He wrote how difficult it would have been for someone to
kidnap the toddler from the apartment complex.
David Jones had his suspicions about the McCanns but two
years on and after along chat with Clarence Mitchell, he
confesses he was horribly wrong
By David Jones
Last updated at 7:49 AM on 4th May 2009
Tuning the car radio into a late-night BBC phone-in
programme during a long motorway drive, a heated debate
caught my attention.
'What sort of parents would leave their three-year-old
daughter alone in an apartment and go off for dinner?'
one angry caller would demand to know.
Then someone else would counter: 'They did nothing
wrong. This could have happened to anyone.'
As I listened, it slowly became evident that the girl in
question had vanished a few hours earlier from a holiday
resort in Portugal, and that she seemed to have been
abducted from her bed as she slept.
By the following day, the first heart-melting
photographs of 'Missing Madeleine McCann' had been
published in the newspapers, etching this grimly
compelling story into the national consciousness.
And soon afterwards, I was dispatched to the Algarve to
report the hunt for the snatched-away cherub.
Tomorrow marks the second anniversary of Madeleine's
disappearance, yet this saga has since taken so many
twists and turns, and invoked such prurient fascination,
that it might have happened only yesterday.
Two years and millions of words later, the questions
show no sign of abating. 'What do you think happened to
her? Could she still be alive? Where is she now?' I am
invariably asked, if ever I mention that I spent many
weeks investigating the Madeleine McCann mystery.
Like every other reporter who has striven to solve this
perplexing case, not to mention all those expensive
private investigators and the inept Portuguese police, I
am no nearer to knowing the answers today than I was on
that May afternoon when I first arrived in Praia da Luz.
But over recent months, having sifted again through my
notebooks, scoured the internet, revisited old contacts
and observed Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry,
campaigning relentlessly and indefatigably for their
daughter's return, I have come to one definite
conclusion.
It is that whatever became of the slumbering Madeleine
on that dreadful Thursday night, her parents played no
part in her disappearance.
In early September, 2007, during perhaps the most
sensational week of the inquiry, Kate McCann was
declared an arguida (an official suspect) by the
Portuguese judiciary.
During her ensuing interrogation, she was treated in a
manner which bordered on brutality - remorselessly
bullied and hectored in a marathon grilling that would
have tested anyone's inner resources to their limits,
let alone that of a grief-stricken mother.
At that time, amid mounting speculation about the
McCanns' possible culpability, I wrote an article that
caused something of a stir and, I am told, exacerbated
Kate and Gerry's anguish.
(It also angered my wife, who, with a mother's
instincts, has steadfastly believed the McCanns from the
outset.)
In that piece, which was based on the facts in my
possession - aligned to gut feeling - I voiced the
suspicions of many colleagues and a surprisingly large
proportion of the watching public, by admitting that I
had nagging doubts about the couple's innocence.
It was an honestly held opinion, but now, on the second
anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance, I have to
confess that I was horribly wrong.
One of two new posters which show Madeleine McCann as
she was aged three, and how she might look now, aged
six.
Why, though, did I think back then that they might be in
some way culpable, and why, two years after their
daughter vanished, have I so radically changed my views?
As the spring of 2007 progressed, opinions about Kate
and Gerry McCann polarised in an extraordinary way, and
they found themselves the subject of intense scrutiny.
It was fuelled by their decision to launch an
international media campaign, the likes of which had
never been seen before, in the hope that it would keep
Madeleine in the news and hasten her return.
They hired a succession of PR experts and private
investigators, set up an internet site that kept people
up to speed with every facet of the case via Gerry
McCann's strangely breezy web diary, jetted around the
world to appear on TV and even secured an audience with
the Pope.
All this frenetic activity was paid for by a fund whose
coffers were swelled by tycoons such as Sir Philip Green
and Sir Richard Branson; and it made many people deeply
uneasy.
Ironically, discussion of their campaign techniques also
distracted the world from the very objective the McCanns
and their supporters were trying to promote: namely,
finding their missing little girl.
Observing from close quarters, I was among those who
found it all rather unedifying. During those early
months I was perturbed by the McCanns' demeanour.
More...Madeleine at six? Two years on, the startling
image that could rekindle McCanns' hope
Don’t you dare tell me Maddie is dead
Grown-up face her mother doesn't recognise: The
technology behind Madeleine McCann's computer-generated
image
Clinging for comfort to Madeleine's favourite soft toy,
Cuddle Cat, Kate appeared unreachably distant.
Her husband, by contrast, seemed positively chipper, and
there were days when the Leicestershire cardiologist
almost appeared to relish his highprofile, globetrotting
new role.
With hindsight this was a ridiculous and unjustifiable
rush to judgment. For how can any of us know what
constitutes 'appropriate' behaviour for parents robbed
of a child so swiftly and left in limbo, unable to
escape the darkest fears of their imagination?
As their spokesman Clarence Mitchell remarked to me this
week, after it was suggested that Kate again appeared
close to the edge on returning from an appearance on The
Oprah Winfrey Show in America, the couple would have
been damned in some quarters however they had reacted.
He was right, but I was not alone among those who
allowed their personal observations of the McCanns to
colour their opinions about the case.
Gerry and Kate McCann talk with Oprah Winfrey about the
ongoing search for daughter Madeleine who went missing
two years ago this Sunday
And the more I examined the story, as they and their
team presented it (in the absence of any information
from the legally constrained Portuguese police), the
more sceptical I became.
There were all manner of reasons why the suggestion that
some fiend had simply carried off Madeleine into the
night just didn't seem to add up.
For one thing, Praia da Luz is not some bustling,
mainstream Mediterranean resort where a stranger could
easily slip in undetected.
