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Now two more McCann Team
insiders have spoken out –
Antonio Tamarit, and Julian
Peribanez, both Metodo 3
investigators.
Their book, La Cortina da
Humo, or ‘The Smokescreen’,
blows the lid off Metodo 3,
exposing what a corrupt and
criminal enterprise it was.
Why did the McCann Team
choose them? The book was
immediately banned in
Portugal. Books about the
disappearance of Madeleine
McCann regularly seem to get
banned.
But CMOMM member PeterMac
managed to get one from
Amazon. He passed it to The
Madeleine Foundation.
Because of the significance
of its contents, they paid
for a professional,
certified translation of it.
And Andrew Simmons has
written an introductory
piece about it.
The book by Tamarit and
Peribanez is copyright, but
I’m pleased to host just one
chapter of it here under the
‘fair use’ provisions of
copyright legislation.
If you’re reading this as a
guest and are not yet a
member of CMOMM, why not
join us, get yourself
briefed on one of the most
mysterious cases of the
century, and maybe even help
us in our quest to find out
what really did happen to
Madeleine McCann.
Read the following posts to
get the whole story.
Jill Havern
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An introduction to Chapter 13 of ‘The
Smokescreen’, by Antonio Tamarit and
Julian Peribanez
by Andrew Simmons of The Madeleine
Foundation – February 2016
When The Madeleine Foundation became
aware of this book, La Cortina da Humo,
or ‘The Smokescreen’, |
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they
contacted a Spanish researcher to get an
overview of what the book was about. The
book went on sale in Portugal in 2014
but was only on sale for one day, as
Francisco Marco, Metodo 3's boss,
managed to obtain an injunction
restraining its sale on grounds of
‘breach of confidentiality’. It still
can’t be bought in Portugal.
The book is by two people who were
employed by the controversial, corrupt
and criminal detective agency in
Barcelona, Metodo 3, or ‘Method 3’. One
of them, Julian Peribanez, |
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worked
extensively on the Madeleine McCann
investigation. He came to England more
than once, worked very closely with
Brian Kennedy |
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and his
English investigator, money laundering
expert Gary Hagland,
and even interviewed witnesses such as
the Jensen sisters. |
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Chapter 13 of ‘The Smokescreen’ is
entirely about Metodo 3’s involvement in
the search for Madeleine. The Madeleine
Foundation therefore commissioned an
approved and certified Spanish-English
translation of this chapter, at a cost
of £202.05, to provide an accurate
translation.
What follows are a few notes on the
chapter.
Despite some of the comments in the
chapter, Julian Peribanez still
maintains that the McCanns are wholly
innocent and that their search for
Madeleine is genuine.
However, he maintains that they were
deceived by Francisco Marco, the now
disgraced ex-boss of Metodo 3, |
which went into liquidation at the end
of 2011. He gives chapter and verse on
those deceptions.
What becomes very clear on reading this
chapter is that Brian Kennedy was the
mastermind behind the whole Metodo 3
operation. And that is not surprising,
for in an article published many years
ago, Brian Kennedy explicitly stated
that he spent several months of the year
in his Spanish villa. This turns out to
be in Barcelona, the very place Metodo
3’s head office was based.
An obvious question that arises from
reading this chapter is: how well did
Brian Kennedy know Metodo 3 before
Madeleine disappeared? Furthermore, did
he know about the controversial and
corrupt nature of Metodo 3? One of the
Metodo 3 men he employed, Antonio
Giminez Raso, was remanded in custody in
Barcelona on 18 February 2008 on serious
criminal charges of assisting a
27-strong vicious drug gang to carry out
major drugs crimes.
Giminez Raso was a former inspector in
the Catalonian regional drugs and child
trafficking department but was either
sacked, or left under a cloud, in early
2005. Julian Peribanez would have worked
alongside him during the Madeleine
McCann investigation. Giminez Raso was
eventually acquitted of the charges
against him, but not before the trial
judge had publicly scolded him for being
‘far too close’ to members of the gang.
Peribanez’s chapter is angry. Much of
what he writes comes over as seeking
some kind of ‘revenge’ against Francisco
Marco, perhaps for some perceived
offence or unfairness against him. It
sounds much like a typical story of
‘thieves falling out’. I can hardly
imagine Peribanez as the epitome of
integrity, while at the same time taking
Marco’s shilling and when, for example,
he clearly knew that Marcos was lying
through his teeth about how many staff
he was employing, was submitting false
invoices and the like.
