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
Brijesh Kalappa Supreme Court Advocate and Additional Advocate Tuesday, January 10, 2012 at 13:59
Fourteen-year-old
Aarushi Talwar, daughter of dentist parents, was found dead with her throat slit at the family's Noida residence on the
intervening night of May 15-16, 2008, while the body of their domestic help, Hemraj, was found on the terrace the following
day. The initial investigation in the case carried out by the Uttar Pradesh Police led to the arrest of Aarushi's father
Rajesh Talwar on May 23, 2008. After frenzied media reporting and public outrage, the probe was handed over to the CBI and
Rajesh Talwar was granted bail by the Ghaziabad court on July 11, 2008.
The CBI, after probing the murder for over
two-and-a-half years, had filed its closure report in the case in the Ghaziabad Special CBI court, saying it had been unable
to find out any evidence to prosecute the Talwars. The Ghaziabad trial court, however, had rejected the CBI closure report,
saying there was enough prima facie material in the agency's report to put the couple on trial for their alleged involvement
in the twin murders and had issued summons to them to face trial. The magistrate took cognisance of the case and summoned
the Talwars on February 9, 2011.
Rajesh and Nupur Talwar went to the Allahabad High court, which had dismissed
their pleas to quash the trial court summons and the proceedings initiated against them. They were then constrained to approach
the Supreme Court of India which had on March 19 last year stayed the trial against them. The Supreme Court dismissed their
petitions. The Talwars will now have to stand trial for the murder of their daughter.
Two features which point
to the complicity of the Talwars is the surgical precision causing the death of the two, as also the fact that the crime scene
was 'dressed up' before policemen arrived on the scene. The spate of 'honour killings' by parents in and around
North India gives rise too to some suspicion regarding the role of the Talwar couple.
A year before the Aarushi
murder, a three-year-old British girl, Madeleine McCann, whose parents were also doctors, went missing when the family holidayed
in Portugal in 2007. The investigation appeared to focus more tightly on her parents. Portuguese police came close to charging
parents Kate and Gerry McCann after demanding the mother's diary be seized as trial evidence. Madeleine disappeared from
a room in a Portuguese holiday resort in May while she and her younger twin siblings were left unattended when her parents
were dining with seven of their friends at a nearby restaurant 50 metres away.
The Portuguese newspaper 'Correio
da Manha' cited police sources as saying new tests on blood found in the car hired by the McCanns conclusively showed
it was Madeleine's. "The definitive result of the tests leaves no doubts for the Policia Judiciaria. The blood found
in the Mc Canns' car is that of Madeleine as well as those samples detected in the flat," the paper said. Portuguese
newspapers had already published what they claim are extracts from Kate's journal and say the diary is fundamental to
the belief that the 39-year-old GP and mother-of-three was involved in the death of her daughter. Passages are said to reveal
a mother at her wits' end coping with three hysterical kids. Her twins, Sean and Amelie, were aged two when their sister
vanished. Cardiologist Gerry, 39, is said to be portrayed as an absentee dad happy to leave his wife to shoulder the burden
while he relaxed on holidays.
Unsubstantiated claims in the Portuguese media said police believed that the child
was killed in the apartment and her body moved in a car hired 25 days after she vanished. According to 'Correio Da Manha',
the police case against the McCanns consisted of sniffer dogs and that traces of blood indicate the presence of the little
girl's body behind a sofa and in the trunk of the car. The McCanns, though formally notified as 'suspects', were
allowed to leave Portugal when the English Press thoroughly examined their rather shameful role in the sordid affair. The
parents remain free even as the child remains untraced and reports recently emanated that a child resembling the missing one
was seen in Leh in India sometime in July, 2011.
Seasoned investigators say that investigations alone cannot tell
the complete story, some lucky breakthrough is often essential to solve a crime.
Investigations fall short in certain
cases where the motive is completely oblique. It is for this reason that the celebrated Judge Lord Denning said, "The
devil himself knows not the thought of man."
In a murder case in Chikamagalur District (Mrs Gandhi's constituency)
in 1995-96, an attractive housewife, Smt. Aruna, was found strangled to death by an electric cord, in nude state. Her gold
bangles were stolen but much of the valuables remained locked in her almirah. The needle of suspicion pointed towards her
husband Dr Manjunath since their three-year-old daughter told the police during interrogation that her father, who had left
for the clinic in the morning, had returned home for a brief while. Dr Manjunath was imprisoned without bail for as much as
a year. Meanwhile, the trial went on. In the public eye and in the eyes of the press, Dr Manjunath turned into one of the
worst kind of cold-blooded killers.
Two years later, in a stray incident, three travelling salesmen of a reputed
company were arrested in Goa (about 600 km away from Chikamagalur) for strangling a lone woman to death. When interrogated,
they provided a list of killings that they had been involved in, including that of Smt. Aruna. Dr Manjunath was forthwith
absolved of all charges since a self-inculpatory confession had been made by the travelling salesmen.
This presents
a lesson for the public who are baying for the blood of either the Talwars or Krishna in the Arushi murder case or even in
that of Ruchika Girhotra's case. Ruchika's case is a stand-alone one, in which, if the facts as projected ultimately
turn out to be true, Mr SPS Rathore deserves the worst kind of punishment.
