05/06 June 2014 - page being updated
Maddie cops search hole found by dogs,
05 June 2014
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Maddie cops search hole found by dogs The Sun (paper edition, page 17)
McCANNS' AGONISING WAIT
From MATT WILKINSON in Praia da Luz Thursday, June 5, 2014
FORENSIC teams yesterday examined a pit found by sniffer dogs 300 yards from where Madeleine McCann disappeared
seven years ago.
They put up tents over the 5ft hole which appeared to be a den with a corrugated tin
roof.
Officers were seen removing bags of evidence as parents Kate, 46, and Gerry McCann, 45, faced an agonising
wait for news.
Teams led by British cops found a sewer network under the pit and were using fibre-optic cameras
to search pipes. They also scoured nearby scrubland which is littered with animal bones.
Scotland Yard last night
applied for seven more days to search the area. Madeleine, right, was just three when she vanished from the Ocean
Club resort.
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Sniffer Dogs Resume Madeleine McCann Search,
05 June 2014
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Sniffer Dogs Resume Madeleine McCann Search Sky News
(with video)
9:51am UK, Thursday
05 June 2014
British police ask for more time to search scrubland in Portugal, as sniffer dogs and forensics
teams continue to scour the area.
By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent,
in Praia da Luz
British police sniffer dogs have resumed their work on scrubland in a Portuguese resort on day
four of an extensive search in the Madeleine McCann case.
One of the dogs from South Wales Police
was working with its handler at dawn, scouring areas within the cordon that have not yet been explored.
The large
search zone in Praia da Luz lies on unused land, five minutes' walk from the holiday complex where the McCanns were staying
in May 2007.
Officers had planned to search the area only until Friday but have asked authorities in Portugal for
an extra week.
Police dig in scrubland close to where
Madeleine McCann disappeared They have been using ground-penetrating radar to discover what lies beneath
the surface and have also searched drains close to the Ocean Club resort. Tents have been put up at several locations,
including one above a hole concealed by corrugated iron which was exposed on Tuesday when trees and shrubs were cut down. Forensics officers dressed in white overalls were seen coming and going from the tents, pushing wheelbarrows around
the site and using large sieves to sift through soil for clues. The search was overseen by Detective Chief Inspector
Andy Redwood, the detective leading the investigation. Police have not spoken about the intelligence that led them
to the scrubland, which is thought to be one of three sites of interest in Praia da Luz. Madeleine was three years
old when she disappeared from the Algarve resort while on holiday with her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, and her younger
siblings. The renewed search for the missing youngster is a joint effort between police in the United Kingdom and
Portugal and follows a Metropolitan Police review of the seven-year-old case.
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Screenshots
Transcript
By
Nigel Moore
Michelle Clifford: I think what we can read into is simply that this is, errr...
going slower than they anticipated. It is inevitably slow and methodical work. They've been hard at for the last few days,
as you say, and the officers are back again today.
You can't actually see them, they're... they're
up the hill, errm... came in about 20 minutes ago, most of them, but some of them were out very early - officers from the
Welsh force were out with the sniffer dogs again very early this morning. I think that was to take advantage of the... the
cool temperatures for the dogs but also obviously to... to maximise time. As you say, they have now asked for this extra period
of time, errm... that would give them sort of two weeks effectively, errm... of searching.
Now, they're...
they've been going over this territory for the last few days but we also understand - or there are reports - that they
may now also look at two further sites. So, that again would, errm... give them, errr... need for, errr... a greater number
of days to carry out the search.
Now, what we're expecting today is it's going to be focussed again in
the area immediately behind me in those two tents that were put up yesterday to cover a hole exposed the day before. Errr...
There was corrugated iron over that hole and yesterday teams in forensic, errm... clothing were inside the tent, errr... going
through the soil, taking out buckets of soil, wheelbarrows of soil for, errm... analysis.