It is little more than a village, serviced by one main
access road. In early May, it is particularly quiet (the
more so now that many holidaymakers refuse to venture
there).
Furthermore, the apartment the McCanns had rented was on
the ground floor, on the corner of a well-lit street and
passageway.
Although the McCanns and their friends - the so called
Tapas Seven - were dining in a restaurant obscured by a
6ft wall, they were less than 100 yards away.
Examining this scene time and again, measuring out
precise distances and times, it seemed inconceivable
that anyone would have the audacity, let alone the
wherewithal, to break into the flat and snatch a
three-year old girl sleeping beside her younger twin
siblings without being caught.
The alternative theories seemed equally outlandish. Some
ventured that Madeleine had woken up bewildered in a
strange country and wandered off to look for Mummy and
Daddy, only to fall down the freshly dug roadworks by
the apartment, which were filled in a few days later.
Or had she been snatched by paedophiles and smuggled out
of Portugal, perhaps across the Spanish border an hour's
drive away, or on a waiting boat - a possibility that
gained credence after witnesses said they had seen a
girl resembling Madeleine with a man near the harbour?
As this last scenario gathered momentum, I went to
Morocco, following one of many supposedly reliable
eye-witness sightings of the little blonde girl with a
distinctive 'flash' in her right eye.
The trail led to a remote village high in the Atlas
mountains, where Madeleine was believed to be held
captive in some farmhouse - but, like so many other such
claims in Belgium, Holland, Spain and, most recently
Malta, it came to nothing.
In the meantime, the spotlight had fallen on Robert
Murat, an entrepreneur of mixed British and Portuguese
extraction whose mother lived just a few hundred yards
from the McCann apartment.
In the estimation of one over imaginative reporter, he
appeared to have acted strangely while working as an
interpreter for Portuguese police investigating the
disappearance.
Such was the police's desperation to solve a case that
threw their deficiencies into stark relief that, without
any discernible foundation, Murat was also made an
official suspect.
Every aspect of his personal life was minutely examined.
Murat was then the subject of all manner of lurid smear
stories. Yet when I tracked him down at his sister's
country guesthouse and became one of the few reporters
to interview him at length, I did not recognise the man
in these articles.
As he spoke lovingly about his own infant daughter, and
described how it felt to be falsely accused of the most
terrible crime imaginable, I became convinced of his
innocence - and wrote as much.
Yet, at that stage, I still couldn't be so sure about
the McCanns, and when Kate was arrested I came out and
said so.
I
asked Clarence Mitchell this week how they had reacted.
'Kate and Gerry didn't like the piece, but at the end of
the day you have the legitimate right to question
anything as a journalist.
Hope: One of the posters being released by the Find
Madeleine Campaign
'Given the flavour of what came out in the Portuguese
media at that time it was understandable; regrettable
but understandable.
'But when you meet them, and get to know them, you
realise quite quickly that they aren't making this up.
And when Madeleine is recovered, a lot of people will
regret what they wrote.'
Sadly, I am not at all sure that she ever will be found.
Flawed as the Portuguese police case against the McCanns
clearly was, it is not so much the hard evidence that
now convinces me that I was wrong, but our old friend
gut instinct, which in my case has completely changed
after following the case from a distance for many
months.
I have come to admire the McCanns for their cussed
determination and refusal to alter course, despite all
the criticism.
When I spoke to Madeleine's two grandmothers this week,
that admiration was cemented. 'The whole family are
physically exhausted. Kate, in particular, is very tired
after coming home from America,' her mother, Susan
Healy, told me from her Liverpool home.
'She has had a hectic couple of weeks and really needs
to recharge her batteries, but I don't think she has
thought about stopping. Not for a minute. I don't think
either of them can stop - that's the awful thing.
'They
are just stuck in a situation where they don't have a
lot of control.
The only control they have is to remind people that
Madeleine is still missing. That is why they do it.
You have to understand that everything Kate does -
everything - is done because she wants her daughter
back. That's the only question they ever ask themselves:
will this help us find Madeleine? Nothing else is of any
importance.
'If Kate ever gets to the end of the line - I mean, if
they got to the stage where they thought there was
nothing more they could do - then that would be very
difficult. But it would appear that they haven't reached
that stage.
'Madeleine is their daughter and they've simply got to
carry on. I don't know whether they would call it
optimism or not, but they have to keep hoping. If they
shrugged their shoulders and said "OK, she's not alive
any more," they would be letting her down, wouldn't
they?'
In Glasgow, Mr McCann's mother, Eileen, told me much the
same thing. 'There's nothing to say that Madeleine isn't
alive, so why would they think otherwise?' she said. 'We
never even discuss any other possibility.'
You can only applaud such spirit. But if, against all
the conceivable odds, Madeleine really has survived,
what has become of her?
This week, in a TV reconstruction of her abduction, the
latest private detectives to be hired by the McCanns -
two experienced former CID men from the North of
England, whose no-nonsense approach contrasts sharply
with that of their expensive and unproductive
predecessors - may uncover fresh clues.
After sifting through reams of previously unexamined
Portuguese judicial documents and reinterviewing key
witnesses, there is talk of a new 'mystery man'
apparently seen loitering near the apartment on that
fateful Thursday night.
The programme will not solve the most enduring and
troubling missing person inquiry of modern times, of
course. Nor will it silence the whispers from those who
still harbour lingering doubts about Mr and Mrs McCann.
Nevertheless, we can be sure that they will continue to
carry their cross with stoicism.
Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1176448/David-Jones-suspicions-McCanns-years-confesses-horribly-wrong.html#ixzz0yxBk2SkF
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