www.mccannfiles.com

Home
Latest News
The Joana Case
The Joana Case (2)
'Tapas Seven' Libel Payout, 16 Oct 2008
Maddie or Madeleine?
The McCanns' PDL Media Statements
The Eddie and Keela Searches/Videos
The Eddie and Keela Extended Videos
The Expresso Interview
Kate's Diary
Gerry's Trip Home - 19/20 June 2007
The Huelva Trip
Sky News Crime Scene Picture Galleries
Case Files Released: UK Reports (1)
Case Files Released: UK Reports (2)
Case Files Released: UK Reports (3)
Case Files Released: Portuguese Reports (1)
Case Files Released: Portuguese Reports (2)
Case Files Released: The Sightings (1)
Case Files Released: The Sightings (2)
Case Files Released: Press Comments
The PJ's Final Report - 57 page summary
The PJ's Final Report - Summary (Part 1)
The PJ's Final Report - Summary (Part 2)
The Smith Family Sighting, 03 May 2007
'A Verdade Da Mentira', 'The Truth of the Lie' (1)
'A Verdade Da Mentira', 'The Truth of the Lie' (2)
'A Verdade Da Mentira', TVI Documentary
Gonçalo Amaral - The Interviews (July)
Gonçalo Amaral - The Interviews (Aug/Sep)
Gonçalo Amaral - The Interviews (Oct/Nov)
Correio da Manhã Exclusive Reports (July)
Correio da Manhã Reports (August)
Madeleine McCann
Gerry McCann
Gerry & Kate's Timeline
Kate McCann
Kate's Interviews
Robert Murat (2007)
Robert Murat (2008)
Murat Libel Settlement
03 May 2007
03/04 May Timeline
04 May 2007
05/06 May 2007
The First Reactions
Pat Perkins/The e-mail
Apartment 5A
Maps/Aerial Shots
The 'Last Photograph'
The 'Abductor' & The 'Eggman'
Cooper's 'Creepyman'
Cuddle Cat/Bear Hunt
Eddie and Keela
Charlotte Pennington
The Tapas Seven
Nannies/Childcare & Najoua Chekaya
Investigating Team
Gonçalo Amaral
Portuguese Penal Code
Método 3
Brian Kennedy
Madeleine 'Sightings'
The Tongeren 'Sighting'
'De Telegraaf' Letter
Alex Woolfall/John Hill
Mrs Pamela Fenn
Ray Wyre
Esther McVey
The Official Site
Madeleine's Fund
Mortgage Payments
The Movie
Vanity Fair Interview
Panorama Transcript
Various Transcripts
CNN Transcripts
O'Donnell/Smith
Misc Videos
Reports Pre-Arguido
Reports Post-Arguido (1)
Reports Post-Arguido (2)
Sol Reports
Misc. Media Comments (03 May - 31 Dec 2007)
Misc. Media Comments (01 Jan - 30 Jun 2008)
Misc. Media Comments (01 Jul - 31 Aug 2008)
Misc. Media Comments (01 Sep 2008 - Date)
European Campaign
LSE Event 30/01/2008
Express Group Apology
The Brussels Trip
The Strasbourg Trip
HELLO!
El Mundo Article
The Sun Review
Anniversary Interviews (TV)
Anniversary Articles (Media)
Anniversary Articles (Family/Friends)
Anniversary Articles (The Services)
Case To Be Archived? 01/02 July 2008
High Court Hearing 07 July 2008
Arguido Status Lifted - 21 July 2008
Madeleine Related 'Art'
CBS 48 Hours: 'Where's Maddie?'
BBC: 'The Mystery of Madeleine McCann'
Dispatches: 'Searching for Madeleine'
RTP: 'Anatomy of a Mystery'
Sky: 'The Mystery of Madeleine McCann'
MSNBC: 'Missing Madeleine'
ITV1 'Madeleine, One Year On' documentary
Al Jazeera: 'The McCanns v. The Media'
Madeleine McCann: Haunting Evidence
2007: May (1-28)
June (29-58)
July (59-89)
August (90-120)
September (121-150)
October (151-181)
November (182-211)
December (212-242)
2008: January (243-273)
February (274-302)
March (303-333)
April (334 - 363)
May (364-394)
June (395-424)
July (425-455)
August (456-486)
September (487-516)
October (517-547)
November (548-Date)
Gerry's Blogs (Days 1-58) May/Jun 2007
Gerry's Blogs (Days 59-120) Jul/Aug 2007
Gerry's Blogs (Days 121-181) Sep/Oct 2007
Gerry's Blogs (Days 182-242) Nov/Dec 2007
Gerry's Blogs (Days 243-302) Jan/Feb 2008
Gerry's Blogs (Days 303-Date) Mar - Oct 2008
Additions
Donate / Contact / Comment / Links