And there was also, errm...
a lot of focus yesterday on the ground-penetrating radar - that's a really useful tool. It allows the police to look,
errr... below the surface of the earth. It doesn't tell them what's under the earth, if anything, what it tells you
is if there's any kind of disturbance and then it can go in further and analyse. And it works really well in this sort
of territory - this is dry soil and the radar can penetrate, errr... very effectively.
But it is, errr... slow-going
and certainly there have been reports that the police have... had said that, errr... it is slower going than they anticipated
and therefore there is that need for the extra time. Errm... We don't know yet for sure whether they are gong to get it
or not, errr... they've certainly asked for it but I think the people will be anticipating they will be given, errm...
those extra days if they need it, or at least that's the hope.
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Madeleine McCann: police begin fourth
day of Praia da Luz scrubland search, 05 June 2014
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Madeleine McCann: police begin fourth day of Praia da
Luz scrubland search The GuardianOfficers continue scouring patch of overgrown land including concealed shaft discovered beneath sheet of corrugated
iron Josh Halliday and Brendan de Beer in Praia
da Luz Thursday 5 June 2014 10.45 BST
Detectives using sniffer dogs have begun a fourth day of searches
in dense scrubland a short walk from where Madeleine McCann was last seen alive seven years ago.
Officers continued
scouring the patch of overgrown land on Thursday morning using two springer spaniels that were deployed in the search for
murdered schoolgirl April Jones.
As detectives returned to the 15-acre site in the Portuguese holiday resort of
Praia da Luz, more details emerged about two key search sites that have become the focus of the investigation over the past
three days.
One of the sites is a concealed shaft in the ground discovered by detectives beneath a sheet of corrugated
iron. Forensic officers wearing protective clothing and face masks examined the site for several hours on Wednesday, erecting
a white tent to shield their work from the glare of the world's media.
Portuguese newspapers reported on Thursday that this site was a disused
storage box where children used to play. The shaft, measuring around 5ft by 3ft (150cm by 90cm), was covered by mounds of
earth and a corrugated iron sheet, which is thought to have concealed the hole for years.
Another key area of interest
for detectives was said to be a grave-like hole, where officers used ground penetrating radar before erecting a white tent
and carrying out digging work.
Under the headline "False grave deceives geo-radar", the newspaper Correia
da Manhã reported that a site "with characteristics similar to a grave" was discovered but officers later
concluded that it was "not compatible with that of a body".
Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood, the
Scotland Yard officer leading the operation, spent about an hour at this site with British officers and Faro's Polícia
Judiciária director, Mota Carmo, on Wednesday, inspecting the discovery himself from inside the police tent.
Detectives will on Thursday examine the sewerage system below the hilly scrubland using micro-cameras and fibre-optic cables,
according to Correia da Manhã.
Redwood and his team of British investigators arrived at the search site
at 9.30am on Thursday, declining to speak to journalists as his accreditation was checked by armed Portuguese police officers
guarding the parameter of the site.
Scotland Yard has formally applied to extend the ground-level searches into
next week.
The operation was initially expected to end on Friday but progress has been slow in the meticulous search
a short distance from where the then three-year-old girl was last seen in 2007.
The painstaking investigative work,
which began on Monday, is being delayed by a need to clear the sites using strimmers and chainsaws.
It is expected
that the searches will now stretch into a second week, after Scotland Yard applied to extend the operation as they await formal
approval from Portuguese police.
Madeleine's parents, Kate, 46, and Gerry, 45, are being kept abreast of developments
in the first ground-level search since those conducted immediately after her disappearance in May 2007.
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Message from the McCanns, 05 June 2014
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Message from the McCanns Official Find Madeleine Campaign - Facebook
[Text versions of screenshots above]
Thursday, 5 June 2014 at 15:02
We would like to ask people to refrain from spreading rumours
and speculation based on inaccurate press reporting. We are kept updated on the on-going work in Portugal and are encouraged
by the progress.
