The continuing activities of The Madeleine Foundation in 2011
A press statement from The Madeleine
Foundation, 07 June 2011
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A press statement from The Madeleine Foundation The Madeleine Foundation
Tuesday 7 June 2011, 6pm
Madeleine McCann case:
European
Commission on Human Rights to investigate Tony Bennett's claim that U.K. libel laws breached his right to free speech
under Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights
The European Commission on Human Rights is currently
investigating a claim by Madeleine Foundation Secretary Tony Bennett (63) that Britain's notoriously draconian libel laws
interfered with his human right to free speech, guaranteed under the European Convention on Human Rights.
Tony
Bennett's claim, made on 24 March last year, cited Article 10 of the Convention, which states: "Everyone has the
right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and
ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers".
In his application to the Commission,
Tony refers to the sequence of events which forced him to sign a legal undertaking in the High Court in November 2009 not
to distribute certain information on the Madeleine McCann case, and not to make allegations that the McCanns were guilty of,
or should be suspected of, causing Madeleine's death, or disposing of her body, or that they were lying about what happened
or seeking to cover up what they had done.
At the recent General Election, all three main political parties promised
reform of Britain's libel laws, which allow the rich to control what is said about them. Other nations place sensible
limits on the ability of the wealthy to stop people discussing their actions; for example, Germany puts a cap of no more than
10,000 euros (£8,900) on the costs that can be claimed by a successful libel claimant.
Tony said: "If
Britain had had a similar law, I could have afforded to defend the McCanns' claim that my book on the case and leaflets
published by the Madeleine Foundation libelled them. However, my lawyers advised that I could lose my home and all my savings
if I defended their claim, as the McCanns' lawyers, Carter Ruck, who charge up to £1,000 an hour for their services,
could have claimed all their costs from me in the event that just one sentence in my book was held to be libellous by the
High Court".
The application, registered as 'Reference 20455/10: BENNETT v. UK', is being considered
by the Commission as to whether the case 'has merit'. If it does, the matter will be passed to the European Court
of Human Rights for a ruling.
The government has recently outlined a new 'Libel Reform Bill'. Public consultation
on the Bill ends this Friday (10 June). The Bill includes the following proposals: - A new 'public interest'
defence, which can be used by defendants in defamation cases
- A new court procedure to cut the sometimes overwhelming
costs associated with libel actions by encouraging early resolution of key issues
- A requirement for claimants
to demonstrate substantial harm, or likely substantial harm, to their reputation before they can sue
- Reducing so-called
'libel tourism' by making it tougher to bring overseas claims which have little connection to the UK in the English
courts, and
- A 'single publication' rule, meaning repeat claims for libel cannot be made every time a publication
is accessed on the internet.
It may take some time for the European Commission to make its decision on merits. Recently
the ECHR released figures showing that the backlog of cases reached 119,300 at the end of 2009 and the figure has risen since
then.
BACKGROUND
The stated aims of Madeleine Foundation, set up in January 2008, include research into
the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
Faced with the prospect of a libel writ in the High Court, Tony Bennett
agreed on 25 November 2009 to sign a High Court undertaking preventing him from distributing his book on the case: "What
really happened to Madeleine McCann? - 60 Reasons which suggest that she was not abducted", and from distributing a 4-page
leaflet on the case, known as '10 Reasons'.
On page 311 of her new book on the case, madeleine,
Dr Kate McCann falsely described The Madeleine Foundation as "a nasty little organisation...who prey on vulnerable families
who have experienced tragedy".
Two Portuguese courts - their Appeal Court in October 2010 and the Supreme
Court in March 2011 - both allowed appeals by Portuguese detective Goncalo Amaral against a decision of a lower court
in Lisbon in February 2010 to ban his book on the case: 'The Truth About A Lie'. It has been back on sale in Portugal
for the past 7 months. In his book, he says that the evidence in the case suggests that Madeleine died in her parents'
holiday apartment and that the McCanns arranged for her body to be hidden.
In 1987 the European Court of Human
Rights upheld a claim made by Tony Bennett on behalf of a parent of a child in care whose rights to a fair trial under Article
6(1) had been breached by the UK. The mother was awarded £12,000 compensation.