However, the press or the public have
not been invested with the powers to conduct trial. It reminds one of a lady teacher who was arrested for prostitution and
for involving her students in the trade too. It turned out to be some journalist's idea of a great story. Trial by the
media or by the people's court is dangerous. Civilisation has advanced far too much for popular trials where due process
is not followed, nor the rule of law.
How did these two children simply vanish
one day?, 21 January 2012
How did these two children simply vanish one day? Sunday Express
By William Bond Sunday January
22,2012
AN INVESTIGATING judge in southern Spain will this week lift a secrecy order on the disappearance
of two young children that has gripped the nation for more than three months.
It could cast fresh light
on what happened to Ruth Breton, six, and her two-year-old brother Jose but could just as easily only fuel the mystery.
The children were reported missing by their father on October 8, 2011.
He approached a security guard in
a popular public park in the city of Cordoba, telling him his children had simply disappeared when he was distracted and had
taken his eyes off them for no more than a minute or two.
Jose Breton and his wife Ruth had just separated. He
had weekend custody and had taken them to the park that Sunday.
Police launched a frantic search but the two children
were nowhere to be found and no one had seen them. Even the park's numerous security cameras had captured images only
of the father, none of Ruth and Jose.
Police immediately noticed that Jose senior seemed to show no emotion. In
a flat voice, he repeated his story several times, never changing a detail.
Yet there wasn't a flicker of fear
over what might have happened to his beautiful children. It was reported that he had shown no guilt either for having taken
his eyes off them, nor anger that they may have been snatched by strangers to meet who knows what fate.
Detectives
leaned heavily on him but he just kept repeating his story, virtually word for word. The children were playing, he took his
eyes off them briefly and they were gone. Officers were convinced he was involved in the disappearance. A few days later detectives
and uniformed police swooped on the country property just outside the city owned by his parents and little Jose's paternal
grandparents at Las Quemadillas.
They were accompanied by sniffer dogs and spent hours turning the place inside-out.
They found nothing. In the next eight days they repeated the operation twice more. But there were still no clues. Although
Jose stuck to his story he was arrested and questioned as a suspect. After 72 hours – the maximum a suspect can be held
in Spain – he was handed to an investigating judge, Jose Luis Rodriguez.
After a closed-door session, Breton
was ordered to prison on suspicion of illegal detention, kidnapping and simulating a crime. A secrecy order meant that whatever
evidence there was could not be disclosed.
Last week, state prosecutor Jose Antonio Martin-Caro said that when
the secrecy order is lifted on Wednesday there will be evidence to back-up why Breton is being held. He admitted, however,
that what actually happened to the children remains a mystery. The police are convinced that the father did not take them
to the park and knows what happened to them, but they have yet to get him to admit it.
The pressure has not let
up on the paternal grandparents. The estate where they live has been searched at least half a dozen more times. Drains have
been scoured, false roofs torn down and walls opened up. Last Wednesday a team of National Police divers dragged the River
Guadalquivir where it passes through Cordoba and near to the grandparents’ property for a second time since the drama
began.
The weekly Madrid news magazine Interviu reported that the father had let one ominous expression slip when
a detective asked yet again: "Where are the kids, Jose?" "That," he is reported to have said, "is
my secret."
Equally convinced that Jose senior is responsible for the children's disappearance is their
mother, Ruth. She broke her silence for the first time this month as the 100th day of their disappearance approached.
She told a rally near the Portuguese border: "Everyone who knows Jose Breton knows that he did not lose his children.
And to those who don't know him, I will assure them that he didn't."
The case bears a passing resemblance
to the disappearance of British child Madeleine McCann on a family holiday in Portugal almost five years ago, in the sense
that the mystery has a nation in thrall. Just as Kate McCann has clung to the belief that her daughter is still alive, so
Ruth Ortiz is convinced her children are not dead. Also like Kate, she is determined to keep the spotlight on the case and
not to give up until the mystery is solved.
Earlier this month she crossed the border into Portugal to put-up scores
of posters with pictures of Ruth and Jose.
In Cordoba, a city visited by thousands of tourists every week, posters
are being prepared in several languages, including English.
British expats are said to have offered to send posters
to the UK as Interpol alerts police across Europe.
It has to be emphasised that there is nothing to connect the
Spanish children's disappearance with that of Madeleine.
------------
Madeleine's parents support
the family of the missing children in Córdoba europapress
MADRID, 19 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS
) 19.10.2011
The parents of the missing girl Madeleine McCann, Kate and Gerry, wanted to show their
solidarity with the family of the two missing children in Córdoba and have said that their "heart" goes out
to them and they hope that they will be found "safe and well".
"We have heard about this case but
we do not know the details of what happened. Of course, our heart goes out to the parents and we hope that they will soon
be found safe and well; we know from experience how hard it is when a child is abducted and we always feel with all our hearts
for the parents whose children have also been abducted," said Gerry McCann.
Madeleine's father made these
statements during a press conference in Madrid where they presented a book entitled "Madeleine" in which the girl's
mother reconstructs the facts since the disappearance of her daughter on 3rd May 2007.