Thank you for continuing to stand by us and supporting our efforts to get Madeleine home.
Gerry and Kate
------------------
Thursday, 5 June 2014 at 17:23
To
those commenting on why Gerry and Kate are not in Portugal, it's because they were asked to not go there. Please let the
police do their job.
And anyone posting their sanctimonious comments about leaving children alone will be banned.
No questions asked. We've heard it all before. ENOUGH with the judging.
~FM Webmaster
--------------------
Thursday, 5 June 2014 at 23:56
Roger, you are right, but I needed to clear
that up. We take all guidance from the Met. People who question what Gerry and Kate do and don't do, need to realise we
get guidance from the investigation team--especially when Gerry and Kate's actions could impact the investigation (i.e.
being in Portugal at the same time the investigation team are looking for clues). ~FM Webmaster
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McCanns Encouraged By New Madeleine
Search, 05 June 2014
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McCanns Encouraged By New Madeleine Search Sky News
(with video)
11:59pm UK, Thursday
05 June 2014
As sniffer dogs and forensics teams continue to hunt for clues in Praia da Luz, Madeleine's
parents thank supporters.
By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent,
in Praia da Luz
Kate and Gerry McCann say they are "encouraged by the progress" being made by search
teams in Portugal close to where their daughter Madeleine went missing.
Writing on their Official
Find Madeleine Campaign Facebook page, the couple said: "We are kept updated on the ongoing work in Portugal and are
encouraged by the progress.
"Thank you for continuing to stand by us and supporting our efforts to get Madeleine
home."
Kate and Gerry McCann with a picture of
Madeleine as she might look now
Police searching an area of scrubland in Praia da Luz have begun looking
inside drains for any clues about her disappearance.
At least three manhole covers were pulled up and mini cameras
dropped into underground pipes, on the fourth day of the search by officers from Britain.
Sniffer dogs started
hunting for evidence at first light, scouring areas within the police cordon that had not previously been explored.
Cameras were dropped into at least three
drains in Praia da Luz
Officers have also been using ground-penetrating radar to discover whether anything
may be buried there.
The large search zone in the Portuguese resort lies on unused land, five minutes' walk
from the holiday complex where the McCanns were staying in May 2007.
Officers had planned to search the area only
until Friday but have asked authorities in Portugal for an extra week.
A police officer peers into one of the
drains in the Portuguese resort
Tents have been put up at several locations, including one above a hole
concealed by corrugated iron which was exposed on Tuesday when trees and shrubs were cut down.
Forensics officers
dressed in white overalls were seen coming and going from the tents, pushing wheelbarrows around the site and using large
sieves to sift through soil for clues.
Evidence bags were carried away as Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood,
who is leading the investigation, looked on.
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Sniffer dogs helped police officers hunt
for clues
Police have not spoken about the intelligence that led them to the scrubland, which is thought
to be one of three sites of interest in Praia da Luz.
Madeleine was three years old when she disappeared from the
Algarve resort while on holiday with her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, and her younger siblings.
The renewed
search for the missing youngster is a joint effort between police in the United Kingdom and Portugal and follows a Metropolitan
Police review of the seven-year-old case.
Officers search through scrubland close
to where Madeleine disappeared Officers are expected to be given more time to search the site, which is
guarded by local police day and night. It is not clear whether work will continue over the weekend, while no activity
is expected on Tuesday as it is a public holiday in Portugal.
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Screenshots - video (silent)
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Maddie police test 'clothes' find
for DNA, 05/06 June 2014
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Maddie police test 'clothes' find for DNA Daily Mirror (paper edition)
Scraps of fabric discovered near hidden pit on search site
FROM MARTIN FRICKER in Praia da Luz Friday June 6, 2014
BRITISH police were last night DNA testing scraps of material found 300 yards from the spot where Madeleine
McCann vanished.