CONTACT
Tony Bennett,
Secretary, The Madeleine Foundation 01279 635789 Mobile 07835 716537
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The Madeleine Foundation's correspondence
with Scotland Yard, 11/19 July 2011
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The Madeleine Foundation's letter to Scotland
Yard (1) The Madeleine Foundation
The Madeleine Foundation
Asking the questions about what really happened to Madeleine McCann
66 Chippingfield HARLOW Essex, CM17 0DJ
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Tel: 01279 635789 e-mail: ajsbennett@btinternet.com website: www.madeleinefoundation.org.uk
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Monday 11 July 2011
Detective Chief Inspector Andy
Redwood, Atten. Mr Thomas Bowen MIT5 (Madeleine McCann Review Team) Belgravia Police Station 202 Buckingham
Palace Road LONDON SW1W 9FX.
Dear Detective Inspector Andy Redwood
BY RECORDED DELIVERY
LETTER
re: Submission of evidence to the Madeleine McCann Review Team
I write to you regarding
the submission of revelant evidence to your team. I am informed both by Sergeant Voges [Collar No. 605CC) at the Metropolitan
Police Central Control and by your Thomas Bowen that you have been appointed the Senior Investigating Officer by the Metropolitan
Police Commissioner with overall responsibilty for the conduct of the Review into the reported disappearance of British girl
Madeleine McCann.
We wish to submit evidence to your Review which suggests that Madeleine's parents, Dr Gerald
and Dr Kate McCann, have not told the truth to both the Portuguese Police and to Leicestershire Police about the disappearance
of their daughter. This evidence also suggests that the McCanns' friends in Portugal, popularly known as 'The Tapas
7', may also not have told the truth to the police about Madeleine's disappearance. Moreover, the evidence we wish
to present to you tends to suggest that Madeleine McCann may have died in her parents' apartment, howsoever that death
may have been caused, and that others besides the McCanns and the 'Tapas 7' have conspired to cover up the true circumstances
of her death.
We have three classes of evidence that we wish to submit to you. These are as follows: - A
comprehensive dossier of circumstantial evidence, including new material not disclosed in the Portuguese Police files and
which includes material relating, for example, to various telephone records of some of the parties involved, matters relating
to the creche/baby-minding records at the Ocean Club, Praia da Luz, matters relating to other guests at the Ocean Club that
week, and analyses of various witness statements which demonstrate, we say with clarity, that the McCanns and their friends
did not tell the truth about events in Praia da Luz. This includes, for example, numerous contradictory statements going well
beyond mere inconsistences, and changes of story. Some of these issues were of course highlighhted in the police report of
Tavares de Almeida dated 10 September 2007, the date the McCanns returned to England after being made arguido and
arguida on 7 September 2007. As the Senior Investigating Officer in this case, I expect you will already have read
this document some time ago and recorded your response to it in your policy folder.
- A similar dossier,
which is ready to send to you, detailing various aspects about the McCanns' private investigations. ***
The rest of this section has been removed at the request of Brian Kennedy's lawyers, Carter-Ruck ***
- Information, of a first-hand nature, received from a female insider within the McCann Team whose information strongly
tends to suggest that the entire McCann Team private investigation team was exercised in the creation of a huge smokescreen
to cover up what really happened to Madeleine McCann, rather than being a genuine attempt to find Madeleine. We would only
wish to disclose this lady's information to you in person to one of your team of detectives.
However, before
sending you any of this information, we need to establish if you want to receive it. When Prime Minister David Cameron, in
response to a letter from Dr Gerald McCann, announced in the Sun newspaper on 12 May this year - the same date as
Dr Kate McCann’s book 'madeleine' was published - that he had procured a thorough Scotland Yard Review into
Madeleine's disappearance, he stated that the whole purpsoe of the Review was 'to support the McCann family'.
We do not know for example the terms of the review that were agreed between the Prime Minister and Sir Paul Stephenson. If
the terms of the review team under your leadership have been determined, please supply us with a copy of them.
The
official Home Office announcement of the Review you are currently implementing stated: "The Home Office today announced
that the Metropolitan Police Service will be bringing their expertise to the case regarding the search for Madeleine
McCann." It did not, for example, say: "The Home Office today announced that the Metropolitan Police
Service will be bringing their expertise to the case regarding the mystery of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann".