Misc. Media Comments (01 Jul - 31 Aug 2008)

A collection of interesting, and sometimes controversial, press articles and general comments about various aspects of the case, covering 01 July 2008 to 31 August 2008.

 
Make it up to the McCanns, 05 July 2008
 
Make it up to the McCanns The Sun (No online link, appears in paper version only)
 
By Lorraine Kelly

 
The Maddie factor that will haunt this year's family holidays, 06 July 2008
 
The Maddie factor that will haunt this year's family holidays Guardian
 
Barbara Ellen
The Observer, Sunday July 6, 2008
 
The plan was simple. We needed to book a holiday suitable for small children. Which is how I came to be scrutinising an internet site for a family holiday company. And there, among the sparkling swimming pools, bobbing lilos and 'boutique spas', promising to melt Mummy and Daddy's credit crunch stress away, even as the prices added to it, was parent Mecca, a fully staffed, totally legit children's club.
 
My initial feeling was: 'No way.' Then I thought - maybe there will be some activity she'll want to do. But I wouldn't want her to go on her own. Just to be on the safe side, I'd go with her. I could sit in the corner reading a magazine, so long as the creche staff didn't mind. Failing that, I could sit by the entrance for the duration so I could keep a beady eye on who goes in and out.
 
It was at this point, staring at the computer screen, my mind buzzing with maternal troubleshooting, that it struck me - why am I thinking like this, why am I planning to sit in on a kids' club, an establishment specifically designed, and officially endorsed, to look after your children? It's crazy - cancelling a dinner date to stay home with the babysitter level crazy. But maybe it's also sadly indicative of what will be Britain's first official post-Maddie holiday season.
 
Does a Madeleine McCann-shaped cloud hang over British holidaymakers this year? Are parent-tourists doomed to fly Air Paranoia like never before, maybe even more so than last year when the overriding feeling of shock made everything feel slightly surreal?
 
Admittedly, I have never left my children in a kids' club. Not because I'm such a wonderful doting parent, but because I'm such a bad, neurotic one. I don't care if my five-year-old has a lousy time, so long as she's right there in front of me having it.
 
Moreover, while I have never eaten at a restaurant 100 yards from my child's room, I have spent many a drunken holiday evening lolling about on villa balconies, drinking rough local wine and blasting loud music through my iPod, to the point where an intruder could probably have got away with demolishing the entire building behind me, never mind taking one sleeping child.
 
I tell you this to make it clear that I have no intention of joining the pious chorus that still delights in tormenting the McCanns with what became the most overasked, unoriginal question of the past 12 months: 'Why did you leave her alone?'
 
It's a bit rich, then, when, last week, the McCanns were relieved of their arguido (suspect) status and the air rang with cries that 'Portugal owes them an apology!' (So that would just be Portugal, would it?) However, the issue that concerns me here is a wider one, namely that with this latest ripple of the Maddie-effect, may we be seeing the dawning of yet another dimension of parent-fear?
 
It seems to me that parent-fear, not finger-pointing or stranger-danger, was always the true heartbeat of the Maddie case. It explained why everyone cared so much, how a small child became the world's favourite rescue fantasy. When Madeleine first disappeared, I was staying in deep French countryside and I was still hoping, somewhat irrationally, to be the one to spot her. What happened to Madeleine dominated the entire holiday. Judging by my recent experience with the holiday site, maybe the next few too.
 
This is what one wonders - whether, in a sense, Maddie will be on all of our holidays with us this year, at least those involving jumpy, paranoid parents like myself. That little figure tearing a giant, ragged hole in our sense of security, inadvertently throwing a shadow over the sun.
 
One hopes not, nor does it make sense. Madeleine did not disappear from the children's club at Praia da Luz. The vast majority of family holidays, some of which quite possibly fall far short of the parenting standards of the McCanns, unfold without incident. Most important, beaches and pools are not your usual motifs of doom and nor should they ever be allowed to become so.
 
