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

Case Files Released: Press Comments

Comments from the UK media following the release of the PJ case files.

 
Sifting through McCann case files, 05 August 2008
 
Sifting through McCann case files BBC News
 
By Alison Roberts
Page last updated at 14:15 GMT, Tuesday, 5 August 2008 15:15 UK
 
Days after the McCanns' lawyers began sifting through files from the investigation into their daughter's disappearance, media organisations are doing the same, with different objectives.
 
The couple's lawyers are, according to their spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, hunting for leads for private detectives to follow up.
 
But journalists are focusing on key parts of the investigation such as the questioning of the McCanns on the day they were named arguidos, or formal suspects.
 
The files released to dozens of journalists on 4 August contain nearly 30,000 pages in digital format.
 
These range from photographs of the room from which Madeleine disappeared, to the conclusions of the prosecutor, Jose Magalhaes e Meneses, outlining the decision on 21 July to shelve the case and lift the arguido status of the McCanns and of Robert Murat.
 
It has emerged that police on 7 September last year "confronted" the McCanns, in the prosecutor's words, with evidence that could point to their having committed "crimes, including homicide".
 
Inconclusive material
 
This "evidence" was the reactions of cadaver and human-blood sniffer dogs at points in the apartment and in a car hired weeks after Madeleine went missing and results from forensic tests on samples taken from these.
 
But the Birmingham laboratory that did the tests had already warned that the results were inconclusive.
 
In an e-mail dated 3 September 2007, John Lowe of the major incidents team of the Forensic Science Service wrote that findings regarding a possible match between DNA in the samples and Madeleine's DNA were "too complex for meaningful interpretation".
 
The McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, who had criticised police for failing to secure the crime scene, has now accused them of misrepresenting the evidence.
 
Before putting the evidence to the couple in separate interviews, police had to declare them arguidos, assuring them the right to remain silent.
 
After Kate McCann was made an arguido, she declined to answer dozens of questions, such as what she saw and did on finding Madeleine gone; and why, when she raised the alarm, she left her two-year-old twins alone in the apartment.
 
She was fully within her rights not to respond, and according to the couple's spokesman was advised by her lawyer not to.
 
Only when asked by police if she realised she was jeopardising the investigation did she say: "yes, if that's what the investigation thinks."
 
In his final conclusions the prosecutor said, while referring to the McCanns' "carelessness" in leaving their children alone, he saw no evidence of wilful neglect.
 
As for other possible crimes, while there was a "high degree of probability" of homicide, hard evidence was lacking. Aspects of the FSS findings that seemed significant later turned out to be "innocuous".
 
Overall, no proof was secured that led to "any lucid, sensible, serious and honest conclusion" about how the little girl disappeared, "nor even - and most dramatically - to determine whether she is still alive, or dead, as seems more probable."
 
The report concludes by stating that further investigations may be undertaken if fresh evidence emerges to warrant them.

 
Maddie fiasco, 05 August 2008
 
Maddie fiasco The Sun
 
Published: Today, 05 August 2008
 
The Sun says
 
KATE and Gerry McCann have finally been handed the Portuguese files on their abducted daughter, Madeleine.
 
The papers contain evidence of lazy policing, human failing and official stupidity. They reveal cops shamefully made the McCanns suspects even though they were warned four days before that there was no DNA evidence against them.
 
But in the right hands, the files may just yield the precious clue that will solve the tragic little girl's fate.
 
They will also clear her parents of any last, lingering, ludicrous suspicion that they were in any way involved in her disappearance.

 
Maddie's parents are INNOCENT, 05 August 2008
 
Maddie's parents are INNOCENT News of the World
 
(Author not identified)
05/08/2008
 
THERE'S absolutely no chance that the parents of Madeleine McCann would be charged with her murder in this country.
 
It would be an outrageous miscarriage of justice if they were.
 
I don't say that from any feelings of sympathy for Kate and Gerry McCann, but from examining the facts of the case — or rather, the total LACK of them.
 
I've been a detective at the most senior level for 30 years and have never seen such a witch-hunt, or one based on such flimsy evidence.
 
Again, I don't say this from believing in the McCanns' innocence or their guilt. I simply don't know either way.
 
But from the evidence I have read I don't think they did it.
 
Unless the Portuguese police have something else, it doesn't make sense. The couple don't fit the profile and their opportunity was limited.
 
Throughout my career I have based my conclusions on hard evidence—and here there isn't any.
 
Sadly, I have to admit that is because of the sheer inadequacy of the police investigation that began when little Madeleine disappeared on the night of May 3.
 
Among the many things the Portuguese police SHOULD have done that night, but didn't, was treat the McCanns as the prime suspects.
 
Tragedy
 
That's what I'd have done. It's a matter of statistical fact that three out of four child murders are committed by the parents.
 
So their behaviour, movements, what they said, how they said it, what they did, who they were with, should have been instantly put under the police microscope.
 
They should have been sympathetically but relentlessly grilled again and again about what had happened that night.
 
They weren't.
 
That police error has become their tragedy now, because if they had been properly investigated back then they may well have been cleared. And thus free now to concentrate on the hunt to find their missing four-year-old, rather than somehow proving their innocence.
 