Similarly, a Home Office spokesperson said: "The government's primary concern has always been and remains
the safe return of Madeleine".
A news report soon after 12 May stated: "The Prime
Minister has been very clear that he wants to do everything we can to support the family".
Yet a police source for Scotland Yard said that in conducting reviews... "What we do is painstakingly
look at all the evidence, the paperwork, the CCTV, any suspects who came to light and were
investigated. Sometimes it takes fresh eyes to see what was always there".
The term 'suspects
who came to light' would of course include: Dr Gerald McCann, Dr Kate McCann and Mr. Robert Murat.
What we
need to know, in the clearest possible terms, please, is whether your team is prepared to review in full any evidence, foresnic
or circumstantial, that tends to show that Madeleine died in the McCanns' apartment in Praia da Luz, and her body then
hidden - as well as examining the evidence that Madeleine may have been abducted, a matter which even the McCanns' own
chief spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, conceded publicly on 6 January this year was only 'a hypothesis, an assumption'.
If your team is not prepared to look at the alternative hypothesis i.e. that Madeleine died in the McCanns' apartment
and that her body was subsequently hidden, then clearly there is absolutely no point in our sending you anything.
I should explain that the Madeleine Foundation was set up in January 2008 with a number of purposes, including investigating
what really happened to Madeleine McCann. That was a full six months before the Senior Investigating Officer in the Madeleine
McCann case, Goncalo Amaral, wrote his book, A Verdade da Mentira - 'The Truth About A Lie' - in which he
gave persuasive reasons why he and his team made the McCanns suspects and explained why they held to their conviction that
Madeleine McCann died in her parents' apartment. Last year we published: 'The Madeleine McCann Case Files: Volume
1', which reproduces evidence from the case which tends to suggest that Madeleine McCann was not abducted.
Finally,
we join with many other voices, including those of Metropolitan Police authority members, in querying whether the circumstances
in which this Review was set up, and the current concerns about corruption and the undue influence of the Rupert Murdoch empire
at the highest levels in the Metropolitan Police, suggest that you are not a suitable police force to carry out this Review.
We suggest that any Review should be carried out by a police force less riven with corruption allegations at a senior level
and which is not tainted by its close association with the Murdoch empire, a matter we have recently detailed in our letter
to the Prime Minister dated 18 May 2011, a copy of which I am pleased to enclose for your attention.
We look forward
to hearing from you.
Yours sincerely
Tony Bennett Secretary The Madeleine Foundation
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The Madeleine Foundation's second letter to Scotland Yard The Madeleine Foundation
The Madeleine Foundation
Asking the questions about what really happened to Madeleine McCann
66 Chippingfield HARLOW Essex, CM17 0DJ
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Tel: 01279 635789 e-mail: ajsbennett@btinternet.com website: www.madeleinefoundation.org.uk
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Thursday 21 July 2011
Detective Chief Inspector Andy
Redwood, Atten. Mr Thomas Bowen MIT5 (Madeleine McCann Review Team) Belgravia Police Station 202 Buckingham
Palace Road LONDON SW1W 9FX.
Dear Detective Inspector Andy Redwood
BY RECORDED DELIVERY
LETTER
re: Submission of evidence to the Madeleine McCann Review Team
As I had not yet received
any reply to my letter of 11 July (copy attached for ease of reference), I telephoned yesterday to check that you had at least
received it.
I spoke to Sam - Collar No. 220629 - who said he did not know and was unwilling or unable to find
out.
As he was unsure whether it had been received or not, I offered to fax the letter to you forthwith. He hesitated
about giving ma a Fax No. and then said I should wait two more days to see if it had been received. However, since he also
said 'we do not answer correspondence in this team', I thought I had better write to you again.
I doubt
if there is an explicit policy to refusee to even acknowledge letters, so I am sending this second Recorded Delivery letter
and would ask you please to acknolwedge it without delay as well as giving me a reply to the very particular question I asked,
namely as to whether you will accept evidence that suggests that Madeleine died in her parents' holiday apartment and
have covered up that fact.