The "non-organic" items were believed to include pieces of clothing. They were
discovered near a hidden pit on wasteland at the Praia da Luz resort where the youngster was staying.
Madeleine's
parents Kate and Gerry said: "We are kept updated about the work and are encouraged by the progress."
FULL
STORY: PAGE 5
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Madeleine McCann cops carry out DNA tests on 'scraps of clothing'
found near holiday resort Daily Mirror
Jun 05, 2014 17:09 | By Martin Fricker
A Portuguese military jet also swooped low over the site in Praia da Luz to gather detailed imagery of the terrain
which will aid detectives int he search for Madeleine
Madeleine McCann Dig - Day 4
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Hidden hole: British police uncover the pit near the McCanns'
apartment in Praia da Luz - previously obscured by dense undergrowth
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Map: Shows proximity of family's apartment to the dig site
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Shot from the air of the British police dig
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Shot from the air of the British police dig
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Shot from the air of the British police dig
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Shot from the air of the British police dig
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British police use cameras to look down manhole covers as part
of new searches in Praia da Luz
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British police officers search the grounds in Praia da Luz in
the hope of finding clues
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A British police handler cools down a sniffer dog after checking
an area of scrubland during the search for evidence of Madeleine McCann
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British police use cameras to look down manhole covers as part
of new searches in Praia da Luz
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British police officer use spade and pick axes to clear waste
ground
-----------------------
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British cops are carrying out forensic tests on material discovered
near a hidden pit on wasteland close to where Madeleine McCann vanished.
Experts drafted in from the UK are carrying
out scientific analysis of the "non-organic" items - believed to include scraps of clothing.
Search teams
scoured the cordoned off area for a fourth day and inspected sewers with hi-tech cameras.
A Portuguese military
jet also swooped low over the site in Praia da Luz to gather detailed imagery of the terrain which will aid detectives.
UK sniffer dogs continue to work inside the taped-off area - which is 300 metres from the apartment where Madeleine
disappeared in May 2007.
Detectives from Scotland Yard's Operation Grange need at least another week to scour
the land and two more areas in the Algarve resort.
Met Police officers wearing blue combat trousers and white t-shirts
cleared scrubland using spades and pick axes in searing 28C heat.
They were said to be looking for objects that
may have been abandoned soon after the youngster disappeared from the nearby Ocean Club.
Search: Madeleine McCann disappeared
in May 2007
A team of experts lifted at least three manhole covers to expose a sewer system - installed
as part of failed plans to build a hotel.
One plain-clothed UK detective then lowered a hi-tech micro-camera attached
to a long pole down the drains and inspected the pipes.
Work also continued at the concealed shaft covered with
corrugated iron sheeting that was discovered earlier in the week.
The concealed chamber, on the south-eastern
tip of the search area, is believed to have been used previously by local children as a play area.
Local reports
said "non-organic" items had been discovered close to the pit on Wednesday and is being subjected to forensic tests.
A source said: "It could be days before the significance of the items is known.
"Several are
being analysed by the British team."
Scotland Yard refused to comment on the possible development, saying
it was not giving a "running commentary" of the investigation.
Site: The proximity of the
apartment to the dig
The painstaking search is likely to go into a second week after police applied
to the Portuguese judiciary in Lisbon to spend an extra seven days in the country.
It is not clear whether they
will work over the weekend - and searches will come to a halt for 24 hours on Tuesday because it is a public holiday.
Madeleine's parents Kate, 46, and Gerry, 45, are being kept informed throughout the work and are said to be
bracing themselves for "significant news".
The youngster was nearly four years old when she vanished
from her parents' holiday apartment while they dined with friends in a nearby tapas restaurant.
The Portuguese
police case - which was criticised after the McCanns were named formal suspects - was shelved the following year.
Operation Grange was set up in 2011 to investigate the disappearance after David Cameron ordered Scotland Yard to review
all the evidence in the case.