"When Madeleine disappeared
at the beginning it was suggested to us that we should meet with other parents whose children had been abducted. This seemed
a totally crazy idea to us because we thought that we were going to find our daughter straight away. We could not imagine
that four and a half years later we would still be searching for her and now we know this feeling of other parents and we
feel with all our hearts for them," added Gerry.
On the 10th October the siblings Ruth (aged six) and José
(aged two) disappeared from a park in Córdoba. Since then National Police officers have been investigating the whereabouts
of the children whose father was arrested on Tuesday in the face of indications of a possible crime of homicide.
------------------
The McCanns on the children of Córdoba europapress
19 October 2012
Transcript
by Nigel Moore
Gerry McCann: When Madeleine was taken and it was suggested to us that we
might want to speak to other parents whose children had been missing for a long time, we didn't want to go there because
we couldn't imagine being in the situation we're in four and a half years down the line. So, we hope that the children
are found as quickly as possible.
SOSNOWIEC: The kidnapping of 6-month-old
Magda. Magda is the Polish Madeleine McCann, 28 January/03 February 2012
SOSNOWIEC: The kidnapping of 6-month-old Magda.
Magda is the Polish Madeleine McCann SE.pl
Published: 28.01.2012 19:40
The mysterious
disappearance, the frantic searching and despair of their parents. And there are similar names. The Magda kidnapping
case (6 months) from Sosnowiec is very similar to the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, British (4 years), in 2007.
The parents left Madeleine alone for a while, while she slept
in a bed. They went to dinner with friends and took turns to ensure that everything was in order. Once they found the bed
empty.
That was the story told to British investigators by Kate and Gerry McCann, whose four-year-old daughter
Madeleine disappeared from a hotel room in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz. Although a large scale search was undertaken,
to this day we do not know what happened to that child.
For a time the parents were themselves in the circle of
suspects. Investigators reportedly found biological traces of the girl in a rented car after McCann's disappearance. There
were also suspicions that the child was given anesthetic which accidentally killed her, and claims by a private detective
that the child had been kidnapped by a paedophile and taken to the United States.
At the end of the investigation
it was shelved. We will probably never know what really happened. Let's hope that the "Polish Madeleine" will
be different.
The case of missing baby Magda took a number of dramatic turns late Thursday night after the girl's mother reportedly
told police where they could find the body.
At the time of going to press details were still sketchy,
but it's believed that the woman has pointed out a tree next to which she left the body and police officers have been
combing the surrounding area ever since.
The six-month-old baby was reported missing on January 24 in the town
of Sosnowiec. Immediate reports stated that the mother had lost consciousness, presumably after being attacked, and when she
came round, Magda's pushchair was empty.
Since then, the country has witnessed a nation-wide campaign, with
huge amounts of money being offered up as rewards for the child's return.
However, according to recent reports
on TVN24, it transpires that the mother has now admitted in an interview with Detective Krzysztof Rutkowski that her baby
died in an accident and she later hid the body outside next to a river.
So far police have only uncovered a rolled
up jacket, but have been unable to confirm whether it belongs to the girl.
"We are checking every bush and
shrub," says Pawel Warchol, a spokesman for Sosnowiec police.
Reports state that the mother made the confession
to Detective Rutkowski during an interview, in which she claims baby Magda fell out of her arms from a slippy blanket, hit
her head in the bedroom and died.
"The mother did not know what to do with the body," states PC Warchol.
"She packed it into her truck and eventually left it under a tree next to the river. Police are searching there as we
speak."
He went on to stress that the child's father had no knowledge of the accident.
However,
despite the tragic developments, there was officials said, still a glimmer of hope.
Mariusz Sokolowski, spokesman
for Polish Police Headquarters (KGP) said that they would continue to search adding, "While there is no corpse, hope
dies last."
The mother is currently at Katowice's Regional Police Headquarters, although reports claim
that in her current state she is "unable to perform any acts".
The tragic case continues.
Madeleine McCann detectives to call in Tapas
7, 05 February 2012
Madeleine McCann detectives to call in Tapas 7 Sunday Express
By James Murray Sunday February
5,2012
SCOTLAND YARD detectives are poised to interview the so-called Tapas Seven as their inquiry
into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann steps up a gear.
The friends of Kate and Gerry McCann, who
accompanied them on their holiday to Portugal almost five years ago, are expecting interview requests as soon as officers
feel they could assist the investigation.
So far, the Yard's Maddie Squad has been concentrating on analysing
every scrap of evidence in the case from files supplied by Leicestershire police, Portuguese detectives and Metodo 3,
the Barcelona-based private investigators hired by the McCanns.
Officers have flown to Portugal three times
and visited Spain twice.
With much of the analysis over, Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood wants to put his
team of three detective chief inspectors, five detective sergeants and 19 detective constables to good use.
They
are being supported by six civilian staff and three officers from the specialist murder review group, bringing the total number
on the team to 37.
By April the cost of the inquiry will be £1.9million but it is thought that figure could
double with the "investigative review" going into next year.
After nine months of information gathering,
officers are checking statements from key witnesses.
They include the Tapas Seven, so called because they were
eating at a tapas bar with Kate and Gerry at the time Madeleine disappeared.