Since I last wrote to you 10 days ago, the absolute importance of the police in general,
and the Metropolitan Police in particular, doing things correctly and honestly has been vivildy highlighted on all our news
bulletins, and by the Prime Minister himself, and I want to make absolutely sure that your Team is prepared to go wherever
the evidence leads, a matter which has caused us a great deal of concern regarding your Team's remit ever since Prime
Minister David Cameron said that the purpose of your Review Team was 'to support the family'.
The whole
question of whether your Team can in any way be seen to be acting 'to support the family', when there is
already a substantial body of evidence suggesting that Madeleine McCann died in Ocean Club Apartment G5A, where her parents
were staying, is very much in issue here.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Yours sincerely
Tony Bennett Secretary The Madeleine Foundation
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Reply from Scotland Yard
The Madeleine Foundation
METROPOLITAN POLICE SPECIALIST CRIME DIRECTORATE
Mr Tony Bennett 66 Chippingfield Harlow Essex CM17 0DJ
SCDI - Homicide and Serious Crime Command Rm 3.30 1st Floor Belgravia
Police Station 202-206 Buckingham Palace Road London SW1W 9SX
Your ref Our ref 19th July
2011
Dear Mr Bennett
Thank you for your letter dated 11th July 2011 and for sight of your correspondence
with the Prime Minister dated 18th May 2011.
The investigative review into the circumstances of Madeleine McCann's
disappearance will encompass all investigations that have been conducted. This includes material held by private investigative
organisations.
lf the Madeleine Foundation holds 'evidence' which you believe will assist this process
then please by all means forward it to the above address. Any material submitted will be subject to assessment and review.
Yours sincerely.
Andy Redwood Detective Chief lnspector
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Letters from Carter-Ruck (Re: Edward
Smethurst), 04 August 2011
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Edward Smethurst issues a libel summons
against Tony Bennett, 09 August 2011
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Edward Smethurst issues a libel summons against Tony
Bennett The Madeleine Foundation
Article filed 16 August 2011
On 9 August 2011, Mr Edward Smethurst,
the Co-ordinating Solicitor for Drs Gerald and Kate McCann, issued a libel summons against Madeleine Foundation Secretary
Tony Bennett, a fact he found out on returning yesterday from a 10-day holiday. The claim is limited by Mr Smethurst to 'a
sum not exceeding £100,000'.
The summons, technically called a Defamation Claim, was accompanied by an
ex parte Order also made on 9 August by Master Eyre in the High Court, which requires that "any non-party seeking access
to, or copies of any documents before the court or on court records (including statements of case and witness evidence) must
make an application for such access on notice to the parties. Documents filed at court in respect of this action are to be
placed in a sealed envelope marked: 'Not to be provided to any non-party without the leave of a Judge or the Senior Master
of the Queen’s Bench Division and on prior notice to the parties'."
The Claim relates to postings
made by Tony Bennett about Mr Smethurst on the 'Complete Mystery of Madeleine McCann' (CMOMM) forum between 9 and
12 May. The case has been assigned to Master McCloud.
Mr Smethurst's concerns about one thread in particular
were first brought to Mr Bennett's attention on 4 August. Carter-Ruck, who act for Mr Smethurst, in the second of two
letters sent that day, demanded: "Should you now fail to remove the defamatory postings...we will advise our client to
issue proceedings for libel against you without further notice to you". The allegedly defamatory postings were removed
the following day, the day Mr Bennett began a 10-day holiday.
On his return from holiday yesterday, Mr Bennett
discovered that Mr Smethurst had already issued libel proceedings, on Tuesday 9 August, in relation to two other threads on
CMOMM which had not previously been brought to his attention by Mr Smethurst. These two threads about Mr Smethurst were removed
from CMOMM as soon as Mr Smethursts' libel summons was brought to the attention of CMOMM's administrators.
Proposals to settle the dispute will shortly be put forward by Mr Bennett who has in the meantime agreed not to discuss
the subject matter of his postings. We will publish further developments in the case as and when they happen.