After all, even Gerry and Kate announced recently that, for their twins' sake, they intend to attempt another holiday. At the time, I thought, fair enough. Maddie, the vile situation, not the loved child, was an all-encompassing, ever-swirling media storm. If anyone needed to escape it, if only for
 
*
 
Posted Comment:
 
Barbara Ellen, what on earth are you talking about? The McCanns have NOT been relieved of their arguido status.
 
Also, for your information, the case files have NOT been 'closed' or 'dropped', they have been passed to the prosecutor for a decision on whether to bring charges or not. This is the normal legal procedure in Portugal.
 
The Policia Judiciaria (PJ) have no control over whether to bring charges against the McCanns. All they can do, as they have done diligently, is collect and present their evidence and await a decision. That decision rests solely with the prosecutor.
 
It would appear unlikely that a charge of homicide will be brought, not because the PJ don't have evidence that Madeleine is dead but because they are unable to provide evidence to support how, where and why she died. If a homicide charge is not brought it will remain on file awaiting the possibility that further evidence will come to light.
 
A charge of abandonment, or neglect, is a very real possibility although it is harder to bring such a charge in Portugal than the UK. In Portugal it must be proved that the parents 'intended' to leave their children, thus placing them at risk.
 
The fact that the McCanns have already admitted that Madeleine cried on the previous evening, YET STILL went out leaving the tots alone would appear to show wilful abandonment. But, of course, that will ultimately be for the Portuguese judges to decide, should such a charge be brought.
 
I very much doubt 'The Maddie factor' will haunt many parents this year. Why should it? There is absolutely no evidence that Madeleine was abducted other than the word of an unreliable witness whose description of the alleged 'abductor' is so vague as to catch everyone and catch no-one. Indeed, Martin Brunt, Sky News crime correspondent, has stated that, in her first police statement, Ms Tanner was not even sure the man she saw was carrying anything!
 
There are too many people in the media, with little or no understanding of this case, who have taken it upon themselves to spout forth profoundly. They inevitable fall flat on their faces. I'm afraid, with all due respect, that you fall into that category.
 
If you don't really know what you are talking about it is always best to maintain a dignified silence.
 
Or pick up a holiday book.
 
*
 
Subsequent amendement by Barbara Ellen to the article, 08 July 2008:
 
This sentence:
 
'It's a bit rich, then, when, last week, the McCanns were relieved of their arguido (suspect) status and the air rang with cries that 'Portugal owes them an apology!''
 
was rewritten as:
 
It's a bit rich, then, when, last week, the McCanns learned Portuguese police were to close their file, which should soon result in the relief of their arguido (suspect) status, that the air rang with cries that 'Portugal owes them an apology!'
 
and the following footnote added:
 
· This article was amended on Tuesday July 8 2008. In the article above we implied that Gerry and Kate McCann have been relieved of their arguido (suspect) status. While the Portuguese police have announced that they are closing the case, the McCanns's status has not, as yet, changed. This has been corrected.

 
Carole Malone - News of the World, 06 July 2008
 
Column News of the World (no online link, appears in paper version only)
 
By Carole Malone
06 July 2008
 
Do people seriously think that Portuguese and British cops have kept the file on Maddie McCann open for more than a year in order to embarrass, humilliate and torture her perents Kate and Gerry?
 
Hasn't it occurred to anyone (especially the McCanns)that this file has been left open and questions have continued to be asked because coppers (as inept as some of them have been) really want to find Maddie - preferably alive?
 
Why should Kate and Gerry get an apology now the case files look like it's about to be closed? It has always been in their best interests to have it kept open so maddie abductors (or killers) can be found. And by closing the file the police aren't saying anyone is guilty or innocent. They are simply saying they can't find or prove who took her.
 
Yes the police have made stupid mistakes. But then so did Kate and Gerry by leaving their children alone in an unlocked apartment for five nights in a row while they went out eating and drinking with friends. And if the McCanns, as rumors suggest, are not going to be charged with neglect they ought to be grateful.
 
Because while those charges might not be brought very often in Britain they are routinely brought in other european countries, where society and the legal system seem to value kid safety more than we do. (if you think britain cares about its children ask yourselves why convicted paedophiles are freed by courts to wander among our kids,when even they tell us thay can't be cured).
 
