann Files

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