In some cases the Yard officers have
asked for documents to be retranslated from Portuguese to English so that they are absolutely sure of what was said and
meant.
One theory they are examining is that if someone abducted Madeleine they could have had a copy of the key
for the holiday apartment at the Ocean Club in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz.
The Sunday Express has learned
that the Tapas Seven "fully expect" to be asked to go over the statements they made to Portuguese officers shortly
after Madeleine vanished on May 3, 2007.
They were also interviewed by Leicestershire detectives, with Portuguese
officers in attendance, when they arrived home.
The most significant witness is mother-of-two Jane Tanner, partner
of doctor Russell O'Brien, who said she saw a man carrying a child resembling Madeleine some time after 9pm.
Another key witness is Matthew Oldfield, who went to the apartment to check on Madeleine and twins Sean and Amelie, who
celebrated their seventh birthdays last week.
Mr Oldfield saw the twins in their cot but did not push the door
open wide enough to see Madeleine, although he was happy all was well.
All the Tapas Seven fully support the Yard's
review of the case and hope it will provide a breakthrough.
Other members of the group include Mr Oldfield's
wife Rachael, David and Fiona Payne and her mother Dianne Webster.
A Yard spokesman declined to say who would be
interviewed and when. "We are not going into that level of details," he said. "We are not at the stage of speaking
to individuals yet. We are laying the groundwork."
The McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell said they
and their friends would do everything to assist attempts to discover what happened to Madeleine.
Posted by Johanna at 12:06 Sunday, 5 February 2012
Questions:
To Matt: Are you being treated for your colour blindness (regarding fabrics), your inability
to count (windows) and your problem identifying shapes (of tables)?
To Russell: How did Matt
react when you entered his apartment with his key on Sunday evening to check on his daughter while Matt was inside with his
tummy bug?
To Jane: Did you hear Rachael snoring when you listened at her window on Wednesday
evening to check on her daughter?
To Rachael: Didn't it feel odd to watch a group of
children at tennis on Thursday when none of the group's children took part but were instead out on a boat trip at the
beach?
To Fiona: When you collected Maddie together with Kate from the creche on Thursday
at lunch time, was she as drenched, cold and wet as yourself from sailing on the rough sea?
To David: How did it feel to get thrown in the deep end when your buddy claimed that you checked on his daughter on the WEDNESDAY
alone inside the apartment?
Trial for alleged defamation of Gonçalo
Amaral postponed to March 29, 08 February 2012
Trial for alleged defamation of Gonçalo Amaral postponed
to March 29 SIC Noticias
Lusa 08.02.2012 19:37 With thanks to Astro for translation
The trial of lawyer Marcos Aragão Correia and of the university teacher
António Pedro Dores, over defamation of former PJ inspector Gonçalo Amaral, within the case of Leonor Cipriano,
which was to take place on Thursday, in Faro, has been postponed to the 29th of March.
Isabel Duarte,
Marcos Aragão Correia's lawyer, has told Lusa Agency that by a dispatch from Faro Judicial Court, the trial was
postponed to the 29th of March, at 9.30 a.m.
Despite not having had Access to said dispatch yet, the lawyer said
that she had been informed, by telephone, that the postponement was due to a pending appeal, which was filed by the other
arguido in the process, António Pedro Dores, the president of the Association Against Exclusion through Development,
whose defence attorney is José Preto.
For the trial in Faro, Marcos Aragão Correia has called António
Marinho Pinto, presently the head of the Lawyers' Order, and Ana Maria Calado, the former director of Odemira Prison,
as defence witnesses.
Former Judiciary Police (PJ) inspector Gonçalo Amaral – who investigated the
disappearance of Joana, the daughter of arguida Leonor Ciprinao – has criminally sued Marcos Aragão Correia and
António Pedro Dores, because they publicly alluded to the alleged torture that Leonor Cipriano was a target of during
the Joana case's questioning stage.
Marcos Aragão Correia, lawyer to Leonor Cipriano, alleges that the
Portuguese courts have already decided that it has been proved that His client was tortured, yet the Public Ministry (MP)
continues to uphold the accusation in the defamation lawsuit that Gonçalo Amaral has filed.
He further recalls
that, within the alleged case of torture of Leonor Cipriano, Gonçalo Amaral was condemned over the crime of false statement,
to a one-and-a-half-year prison sentence, which was suspended over the same period of time.
The defendant of Marcos
Aragão Correia in the defamation lawsuit is lawyer Isabel Duarte, who is equally the lawyer for Madeleine McCann's
parents, who has pending lawsuits against Gonçalo Amaral.
The trial in Lisbon over the defamation lawsuit
that has been filed by the parents of Madeleine McCann, the little girl that disappeared in the Algarve, in May 2007, which
was equally scheduled for Thursday, has also been postponed, without a new date, according to lawyer Isabel Duarte's indication
to Lusa.
That process concerns Gonçalo Amaral's book, "Maddie: A verdade da mentira".