The tragedy here isn't Kate and Gerry's hurt feelings over the investigation, it's that Maddie's still missing - and closing the file means her abductors have got away scot-free.

 
Where's the police apology to the McCanns?, 06 July 2008
 
Where's the police apology to the McCanns? Sunday Mirror
 
By Fiona McIntosh
06 July 2008
 
The serial cock-ups by Portuguese police (the Inspector No-Cluesos of Europe) are only just beginning to come to light.
 
They have finally cleared the McCanns of any involvement in daughter Madeleine's disappearance (way overdue) but have handed over shambolic files which show they have absolutely no idea what happened to her. As a source said: "It is not conclusive nor does it point in any direction...kidnap, murder or the concealment of Madeleine's body."
 
Every scrap of twobit detective work and dead ends have been left in a box. The only thing missing is an apology to Maddie's parents who, thanks to the total incompetence and spite of the Portuguese police, will spend the rest of their lives under a vile cloud of suspicion.

 
Write scoundrel, 06 July 2008
 
Voice of the People The People
 
Write scoundrel
06 July 2008
 
From the very first day Madeleine McCann disappeared the Portuguese police botched the investigation.
 
So after failing to find Maddie, let alone her kidnappers, you would think the one thing they have learned is to button their mouths.
 
Yet Goncalo Amaral, the Chief Inspector Clueless sacked for incompetence, is still hurling wild and unproven allegations around.
 
And that can only be in an attempt to line his grubby pockets by promoting the book he plans to publish about the case.
 
No matter how strong both Gerry and Kate McCann are, this tarnished copper's bid to cash in on the tragedy must still hurt.
 
If we thought it would do any good, we would appeal to Amaral's better nature to leave them in peace.
 
But we very much doubt he has one.

 
Exclusive: Kidnap girl's message of hope to Kate and Gerry McCann, 06 July 2008
 
Exclusive: Kidnap girl's message of hope to Kate and Gerry McCann Sunday Mirror
 
By Deborah Sherwood And Dennis Ellam
6/07/2008
 
These are the words that will give fresh heart to Kate and Gerry McCann this week: "Don't give up... because miracles DO happen."
 
It's a simple enough message, but what's important is that it comes from the one person who is living proof that there will always be hope for missing Madeleine.
 
As the McCanns wait to hear if Portuguese police have abandoned the search for their daughter, a pretty young woman called Elizabeth Smart has broken a long silence to talk about her own childhood ordeal.
 
Elizabeth, 20, reveals how she too was kidnapped in the night and was missing for months on end. She tells how her parents came under suspicion, just as Gerry and Kate McCann have.
 
Her case bears striking similarities to the baffling disappearance of little Maddie... but with a final instalment.
 
It ended happily. Elizabeth came home.
 
"I feel so lucky to be here, to have come through this unscarred," she says. "While I was gone I didn't know if I would ever be found, but I had hopes and dreams that I would.
 
They tell me I am an icon of hope. I just wish everyone could be as lucky as I was.
 
"Madeleine is a beautiful little girl and I can only imagine how her parents must feel, to see the case closing on their daughter - I feel so heartbroken for them.
 
"But look at me... I'm proof that good things do happen in this world."
 
Six years ago when she was 14, Elizabeth went to sleep in the bedroom she shared with her 10-year-old sister Mary Catherine - and the next morning she was gone. There was no evidence left behind and searches of the countryside around the family's home in Salt Lake City, Utah, produced not a single clue.
 
For a while her own parents Ed and Lois were suspects, like Gerry and Kate. And just like the McCanns, they carried on defiantly, campaigning to keep her face and name in the media.
 
Missing Elizabeth dominated the American TV networks as speculation raged - where had she been taken, how had anyone managed to spirit her away, was she alive or dead?
 
Months later, the police declared they were winding down their investigation.
 
And then, after nine agonising months, as suddenly as she had vanished Elizabeth was found again.
 
She was spotted on the street with her kidnapper, 54-year-old Brian David Mitchell, a drifter and a religious fanatic, who had done odd jobs at the Smarts' home.
 
The mystery that gripped the country was solved at last, and, little by little, details emerged of her terrible ordeal.
 
Mitchell - who called himself the Prophet Immanuel - and his wife Wanda Barzee, 53, had kept Elizabeth chained to a tree in a camp in the woods, where they starved and abused her.
 