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Maddie police pull 'clothes' from
hole, 06 June 2014
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Maddie police pull 'clothes' from hole The Sun (paper edition, page 21)
Cameras in drain search
From MATT WILKINSON in Praia da Luz Friday, June 6, 2014
MADELEINE
McCann cops have found what are thought to be items of clothing near a hole they were searching.
Forensic experts
were last night carrying out tests on the "non-organic" material.
A source said: "It could be days
before the significance of the items is known. Several are being analysed."
It came as police yesterday lowered
micro-cameras into a maze of unused sewage pipes under the vast search area - the size of three football pitches.
The British detectives were informed only this week of the pipes, which were fitted several years ago for a failed holiday
development.
A Portuguese military jet flew over yesterday afternoon as digging - aided by ground-penetrating radar
- continued on at least three sites in Praia da Luz where three-year-old Madeleine, above, vanished in 2007.
Scrubland
The sites included a mysterious pit found on scrubland by sniffer dogs.
Sheets
of corrugated iron and wooden joists or frames - believed to be part of a kiddie's play den or storage area - were uncovered.
Around seven more areas of interest have been cordoned off. In particular, the detectives want to search two more
patches of wasteland.
The investigation - led by the Met's Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood - will go
into a second week after cops demanded more time from Portuguese officials.
Scotland Yard - which reopened the
Madeleine case in 2011 - are refusing to discuss the investigation, saying they "would not give a running commentary".
But parents Kate and Gerry, below, said yesterday on the Official Find Madeleine Campaign Twitter account:
"We are kept updated on the ongoing work in Portugal and are encouraged by the progress.
"Thank you for
continuing to stand by us and supporting our efforts."
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Madeleine McCann detectives begin fifth
day of searches in Praia da Luz scrubland, 06 June 2014
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Madeleine McCann detectives begin fifth day of searches
in Praia da Luz scrubland The GuardianThe searches are taking place a short walk from the Ocean Club apartment where Madeleine was last seen alive in
May 2007
Josh Halliday and Brendan de Beer in
Praia da Luz Friday 6 June 2014 11.35 BST
Detectives investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann
have begun a fifth day of searches in scrubland a short walk from where she was last seen alive seven years ago.
A team of Scotland Yard officers arrived in the Portuguese holiday resort Praia da Luz shortly before 10am on Friday as
the search of the 15-acre area prepared to draw to a close.
Officers are expected to spend another two days searching
this dense area of scrubland before expanding the operation to two further sites next week.
On Thursday night,
Kate and Gerry McCann, who have not travelled to Portugal, urged people to "refrain from spreading rumours" as they
broke their silence on the latest police operation.
As detectives searched the underground sewerage network in
Praia da Luz, the McCanns wrote on Facebook: "We would like to ask people to refrain from spreading rumours and speculation
based on inaccurate press reporting.
"We are kept updated on the ongoing work in Portugal and are encouraged
by the progress.
"Thank you for continuing to stand by us and supporting our efforts to get Madeleine home."
An administrator for the official Find Madeleine Facebook page later said the girl's parents, from Rothley in
Leicestershire, had been asked not to visit Praia da Luz while the search was underway.
A post on the page said:
"To those commenting on why Gerry and Kate are not in Portugal, it's because they were asked to not go there. Please
let the police do their job.
"And anyone posting their sanctimonious comments about leaving children alone
will be banned. No questions asked. We've heard it all before. ENOUGH with the judging."
The McCanns'
statement came at the end of a fourth day of searches in a six-hectare (15-acre) spread of dense scrubland, where officers
on Thursday prised open manholes and inspected sewer pipes using micro cameras and fibre optic cables.
At one of
the sites police officers took away bags of evidence containing "non-organic" material, including an item of clothing
that was later said to have been identified as a man's sock.
The ground-level searches, which began on Monday,
are a five-minute walk from the Ocean Club apartment where Madeleine was last seen alive in May 2007. She went missing as
her parents dined with friends at the hotel's tapas restaurant.