He does not therefore come over as a
‘witness of truth’. However, there are
some valuable insights on some factual
issues. I will list some of them here;
they can be explored more fully in
reading his account in Chapter 13 of
‘The Smokescreen’. |
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First of all, there is a short
section of the chapter written by
Antonio Tamarit, which discloses some
significant issues: |
1 Tamarit says that he was first
contacted by Francisco Marco, boss of
Metodo 3, whilst he was ‘on business’ in
Tangier, Morocco - in October 2007. He
gives no further details: ‘on business’
is so vague it could mean anything or
nothing
2 Notice that Tamarit was told to
stay in Tangier and meet someone from
the government funded security risks
company, Control Risks, but ended up
meeting with Brian Kennedy. Tamarit
thinks that Kennedy had nothing to do
with Control Risks, but I suggest it is
far more likely that Control Risks and
Kennedy were working closely together.
Indeed, Kennedy may well have been
giving the orders to Control Risks – and
quite possibly way before October.
3 He states that he was invited
to meet with Brian Kennedy in
Manchester. This might well refer to the
house in Knutsford, Cheshire, which
Brian Kennedy bought in 2007 for the
purpose of acting as a base for his
investigation, and part of which was
seen on screen in the 2009 Channel 4
documentary (the ‘Mockumentary’). The
existence of this base was first
disclosed to Tony Bennett by Brian
Kennedy’s lead investigator in England,
Gary Hagland. |
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4 He then adds that he was not
sent to Manchester after all, but that
Marco’s mother, Marita Fernández,
and José Luis Marco Llavina, her nephew
- Metodo 3’s accountant - travelled to
Manchester instead. He makes this
important declaration: “[Neither] had
carried out any investigative work for
many years…they made a big point of
emphasising that where
[the Madeleine McCann] operation was
concerned, they were not motivated by
money; however, in reality they ended up
making a fortune by means of deception
and dishonest trickery”. Later he adds:
“Método 3 was swindling [Madeleine’s
Fund] which…was supported by hundreds of
unsuspecting people whose sole objective
was to find Madeleine…inflated expenses,
invented items, false invoices, etc.”
5 People who have followed this
case closely for many years will recall
a search for Madeleine in the Rif
mountain range, Morocco. Tamarit informs
us that this was based on information
from “two clairvoyants, one in France
and one in Morocco”.
6 Tamarit explains how he visited
numerous places in Morocco ‘looking for
Madeleine’. He gives no detail about how
exactly he set about this. Peribanez in
his section of the chapter describes
this alleged ‘search’ as ‘bizarre and
insane’.
The section of the chapter by Julian
Peribanez is longer, and he discloses
several more subjects of interest: |
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The section of the chapter by
Julian Peribanez is longer, and he
discloses several more subjects of
interest: |
1 He says he spent ‘six years’
working for Metodo 3. As he was
apparently still working there when the
firm was raided and closed in late 2011,
this was presumably from 2005 to 2011.
Antonio Giminez Raso was also probably
recruited in 2005.
2 He says that Metodo 3 ‘became
involved in the search for Madeleine’ in
October 2007. However, that is
contradicted by Brian Kennedy’s man in
England, Gary Hagland, who says that he
and Metodo 3 were already involved in
September. I suggest it’s very likely
that Brian Kennedy had been in contact
with Francisco Marco well before then.
3 He writes about an early
meeting between the McCanns, Brian
Kennedy, and Marita Fernández and José
Luis Marco Llavina ‘in Manchester’.
There is nothing whatsoever about this
in Kate McCann’s book: ‘madeleine’.
4 Then he talks about a second
meeting, this one apparently at the
headquarters of Brian Kennedy’s Latium
group in Wilmslow, Cheshire. Peribanez
says that at this meeting he met: Brian
Kennedy, ‘lawyer Edward Smethurst’,
Madeleine’s parents Gerry and Kate
McCann and ‘another lawyer who was a
former police officer’. It would be
interesting to know who that was! Also
present were Francisco Marco and José
Luis Marco, his cousin, or
‘half-brother’ as he has been described
elsewhere. Once again, there is no
mention of this in Kate McCann’s ‘very
truthful’ book.