Amazingly she was held captive just three miles from home - but the massive search of the locality in the first days of her abduction still failed to find her. Months later her captors took Elizabeth to spend the winter in California, living in an abandoned trailer. They moved back to Utah in the spring.
 
"In those nine months they threatened to kill me, and my family too if I managed to escape," says Elizabeth.
 
"There were several times when I tried, but I couldn't cut through my chains.
 
"All I had to use was a vegetable knife. I was scared that I might stay a prisoner there for the rest of my life. I went into survival mode and did whatever was needed to stay alive.
 
"I reminded myself that no matter what they did or how they tried to change me, I would always be Ed and Lois Smart's daughter. My parents would always love me - I knew that, no matter what."
 
The night Elizabeth was kidnapped, Mitchell had crept into the house and seized her at knifepoint. He must have partly disturbed her sister because months later Mary Catherine seeing flashbacks of him taking Elizabeth away.
 
Mitchell forced her to walk through the woods in her pyjamas to a makeshift campsite, where there was no plumbing and little shelter.
 
When Elizabeth wasn't tethered to the tree, the couple hid her in a hole in the ground, covered with wooden boards.
 
"I had no idea what was going to happen to me each day," she says. "It really depended on how Mitchell was feeling, what thought or theme was in his head.
 
"He didn't strike me or hit me, but there was always the threat that I would be killed. Every time I did something wrong, he would make my life that little bit harder.
 
"I was given mostly bread to eat, with the occasional piece of fruit. In all those nine months I wasn't allowed to take a bath. They dressed me in a white robe and a white headscarf, with a cloth across my face. Often they wore robes as well - that was all part of their so-called religion.
 
"Sometimes I heard police helicopters overhead, and people who were searching for me calling my name, but I was too terrified to cry out."
 
As Ed and Lois, both devoted church goers, vowed they would never abandon the search for their daughter, she was enduring a daily struggle to survive.
 
It was only when months later Mary Catherine started having vivid flashbacks of the kidnap that a new wave of publicity was started. Pictures of the missing girl and photofits of "Immanuel" began appearing in the newspapers.
 
Within days, several reports came in that a couple with a girl had been seen on a street in Sandy, 18 miles from Salt Lake City. The girl was wearing a red wig over her tightlybraided blonde hair, and she said her name was Augustine.
 
When a police officer approached and asked her, "Are you Elizabeth Smart?", she denied it.
 
But he followed her and asked again, and she replied in the Biblical style of language that her captors had been teaching her. "If thou sayeth," she nodded.
 
Elizabeth was safe, and soon in the arms of her overjoyed family.
 
Two weeks later she took them to see the remote place where she had been a prisoner.
 
"I felt triumphant - it wasn't a secret any more," she says. "When I was held against my will, nobody in the world knew I was there. Now nobody could make me hide.
 
"I'm not sorry any more that this happened to me, because it was an experience that made me grow up."
 
Today, Elizabeth is at university studying music. When she's home on holiday, she still sleeps in the same bed where her ordeal began.
 
She helps to counsel other families of missing children - the same work that her parents took on full-time through a specialist centre in Washington. Her dad Ed, 53, met the McCanns when they visited the States last summer and they regularly keep in touch.
 
Madeleine was abducted at the age of three from her bed in a holiday apartment in Portugal last May where she was left sleeping with her younger brother and sister while Gerry, 39, and Kate, 40, went to a nearby restaurant.
 
A worldwide search has failed to find her, and Portuguese police are reported to be about to wind up the case.
 
Ed says he really sympathised with the McCanns when they too were suspected of their child's abduction.
 
At one stage in the search for Elizabeth, police insisted he take a liedetector test.
 
He says: "I was talking with Kate at dinner one night and she asked me how I kept up hope while Elizabeth was away. I told her I always believed my child was out there. One day she would walk back into our lives. I never gave up thinking that.
 
"Kate feels the same way about Madeleine, and I told her to hold on to that hope - it's the only way."
 
He has also been able to advise the couple about the strain put on their own relationship.
 
"The McCanns have become victims on their own," Ed says. "They are keeping strong, but when you are under this kind of stress it certainly brings out your differences.
 
"But they are sticking together and keeping a routine for the sake of their other children, just as we did.
 
"I know they won't stop until they find thei