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Madeleine McCann search: Police focus on
two new areas, 06 June 2014
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Madeleine McCann search: Police focus on two new areas BBC News
6 June 2014 Last updated at 13:28
Members of Scotland Yard have been seen inside
the search area with police dogs
Police investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann have
focussed their attentions on two new patches of land within the 15-acre search area.
Met Police officers
have been examining the same section of private scrubland in Praia da Luz since Monday.
They have now focussed
their attentions on two fresh areas within the site, where officers have cut back vegetation and used ground-penetrating
radar.
Madeleine was three when she went missing in Portugal in 2007.
As the search entered its fifth
day, officers wearing Met Police uniforms have been seen studying a flat area of ground at the opposite end of the site in
Portugal, which has seen activity over the past week.
They have also been examining the uneven ground inside one
marked-out area, which was covered with long grass.
An item of clothing, believed to be a man's sock, was
removed from the scene but is believed to have been ruled out of the investigation.
'Encouraged'
British and Portuguese police were due to end their search on Friday but have been given permission to continue into
next week.
As well as being granted a seven-day extension at the search site, officers also have permission to
investigate two other areas.
The BBC understands officers are due to continue searching the first
area until Sunday, when the operation will halt for two days to coincide with a Portuguese national holiday.
Officers
are then expected to begin work at the two other areas of interest from Wednesday. Both sites are believed to be in the "Luz
area".
On Thursday night, Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, said they were "encouraged"
by the progress made by police.
The couple released a statement on the Official Find Madeleine Campaign Facebook
page.
"We are being kept updated on the on-going work in Portugal and are encouraged by the progress. Thank
you for continuing to stand by us and supporting our efforts to get Madeleine home," they said in their first comments
since the police search began on Monday.
Officers from Britain have permission to search
three areas in the Portuguese holiday resort
The search comes after the Met launched a fresh investigation
into Madeleine's disappearance last July, codenamed Operation Grange.
In March, they said they were seeking
an intruder who sexually abused five girls in Portugal between 2004 and 2006.
Detectives said the attacks had
happened in holiday villas occupied by UK families in the Algarve.
And last month Scotland Yard said a "substantial
phase of operational activity" in Portugal would start soon.
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Madeleine McCann prime suspects to be quizzed
by British search police in Portugal, 06 June 2014
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Madeleine McCann prime suspects to be quizzed by British
search police in Portugal Daily Mirror
Jun 06, 2014 14:03 | By Martin Fricker
Lisbon judges grant permission to interview eight people of interest, including three convicted drug dealers,
it is claimed
Scotland Yard detectives searching for Madeleine McCann have been given the go-ahead
to quiz their prime suspects.
Officers from Operation Grange identified eight people earlier this year who they
believe could help solve the seven-year-old case.
Now judicial authorities in Lisbon are said to have granted
permission for Metropolitan Police detectives to question the men.
They include three suspected burglars who live
close to the wasteland in Praia da Luz currently being searched by British teams.
The men, convicted drug dealers,
were traced from phone records which placed them in the area at the time Madeleine vanished.
Scotland Yard refused
to comment on the development, saying it does not provide a "running commentary" on the case.
But it
is understood no questioning will take place until after the current searches have concluded.
Madeleine McCann on the family's
holiday at Praia Da Luz
Met detectives believe Madeleine was snatched by a panicked gang who accidentally
woke her in the family's apartment and took her with them.
Mobile phone analysis shows the men made an unusually
high number of calls to each other in the hours after she disappeared in May 2007.
It is understood three of the
other five suspects worked at the Ocean Club complex where Madeleine was staying with her parents Kate and Gerry.
The news comes after it was revealed officers are carrying out DNA tests on scraps of clothing found on their search of
the site.
When news of the breakthrough emerged earlier this year a source close to Madeleine's parents Kate
and Gerry said: "It could be a major breakthrough.