Madeleine
Foundation Committee, 16 August 2011
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The Madeleine Foundation and 3 libel actions, 03 December 2011
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The Madeleine Foundation and 3 libel actions The Madeleine Foundation
03 December 2011
Statement by Tony Bennett, Secretary, 7pm,
3 December 2011
BRIAN KENNEDY
Brian Kennedy's concerns that I had libelled him have now
been settled on terms acceptable to both parties. No court order or undertaking is involved and I did not pay any of Mr Kennedy's
costs.
EDWARD SMETHURST
In Thursday's post (1 December), I received a costs estimate
(as per High Court procedures) of the likely costs incurred by Edward Smethurst if he pursues his libel claim against me,
assuming I continue to defend his claim. I would be liable to pay all those costs if I lose (i.e. if the court holds that
any one of my statements about him on Jill's forum libelled him).
In their
letter, Carter-Ruck say that Smethurst's costs to date are £28,390 and that his future costs, assuming
a three-day libel trial, will be £143,086.50, making the total £171,476.50.
This is based, as set out in a 10-page document, on much of the legal work being done by a Senior Partner at Carter-Ruck
who charges £562.50 an hour for his time (inclusive of VAT).
Faced with such huge costs, I clearly must think
carefully about my options in advance of a Case Management and Costs Management hearing in the High Court next Wednesday.
MCCANNS
At 6.20pm the same day (Thursday), a process server employed by Carter-Ruck came
up to Chippingfield in a 'Godfather'-style limousine, driven by another person, and handed me a large and heavy cardboard
box, measuring 16" x 14" x 12" (40cm x 35cm x 30cm for those who do metric), containing 5 huge ring binders
of statements on behalf of the McCanns, and accompanying evidence. These contained over 3,000 pages in total, mostly photocopies
of my articles on the Madeleine Foundation website and several dozen postings on Jill Havern's site. The cardboard box
was of exceptional quality, while these were no ordinary lever arch files. They were beautifully finished in the attractive
Oxford blue livery of Carter-Ruck, complete with their logo and full contact details.
There was also a summons to attend the Royal Courts of Justice
to be committed to prison for contempt of court (alternative remedies being a suspended prison sentence, a fine, or seizure
of assets, or any combination of these). The case has been listed for a hearing before a judge on Wednesday 8 February. The
summons alleges a wholesale breach of one of the four undertakings I gave to the High Court on 25 November 2009, namely not
to libel the McCanns.
I intend to defend the McCanns' application. Arguably, as I have already been advised
by one local lawyer, the undertaking I gave in 2009 was too 'sweeping' and should either be modified or even withdrawn,
given that it amounts virtually to an undertaking to say nothing about the case ever again. The lawyer also suggested it was
given under oppressive circumstances, a matter I have already raised under Article 6(1) of the European Convention on Human
Rights with the European Commission on Human Rights, which is currently looking into my claim that the way British laws allows
wealthy libel litigants to get their way over defendants who cannot hope to match their financial and legal resources amounts
to a breach of human rights. The government has promised to rectify this manifestly unjust situation as a result of a successful
campaign by the Libel Reform Campaign.
Included amongst the papers is an 84-paragraph, 27-page affidavit sworn
by Senior Partner at Carter-Ruck, Isabel Hudson. I can reproduce parts of that affidavit, but not those parts that include
extracts of my disputed articles and postings. We'll therefore display a redacted version of it on our website.
In Paragraph 58 of her affidavit, Ms Hudson states that a letter sent by myself to Carter-Ruck on 8 June 2011 prompted the
McCanns to say "enough is enough". The McCanns and Carter-Ruck then began what Ms Hudson says in Paragraph 65 was
"a painstaking and time-consuming process" of analysing as many postings of mine as they could find on Jillhavern's
forum, to see how many might be construed as libellous. They think that around 50-60 of my 3,700 posts on the forum might
breach my undertaking, while the other 3,640-3,650 apparently do not. That explains why, as the forum-owner will confirm,
Carter-Ruck have spent literally hundreds of hours on this forum in the past few months, searching for potentially libellous
comments, in order to bolster their application to commit me to prison. The forum-owner's logs record the precise time
and length of each visit by Carter-Ruck.
There is a reference to all of this in Dr Kate McCann's book: 'madeleine'.
She wrote (pp. 289-290):
"Adam Tudor and his colleague Isabel Hudson continue to do a vast amount
of work for us, without payment, most of it quietly, behind the scenes".