Leveson inquiry: Ian Edmondson contradicts
Colin Myler evidence, 09 February 2012
Leveson inquiry: Ian Edmondson contradicts Colin Myler evidence
The Guardian
Former News of the World news editor gives different version of events surrounding the publishing of Kate McCann's
diaries
Dan Sabbagh Thursday 9 February 2012 13.08 GMT
The former news editor of the News of the World has contradicted
evidence given to the Leveson inquiry by his one time editor Colin Myler over what a spokesman for the McCanns was told about
the planned publication of Kate McCann's diary by the now closed Sunday tabloid in 2008.
Ian Edmondson, giving
evidence to the inquiry on Thursday, said he was instructed by Myler to call Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns public relations
representative, and tell him only in "very woolly" terms that the newspaper would be running a story about them
without giving the family any indication that the tabloid was going to publish her diaries in full.
The editor's
instruction, Edmondson said, was to give Mitchell the impression "that we were running a story, but not tell him specifically
what story" and that "certainly don't tell him [Mitchell] that we were in possession of the complete diaries".
Myler, Edmondson added, was "frightened that if Clarence knew what we had, he might take action".
Robert
Jay QC, counsel to the inquiry, asked Edmondson what was the purpose of "having an ambiguous or woolly conversation?"
Edmondson replied that the purpose would be "in order to blame Clarence Mitchell that he hadn't acted properly upon
instructions" if there was a row post-publication.
Edmondson's appearance before Lord Justice Leveson
was the first time he has spoken publicly since he was arrested and bailed on suspicion of phone hacking in April of last
year. The former News of the World news editor was not asked any questions about hacking because of the ongoing police inquiry.
Edmondson's evidence directly contradicts that given by Myler to the Leveson inquiry on 14 December. Myler was
asked: "Did Mr Edmondson make it clear to you that he had made it clear to Mr Mitchell that he had the whole diary and
was going to cause extracts from it to be published in the News of the World?"
In response, Myler said: "That's
what he led me to believe, yes."
Kate McCann told the Leveson inquiry in November that she felt "mentally
raped" by the News of the World's decision to publish her diaries in full – diaries that she had written after
her daughter Madeleine had disappeared on holiday in Portugal in 2007, and which were subsquently seized by the Portuguese
police. The diaries were translated into Portuguese and acquired by the News of the World, which retranslated them to publish
them.
A week later, the News of the World printed an apology for publishing the diaries, and it subsequently emerged
that the Murdoch-owned title paid £125,000 to the fund for finding Madeleine.
Edmondson told the inquiry
on Thursday that Myler's instruction to ring Mitchell came after a meeting that he, Myler and the News of the World's
former legal manager Tom Crone had ahead of publication. Edmondson said that Crone gave "his legal view, which I'm
told I'm not allowed to repeat, but which dismayed, shall I say, Mr Myler". The News of the World editor then asked
Edmondson to call Mitchell.
Myler lost his job as News of the World editor upon the title's closure last July
in the wake of mounting phone hacking revelations.
In January it was announced that he was to become the editor
of the New York Daily News, the bitter rival of Rupert Murdoch's New York Daily Post.
By Sunday Express reporter Sunday February 12,2012
KATE McCann is working on an updated paperback version of her best-selling
hardback book, Madeleine, writes Tracey Kandohla.
It is thought the new book, set to be published in the
spring, will include details about the Scotland Yard review of her daughter's kidnapping.
It will be published
shortly before the fifth anniversary of three-year-old Madeleine's disappearance in Portugal on May 3, 2007. The hardback
raised £2million for the Madeleine Fund. More than 280,000 sold in Britain. Thousands more have been sold around the
world in countries such as Australia, Spain and Portugal.
Kate hopes the paperback will be a hit with British holidaymakers
over the summer. Kate, 43, a doctor, said: "Somebody holds that key piece of the jigsaw. I am hopeful that this book
may help the investigation. It might prompt someone who has relevant information, maybe without even knowing it, to come forward."
Her publisher Alison Barrow, from Transworld said: "Kate's first book was a phenomenal success. It achieved
astounding sales, especially for a first-time author, and it was the number one book in Britain for weeks.
"We
just hope Kate's original book and her new book bring her one step closer to finding her daughter."
The
384-page hardback, was launched on Madeleine's eighth birthday on May 12 last year.
Madeleine McCann detective made £300k
from book about tragedy, 12 February 2012
Madeleine McCann detective made £300k from book about
tragedy Daily Record
Feb 12 2012
THE
Portuguese detective who was thrown off the Madeleine McCann case has made a fortune spouting lies about the missing
girl's parents.
Gonçalo Amaral has been paid at least £320,000 for a book and DVD peddling
claims that Kate and Gerry McCann covered up Madeleine's death in their holiday apartment.
The McCanns
are suing Amaral for at least £1million for libel and breaching their human rights.
Their case against him
was due to be heard in Lisbon last week but was postponed when he split from his legal team.
Amaral was booted
off the police investigation following the disappearance of the three-year-old in 2007 after five months in charge.
His book – The Truth About The Lie – became a bestseller in Portugal, even though the country's top legal
officials insist there is no evidence to back up his accusations.
Amaral is believed to have made £1million
from information about the case.
A legal source close to the McCanns said: "Amaral made an astonishing
amount of money from his campaign to discredit the McCanns.