5 The account of that meeting is
very interesting. After it, they all
went off to have an evening meal at
Brian Kennedy’s home - the palatial
Swettenham Hall, once owned by the
McAlpine family. |
Peribanez says that “Kennedy and
Madeleine’s parents were lovely
people…” but also makes remarks
about Marcos’s real purpose for
being involved - to make a lot of
money.
6 He says that the ‘searches’
for Madeleine took place only in
Morocco and Portugal and that Metodo
3’s claims to have searched
elsewhere were lies.
7 He explains that Brian
Kennedy actually ‘relocated’ to
Portugal for a while to control what
was happening in the investigation –
hence the video we have of Brian
Kennedy and Peribanez walking around
the streets of Praia da Luz, LINK:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-74ragUCC8Y
8 He states that claims that
Metodo 3 had either 20, or 40 people
working on the Madeleine McCann
investigation were an outright lie,
there were only three.
9 Furthermore, claims of
having a ‘bank’ of multilingual
telephonists to staff the telephone
hotline were also bogus. And when
calls came in, he says they were
from: “Fortune tellers (Spanish
playing card and Tarot readers),
necromancers, palmists, individuals
who had dreams...and others who
offered interpretations of those
dreams.
10 Peribanez refers to a
conversation he had with Francisco
Marco and his cousin/half-brother
José Luis Marco in the Petit Paris
restaurant in Barcelona
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when he was told that Brian Kennedy
had terminated the contract with
Metodo 3. But he doesn’t give a
date. It is commonly assumed that
the initial Metodo 3 contract was
for just six months and lasted from
about October 2007 to March 2008.
However, there are statements which
confirm that the McCann Team and
Brian Kennedy continued to use
Metodo 3 on a part-time basis until
at least March 2009.
11 Peribanez describes the
day when Scotland Yard arrived to
collect boxes of evidence from the
offices of Metodo 3 and gives an
explanation of how a photograph of
that event was taken.
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12 Peribanez gives a useful
account of how false invoices were
created, saying that his boss
“…obtained some El Corte Inglés
travel invoices and subsequently
falsified them by changing the
details. These invoices can be found
stored inside Método 3’s computers
which were seized and are located at
Barcelona Court no. 14 (Juzgado
14 de Barcelona). For the
time being, they remain there by
virtue of an action filed by
Montserrat Turu against Francisco
Marco for breach of
confidentiality”.
13 The chapter concludes with
a bitter attack on his former boss,
Francisco Marco, and a fascinating
explanation of what happened in
December 2013 when he attempted, in
turn, to alert Brian Kennedy, then
Edward Smethurst, and finally the
McCanns themselves as to how they
had all been deceived wholesale by
Marco about the scale of his
operation - and how Marco had
created masses of bogus invoices.
None of them were interested in what
Peribanez had to say. Peribanez
gives a blow-by-blow account of how
he corresponded with them all,
including reproducing the letters to
and from Edward Smethurst. It must
be noted, though, that it took until
December 2013 for Peribanez to tell
the McCann Team about these
issues.
Can we believe Peribanez’ version of
events? He says he was an honest,
sincere investigator. But he admits
that Francisco Marco and his family,
who ran Metodo 3, were thoroughly
dishonest and clearly ‘on the make
and on the take’ with no interest in
or experience of finding missing
people or children.
He says that Brian Kennedy and the
McCanns were lovely people who had
the misfortune to be thoroughly
deceived by Marco sand his family.
His central claim is that Brian
Kennedy, senior lawyer Edward
Smethurst and the McCanns were
sincere but naïve in believing that
Metodo 3 really could find
Madeleine, but were lied to by Marco
As we ponder whether this scenario
is credible, we think back to
December 2007, when Francisco Marco
lied, lied and lied again by saying
that he knew who Madeleine’s
kidnappers were, that Madeleine was
alive, that his men were ‘closing in
on the kidnappers’, and finally that
‘Maddie will be home by Christmas’.
He told these outrageous lies in
December 2007. In any normal
situation, once these lies had been
exposed, they would have been
instantly sacked.
But not in this case. The McCann
Team continued to employ Metodo 3
until March 2009 - another 15 months
Anyway, have a look at the
translation and see what you think.
A.S.
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THE TRANSLATION: Chapter 13 |
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