To have spent hundreds of
hours on Jill Havern's forum for the past few months 'painstakingly and time-consumingly' searching, and searching,
for possible libels, without any payment whatsoever, would indeed be regarded by many people as an act of very great generosity.
I cannot conclude this statement without giving an honourable mention to Mr Mike Gunnill of Kent,
a past member of Jill Havern's forum, and, for all I know, a present one, under one of his many personas, aliases, and
'socks'. Mike Gunnill, it may be recalled, was the photojournalist who took the photograph of Debbie Butler (near
whom he lives), used by the Sunday Express alongside their front-page headline: 'The McCanns' Stalker'
on 16 August 2009. His website at the time was remarkable for including over 100 photos he took at the gruesome 'House
of Horror', Haut de la Garenne children's home in Jersey, scene of decades of child abuse and possibly even child
murders by depraved paedophiles. Some on this forum may recall how Gunnill e-mailed me in January 2010 under one of his many
pseudonyms, 'Michael Sangerte', claiming he lived in 'Berkshire', asking to buy a copy of '60 Reasons'
(other names used by Gunnill in previous correspondence with me (before I knew his real identity) were Jason Peters and Peter
Tarwin).
I refused. He then wrote me a further begging letter stating that he really wanted an original copy of
'60 Reasons' because of his 'historical research', adding that he was 'willing to pay a high price'
for a copy. I then offered to obtain a copy belonging to a close relative and asked him to send £5 including postage,
which he did. He asked me to send the book to Michael Sangerte - not in Berkshire, but at an address in Kent. Subsequent enquiries
showed that this was Mike Gunnill's home near Maidstone, Kent. The very day after the book was sent to him, he bragged
on a McCann-believer forum that he had obtained a copy of '60 Reasons' and had already sent it to Carter-Ruck,
who were apparently 'delighted' to receive it. He later openly stated on that same forum that he was being employed
'on a mission'.
This, however, is how this incident is reported in Isabel Hudson's affidavit, paragraph
37:
"We continued to monitor the situation, and in early February 2010 we received evidence (again from a
well-wisher) which suggested that the Defendant had sold at least one further copy of the '60 Reasons' booklet (one
of the publications specifically complained about in the libel claim form which had been issued for the purpose of obtaining
undertakings to the court)...I exhibit a copy of the e-mail thread between this well-wisher and the defendant (which should
be read from top to bottom) at page 26 of Exhibit IJH5".
+++++++++++
To deal with these two separate
court actions will require a great deal of time and attention. For that reason, and for other reasons, I have decided not
to contribute any further postings to the publicly-viewable part this forum until at least these two sets of court proceedings
are concluded. Depending on the outcome of those two court cases, I will then consider my position in relation to whether
or not to rejoin in any public discussions in the future (or even whether the court will allow me to). In the meantime, and
subject as always to the consent of the forum-owner, I shall continue to remain a member of the forum and to contribute where
I can to those parts of the forum which are not publicly-viewable.
This withdrawal, whether temporary or permanent,
comes at a time when Jill Havern's forum has remained the most visited Madeleine McCann discussion forum on the internet
for the past four months, and its membership has grown to nearly 1,500 members. Very informative discussions are taking place
on the forum, to which many contribute.
As Clarence Mitchell himself said nearly a year ago, even the McCanns admit
that Madeleine's abduction is but 'an assumption' or a 'working hypothesis'. Moreover, despite over four
years of searching, using private investigators that have cost the McCann Team millions of pounds, the McCann Team are still
unable to give us one single usable piece of information about who is supposed to have abducted her, and, if she was abducted,
where she was taken. Nor do we really know which of 18 suspects, 'persons of interest' and 'people we wish to
eliminate from our enquiries' (two of whom are women) we are supposed to still be looking out for.
In those
circumstances I wish all of you on here committed to discussing what happened to Madeleine every success in getting ever closer
to the truth.