"I don’t know how he sleeps at
night, knowing he cashed in on the tragic story of a young girl’s disappearance."
Lawyers for the couple
are expected to present proof of some of the ex-detective's earnings when the case is heard.
They will
show Amaral received at least £287,000 from the book publishers and £33,600 for a DVD.
Revealed: How shamed cop made a fortune spouting
lies about Madeleine McCann's parents, 12 February 2012
Revealed: How shamed cop made a fortune spouting lies about
Madeleine McCann's parents Daily Mirror
By Mirror.co.uk 12 Feb 2012 00:00
Gonçalo
Amaral has been paid at least £320,000 for a book and DVD peddling his outrageous claims that Kate and Gerry McCann
covered up the death of Madeleine
The Portuguese detective who was thrown off the Madeleine McCann
case in disgrace has made a fortune spouting lies about the missing girl's parents.
The Sunday Mirror can reveal
Gonçalo Amaral has been paid at least £320,000 for a book and DVD peddling his outrageous claims that Kate and
Gerry McCann covered up the death of Madeleine in the family's holiday apartment.
Amaral was booted off the
investigation after just five months in charge. But his book, The Truth About The Lie, became a bestseller in Portugal even
though the country's top lawman insists there's no evidence to back up his accusations.
A legal source
close to the McCanns believes Amaral could have made as much as £1million in total.
"Amaral made an
astonishing amount of money from his campaign to discredit the McCanns," said the source.
"I don't
know how he sleeps at night, knowing he's cashing in on the tragic story of a three-year-old girl's disappearance."
Gerry and Kate are suing Amaral for at least £1million for libel and breaching their human rights.
Lawyers for the couple, from Rothley, Leics, are expected to present
proof of some of the ex-detective's earnings when the case is heard.
They will show Amaral received at least
£287,000 from the publisher of the book, which has been translated across Europe, and £33,600 for a DVD documentary.
SLURS
The McCanns' civil case against Amaral was due to be heard in Lisbon last week
but was postponed when the ex-cop split suddenly from his legal team.
In 2009 the Sunday Mirror revealed the McCanns
had lodged a 36-page writ at the Lisbon court saying Amaral's slurs left them "totally destroyed".
Friends, relations and those who worked with the couple after Madeleine's disappearance will support their claims as
witnesses. The McCanns are not expected to give evidence in person.
If they win, the money will be used in the
search for Madeleine, who disappeared in May 2007 on a family holiday in the Algarve.
Amaral, 52, led the investigation until October 2007 when he was
removed for claiming British police were only helping with leads provided by the McCanns.
During his stint heading
the inquiry, the Sunday Mirror caught him enjoying regular boozy lunches, one of which lasted more than three hours.
Portugal's attorney general Jose Pinto Monteiro later archived the investigation and cleared the McCanns of any wrong-doing.
Kate and Gerry have never given up hope of finding Madeleine, and Scotland Yard detectives are now carrying out their
own probe into her disappearance.
Brian Robertson and Simon James use their gifts to try to point the way of truth in the disappearance of the English girl
in 2007.
-------------
Note: I have been advised that this video is from a SIC television show named
"Até à Verdade" (Until the Truth) that uses the "gifts" of mediums/psychics to "investigate"
famous criminal cases/mysteries that were not solved by the police. The gifts displayed by the men relate to psychic "powers",
talking to the dead, etc.
The English language section starts from around the 12:00 mark and the video contains
some good, if fleeting, views of Praia da Luz and its surrounds.
I saw Maddie in a supermarket on the Costa
del Sol, 22 February 2012
I saw Maddie in a supermarket on the Costa del Sol The Olive Press
EXCLUSIVE by James Bryce February
22, 2012 A BRITISH expat based in Spain is '100 per cent sure' she saw missing Madeleine
McCann in a supermarket on the Costa del Sol.
The former M&S sales assistant, 63, is adamant the young
girl is the missing Briton after seeing her with a man she describes as looking like 'a gypsy'.
Yvonne
Tunnicliffe, who has lived in Spain for six years, made the sighting while shopping at a Mercadona store in Alhaurin el Grande
in 2009.
The grandmother has only now come forward, after reading about increasing suggestion that the toddler
might have been snatched by a gypsy gang while on holiday in Portugal in 2007.
"My whole body shook when I
saw her, she looked just like her daddy (Gerry)," Tunnicliffe told the Olive Press newspaper.
"I'm
certain it was Madeleine, I wouldn't even say I'm 99 per cent sure, I'm 100 per cent sure.
"She
had mousy blonde hair in scruffy plaits, very fair skin and looked about seven or eight, which is how old she would have been
now."
Tunnicliffe contacted police a week after the sighting and was visited by detectives who immediately
took her back to the store to view CCTV footage.
But police were informed by the store's manager that footage
was only stored for one week and had subsequently been destroyed.
So convinced was she of the sighting, she was
unable to sleep for much of the week and finally drew a number of sketches of both the girl and man for police.
Fighting
back tears, she told the Olive Press: "It really upset me and I couldn't stop thinking about it and why I hadn't
gone to the police straight away.
"It was Christmas and we had friends over. I kept getting sidetracked."