"Kate and Gerry are buoyed up by this latest development.
While they don't want to build up their hopes too high they are feeling optimistic.
"They felt it was
only a matter of time before new clues came to light."
British police use cameras
to look down manhole covers as part of new searches in Praia Da Luz
Officers believe the burglars,
who have not be identified, had carried out a raid in the resort days before Madeleine vanished, disturbing another child.
That youngster's parents were outside and rushed in to find the intruders had fled, but Portuguese police attached
no significance to the break-in.
The Met is thought to have made checks into the men's criminal history, their
friends and any vehicles they have used.
In an interview earlier this year, Britain’s most senior police
officer suggested his officers were closing in on the people who abducted Madeleine.
Scotland Yard boss Sir Bernard
Hogan-Howe admitted his Operation Grange team had the names of several suspects.
According to respected Portuguese broadcaster RTP, the suspects will
not be quizzed until the current searches in the Algarve resort have finished.
UK sniffer dogs which helped in
the hunt for tragic youngster April Jones were again seen scouring wasteland in the popular resort on Friday.
Met
police officers also continued to check an old sewer system underneath the cordoned-off area - which is 300 metres from
the Ocean Club.
They were said to be looking for objects that may have been abandoned soon after the youngster
disappeared.
Uniformed cops also focused their attention on a new patch of scrubland inside the same cordon, which
is guarded by their Portuguese counterparts.
Officers were seen studying a flat area of ground at the opposite
end of the area which has seen activity over the past five days.
Madeleine's parents Kate, 46, and Gerry,
45, are being kept informed throughout the work and said they are bracing themselves for "significant news".
The youngster was nearly four-years-old when she vanished from her parents' holiday apartment while they dined
with friends in a nearby tapas restaurant.
The Portuguese police case - which was criticised after the McCanns
were named formal suspects - was shelved the following year.
Operation Grange was set up in 2011 to investigate
the disappearance after David Cameron ordered Scotland Yard to review all the evidence in the case.
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Madeleine McCann Police Search New Area,
06 June 2014
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Madeleine McCann Police Search New Area Sky News
6:02pm UK, Friday 06 June 2014Police search another piece of scrubland after previously focusing on a hole which had been covered in undergrowth.
British police investigating the
disappearance of Madeleine McCann in Portugal have been looking at a new patch of scrubland close to where she went missing.
Police were seen inspecting a flat area of ground at the other end of the area they have been studying over the past
week.
Yellow tape has been placed in various parts of scrubland in Praia da Luz on the Algarve, to highlight areas
of interest to police.
Officers could be seen examining the grass-covered, uneven ground inside one marked-out
area.
The search is in its fifth day - police had previously been focusing on a hole which had been covered in
undergrowth.
A police officer checks soil samples
Forensics officers sifted through soil in large sieves inside a white tent set up to cover the hole, which was thought
to have been used as a children's den.
An item of clothing, believed to be a man's sock, was removed from
the scene but was thought to have been ruled out of the investigation.
Madeleine's parents said on Thursday
they were "encouraged" by the progress made as police search for clues about what happened to their daughter after
she disappeared from the resort in May 2007 at the age of three.
Writing on the Find Madeleine Campaign Facebook
page, Kate and Gerry McCann thanked their followers for the support they had received.
"We are being kept
updated on the ongoing work in Portugal and are encouraged by the progress," the message said.
"Thank
you for continuing to stand by us and supporting our efforts to get Madeleine home."
Police officers clear an area of wasteland
during the search
The land, which is a few minutes' walk from the Ocean Club resort apartment where
Madeleine and her family were staying, has been searched before.
Two other areas are also expected to be searched
by investigators.
The operation is likely to go into a second week after British police applied to the judiciary
to spend an extra seven days there.
It is not clear whether they will work over the weekend and nothing is expected
to be carried out on Tuesday as it is a public holiday.
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