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PDF Download:
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27-page affidavit sworn by Senior Partner at Carter-Ruck,
Isabel Hudson (pdf)
click here to download file
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Latest on the 3 libel actions - alleged contempt
of court x1, and alleged libels x2, 07 December 2011
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Latest on the 3 libel actions - alleged contempt of
court x1, and alleged libels x2 Jill Havern Forum
Tony Bennett 07 December 2011 at 6:59 am
Libel cases
update:
SMETHURST
Update - Summary: Edward Smethurst's claim against me has been
settled on the following agreed terms:
a) I will pay the sum of £2,500 agreed damages to Mr Smethurst, without
any formal admission of liability. Mr Smethurst has said via Carter-Ruck that he will pay this sum into the Find Madeleine
Fund
b) I will in addition pay Mr Smethurst's reasonable legal costs to date, to be assessed by the court
if not agreed between me and him (see below)
c) Carter-Ruck will draw up an undertaking for me to sign which will
cover the contents of anything that I may or may not publish about him in the future; the terms of that undertaking to be
agreed between us.
The hearing yesterday (7 December):
Carter-Ruck had four people representing them
at yesterday's hearing, which was in Room E117, the chambers of Master Victoria McCloud. They were:
(i) Jacob
Dean, barrister (ii) Isabel Hudson, Senior Partner of Carter-Ruck (iii) Two female assistants.
Mr Smethurst's
claim, issued by the court on 9 August 2011, was originally for £100,000 damages.
This was primarily a costs
management hearing in which Carter-Ruck were asking the Master to approve their 'costs budget'. This set out, in a
series of complex tables, how they had calculated their costs to date (£28,390) and their likely future costs (£143,086.50),
which totalled £171, 476.50.
Discussion about Carter-Ruck's costs bill took up most of the 1¾
hour hearing. The Master queried the very high amount of costs in Carter-Ruck's budget. The end result was that Carter-Ruck's
costs budget schedule, most unusually, was rejected by the Master, who ordered Carter-Ruck at their own expense to submit
another one. Carter-Ruck were given leave to appeal if they wished.
The hearing opened with Jacob Dean, for Mr
Smethurst, being able to make a half-hour opening summary of the case. In this address, he set out that the following legal
issues to be settled in the case:
a) whether any or all of the comments I made about Mr Smethurst were justified
(strictly true)
b) whether, if not justified, they were 'fair comment'
c) what was the actual
meaning of some of the words I used
d) whether I had acted promptly to remove any offending words.
He
also claimed that Mr Smethurst had no control on Facebook over who became his friends on his Facebook page. That meant that
I would have to have proved to the court that certain named friends of his were there as a matter of his conscious decision.
Jacob Dean claimed that anyone could become Mr Smethurst's 'Facebook Friend'.
At the hearing the barrister
produced and served on me a new application, running to several hundred more pages, with exhibits, for 'Summary Disposal'
of the case. The application contended that I had no arguable case and that the case should be disposed of at a 1-day hearing
without the matter ever going to trial. If the case had proceeded, there would have been a 1-day summary trial before a judge.
If at that hearing the judge thought that I had an arguable case, the matter would have been set down for a 3-day trial at
which all the legal arguments mentioned above would have been considered.
The Master was especially interested
in the following aspects of the matter:
a) whether or not I had promptly removed any offending material
b) whether or not Mr Smethurst had followed the Pre-Action Protocol on Defamation, which requires libel claimants to give
potential defendants an opportunity to remove any allegedly libellous publications. The Protocol sets out quite clearly that
court action should be 'a last resort'
c) whether or not Mr Smethurst should have issued proceedings on
9 August when I had met all the demands of Carter-Ruck’s initial two letters of 4 August
d) whether Mr Smethurst's
claim for £100,000 damages was 'proportional': i.e. whether such a large claim was reasonable in respect of
comments made on a small internet forum and which were removed on request
e) whether the steps taken in the proceedings
to date by Carter-Ruck were proportionate, having regard in particular to my prompt removal of any offending material.
At the conclusion of the case, the Master said that she was "fully seized of all the issues relating to the need
for claimants to follow the pre-Action Protocol and as to proportionality".
In terms, this may well mean that
a large part of Mr Smethurst's costs claim may be disallowed by the court.
Once a libel claim has been issued,
and bearing in mind the gross inequality of resources in this case, tough choices have to be made. My choice was to settle
on the most favourable terms that I could agree.
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With thanks
to Nigel at
McCann Files
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