On the sighting she said: "The girl's demeanour bothered me. I don't think she belonged to the man because
she didn't look anything like him.
"He had dark, curly hair down to his neck and was wearing a distinctive
bullring-type earring.
"He sounded Portuguese and was certainly not from Alhaurin."
Tunnicliffe
claims the girl – who was wearing a pale blue top and trousers – did not look Spanish.
"It disturbed
me for a long time and still upsets me thinking about it now," an emotional Tunnicliffe added.
When contacted
by the Olive Press, a Scotland Yard spokesman confirmed: "It's an open investigation and any information
received will be reviewed and considered by detectives."
The McCanns' spokesman was unavailable for comment
as we went to press.
Private client, family and employment, 22
February 2012
Known for his intellect and unyielding tenacity, 29 Bedford Row's Timothy
Scott QC is widely hailed as a guru in the field of family law, including both children work and matrimonial finance. Most
of his practice has an international element and he has fast become a go-to counsel for cases involving prenuptial agreements
made abroad. Throughout his long and distinguished career Scott has led on a wealth of standout cases, including advising
the parents of missing child Madeleine McCann in 2008. Most recently Scott acted on Z v Z – the first case contested
in front of a High Court judge in which the application and the limits of Radmacher v Granatino were tested. Acting for the
wife, Scott won the first round before Mr Justice Ryder, securing English jurisdiction.
The Suzanne Pilley murder trial, 23
February 2012
The Suzanne Pilley murder trial in Edinburgh is of interest for the following reasons:
1) Suzanne
Pilley's body has not been found 2) Cadaver dogs were used and indicated areas of interest - in the boot of a car
belonging to the accused and in the garage area of the building where the accused worked with the alleged murder victim 3) No forensic material was discovered in those areas to link the accused to the perpetration of any crime 4) No confession
has been made by the accused to police 5) No confession has been made by the accused to relatives/friends/inmates
Will the jury return a guilty verdict on the strength of the circumstantial evidence available?
Dog trained to look for bodies found areas of 'interest'
at Suzanne Pilley's work STV
23 February 2012 13:19 GMT
Jury told by scene examiner that dog
trained to seach for bodies was interested in the parking bays at Suzanne Pilley's workplace. A
dog specially trained to look for bodies found three areas of interest in the building where missing bookkeeper Suzanne Pilley
worked, a court has heard.
Jurors also heard that two cadaver police dogs were used to search the car
of David Gilroy, the man accused of the 38-year-old's murder.
Mark Heron, a senior scene examiner with the
Scottish Police Services Authority, said one of the dogs showed "some interest" in the boot of his car.
Gilroy, 49, denies murdering Ms Pilley on May 4 2010 in Edinburgh, or elsewhere, hiding her body and driving with it in
the boot of a car. He also denies trying to cover up the alleged killing.
At the High Court in Edinburgh, Mr Heron
said the specialist dog showed interest in the parking bays in the garage of Infrastructure Management where Ms Pilley and
Gilroy had both worked.
But the defence told the court that no forensic link was found to connect items in the
staircase, basement and the garage of the building to Gilroy.
Advocate depute Alex Prentice QC, prosecuting, showed
the jury a computer-generated image of the office block in Thistle Street, Edinburgh, which Mr Heron said he first examined
on May 9 2010.
The witness said he attended the scene with, among others, two dog handlers and two cadaver dogs.
Mr Heron, 47, said one of the dogs "made its way around the garage sniffing" and paused at three areas.
Mr Prentice asked if the dog handler marked them as areas of specific interest. He replied: "We decided to chalk
these specific areas for further examination."
Jurors heard him describe two of the areas as being in parking
bays and the other around a door. Car boot
During cross-examination, defence QC Jack
Davidson put it to Mr Heron that there was no forensic link from the Thistle Street building to the accused.
Mr
Davidson asked the witness about the various scientific methods used to examine the garage, basement and stair area of the
office building.
Jurors heard that Mr Heron had been to the address "as many as 10 or 15" times.
Mr Davidson asked him if an "extensive and meticulous" inquiry had been undertaken and he agreed that it had.
He asked: "There was no forensic link from examination of items in the staircase, basement and the garage to
Mr Gilroy in relation to this inquiry?"
Mr Heron replied: "Not as far as I am aware."
The
jury was then shown photos of Gilroy's silver car, impounded at a garage used by police for examining vehicles.
Mr Prentice asked: "When you opened the boot of the car, can you tell us what you experienced?"
The
witness replied: "I could smell either a cleaning fluid or air freshener-type smell, a fresh, clean fragrance, when I
opened the boot."
Asked what happened after that, he said: "The dog went into the boot and showed some
interest in the boot."
"What is it you saw?" asked Mr Prentice.
The witness replied:
"My observation was that at the top-right corner and the left-front corner the dog paused and showed interest in these
areas."
Asked what the dog did at this point, Mr Heron replied: "(It) just paid particular attention,
sniffing at that particular area."
Mr Davidson, defending, asked the witness why the smell was not recorded
by colleagues who had examined the car when it came into police custody days earlier.
Mr Heron replied: "I
am 100% certain I could smell it."
Gilroy, of Edinburgh, denies all the charges against him.
The Suzanne Pilley murder trial in Edinburgh has heard how police used dogs which had been
specially trained to find evidence of dead bodies.
The cadaver dogs searched the offices where she worked
with David Gilroy, who denies her murder.
The springer spaniels identified three areas of interest in the office's
basement garage, and two areas in Mr Gilroy's car boot.
Ms Pilley's body has never been found. The trial
is adjourned until Friday.
Defence lawyers said the large number of forensic tests which had been carried out had
failed to find any substantial evidence linked to the accused.
David Gilroy, 49, denies seven charges including
murder. He is accused of killing Ms Pilley either in Thistle Street or elsewhere in Scotland.
On Wednesday the
jury retraced the last known movements of the missing Edinburgh woman.
It followed the route the 38-year-old took
to her city centre office on the morning she disappeared on Tuesday 4 May, 2010.
The jury members were accompanied
by Mr Gilroy, her former lover and work colleague.
---------------------
This article outlines the
prosecution's case against Gilroy:
Suzanne Pilley murder trial: David Gilroy in the dock accused
of killing Edinburgh bookkeeper Daily Record
Feb 20 2012
A MAN has gone on trial accused of murdering a bookkeeper
almost two years ago.
David Gilroy is charged with killing Suzanne Pilley, 38, on May 4 2010 in Edinburgh or elsewhere
in Scotland.
Gilroy, 49, also stands accused of trying to cover up the alleged murder of the Edinburgh woman.
Prosecutors allege he tried to defeat the ends of justice, taking various steps to avoid detection, arrest and prosecution
for the alleged killing.
They include allegations that he concealed Ms Pilley's body in the premises of Infrastructure
Management in Thistle Street, in the Scottish capital, and transported it to various locations in Scotland in the boot of
a car.
Gilroy, also from Edinburgh, denies the charges against him.
He is on trial before judge Lord
Bracadale at the High Court in the city.
The murder charge alleges that Gilroy assaulted and injured Ms Pilley
by unknown means in Thistle Street, or elsewhere, resulting in her death.
A further charge of attempting to defeat
the ends of justice is broken into sub-sections. They include claims that he bought air fresheners on May 4 2010 and repeatedly
visited the basement and garage areas of the Infrastructure Management offices that same day when there was no need for him
to do so.
It is alleged he visited Lochgilphead High School in Argyll on May 5 when there was no requirement for
him to do so and asked for bin bags which were given to him.
He is accused of trying to cover up injuries on his
hands with make-up at Lothian and Borders Police headquarters and elsewhere.
It is also alleged he repeatedly told
police his relationship with Ms Pilley ended in December 2009 when the truth is that it continued and he wanted it to continue
further.
He is further accused of telling officers he saw Ms Pilley two days after he allegedly killed her.
Prosecutors also accuse Gilroy of accessing Ms Pilley's email account between August 24 2009 and April 30 2010
and accessing her account on an internet dating website.
Gilroy faces other charges, including an allegation that
he assaulted his wife Andrea on various occasions between January 1 2009 and May 18 2010.
He is also accused of
threatening two children, who cannot be named for legal reasons, and assaulting a man named Scott Stewardson in Edinburgh
on November 9 2009.
Child killer vows: I didn't take Madeleine
McCann, 26 February 2012
Child killer vows: I didn't take Madeleine McCann Sunday Express
By James Murray Sunday February
26,2012
A PREDATORY German paedophile who will be sentenced tomorrow for abducting and murdering
three boys has denied he is behind other child crimes, including the abduction of Madeleine McCann.
Today
we can reveal that Scotland Yard has been in contact with German detectives questioning Martin Ney, 41.
It follows
our disclosure last May that Ney looks very like the photofit of a man seen acting suspiciously hours before Madeleine vanished
from a holiday apartment in Portugal in May 2007.
The photofit was drawn up by a woman who saw a man leaving the
rear of the next-door apartment. She said he very "quietly" closed the gate and looked around nervously to see if
he was being watched. The photofit was published in Kate McCann's best-selling book, Madeleine.
When we asked
the Yard why officers were interested in Ney, it issued a terse statement saying: "We are not prepared to discuss it."
Ney, who faces life in prison, claims he is not guilty of a series of other child murders across Europe. According
to the Spanish newspaper El Mundo, he would be familiar with the Algarve coastline having travelled to Portugal in the mid-Nineties.
British detectives are believed to be interested in Ney's communications in internet chat rooms in which he used
the nickname Gerd X. Although Ney claims his last child murder was in 2002, they found a posting by him in March last year
which said: "Gerd X moves on to the next boy."
In a 2002 posting he bragged: "I bought a camouflage
suit to jump out of the bushes in children's playgrounds if a beautiful boy goes past."
The softly spoken
youth worker was free to kill for 20 years. His first victim was Stefan Jahrd, 13, in 1992. Three years later he murdered
Dennis Rostel, eight. Six years after that he snatched nine-year-old Dennis Kleinfrom.
Kai Thomas Breas, spokesman
for the German prosecutors, told the Sunday Express: "He has said he hasn't killed in Portugal.
"German
police have been in contact with Scotland Yard. We think he had a sexual interest only in boys."