Hand-in-glove with treating the McCanns as suspects, the entire apartment and its environs should have been totally sealed off and barred to anyone but specially-trained police and forensic scientists who would have checked every millimetre of it for evidence.
 
It wasn't.
 
Police don't call the time after a crime, particularly one against children, the Golden Hour for nothing. In fact, I always insist it's a Golden Day — the time when forensic evidence is most fresh and easy to detect, when memories are most sharp, when lies and alibis are most vulnerable.
 
At its most basic, a bloodstain is easiest to see when it's still wet.
 
Instead, Kate and Gerry McCann were just treated as grieving parents. Nicer for them, but no use in solving a crime they may have been involved in.
 
And the possible murder scene was treated as a glorified meeting-room to organise a search for a missing child, instead of the potential treasure trove of clues it actually was. To any experienced British detective, it is incomprehensible.
 
I spent ten years heading Britain's Psychological Offender Profiling Committee for the Home Office. It was set up after the so-called Railway Murders, in which monster John Francis Duffy killed two women and stalked and raped four others close to London train stations.
 
I worked alongside other very senior detectives, top civil servants and psychological profilers like Professor David Canter — who this week appeared on a TV programme about Madeleine's disappearance.
 
And I instinctively found myself agreeing when my friend Prof Canter concluded: "I feel abduction is the most likely possibility."
 
In other words, the McCanns were not involved. Everything I've learned about the couple tells me their profile simply doesn't fit as killers of their own child.
 
They've been criticised for being too controlled in their dealings with the media. It doesn't surprise me at all. They're both highly professional medics, one a surgeon the other a GP.
 
They're trained and experienced in dealing with crises — and professionals react to crises with calm.
 
Of course, anyone can get caught in horrendous circumstances and in panic try to lie their way out of it.
 
But my experience has shown those lies, particularly elaborate and choreographed deceit as this would have to be, can rarely be maintained before cracks start to show.
 
And particularly so when the suspects choose to place themselves under the intense, unprecedented scrutiny the McCanns have faced. But that's just my opinion, informed and based on considerable experience as it is.
 
Meanwhile, the police investigation that started so disastrously has turned to farce. Every apparent stream of evidence has been either missed, fatally compromised or is simply ludicrous.
 
For instance, Mrs McCann being allowed to hang on to Madeleine's favourite toy CuddleCat. Consoling for her, of course, but that's not the point —it had gone to bed with Madeleine, been taken from her and placed on a high shelf, presumably by the abductor.
 
CuddleCat was therefore vital evidence. Even a rookie detective should know it was highly likely an abductor's DNA would be on it.
 
But it was left for Mrs McCann to clutch, her other children to play with and spread Madeleine's DNA around.
 
Then there was the suggestion the McCanns somehow smuggled their daughter's body away in a car they hired 25 days after her disappearance.
 
Where did they hide the remains in that time? How did they do this when their every move, at their encouragement, was under the media spotlight?
 
There's also a very unpleasant aspect to face. What state, unless it had been in a deep freeze, would the body have been in? I'm afraid very gruesome indeed, probably with considerable leakage of bodily fluids and sloughing off of body cells.
 
Caution
 
The smell alone would have been appalling and would linger endlessly in any enclosed space like a car.
 
I'm bewildered by reports leaked by the Portuguese police that tiny traces have been found in the vehicle. My experience says it would probably be a great deal. If not, then anything found should be treated with extreme caution.
 
In Britain, forensic evidence alone rarely solves cases. When it does, such as in rape cases, it hits the headlines because of its infrequency. But even then it's usually in support of more conventional evidence.
 
None of the so-called forensic finds being boasted of in Portugal sound either likely, admissible or even possible to me.
 
Evidence from cadaver dogs, for instance, could not be used to bring about a conviction here. Generally they are regarded as being at best 80 per cent reliable.
 
And so it has gone on. The police haven't even found poor Madeleine's body — though that doesn't surprise me when you know rubbish bins in that small Portuguese seaside town weren't even searched in the week of her disappearance, before the contents were dumped in a landfill site.
 
To me, there is only one possible conclusion. There is so far not a single shred of evidence that justifies charges against the McCanns.
 
But the worst thing is that, while the Portuguese police continue their single-minded determination to nail them, they ignore other lines of inquiry.
 
And, worst of all, they are failing to carry on the hunt to try to find Madeleine alive.

 
Shame of cops, 07 August 2008
 
Shame of cops The Sun
 
Published: Today, 07 August 2008
 
The Sun says
 
WE already knew that the hunt for Madeleine McCann was a shambles — but the sheer scale of police incompetence beggars belief.
 
Thousands of documents, CCTV images and photographs prove that they systematically ignored or trampled crucial evidence.
 
Chances to catch Madeleine's abductor were missed, likely sightings downplayed and trails allowed to run cold.
 
Police were so focused on pinning the blame on Kate and Gerry McCann they refused to publish crucial e-fit images of suspects.
 
Eyewitness sightings are gold-dust in any kidnapping investigation.
 
This fiasco leaves a stain on Portugal’s image as a modern, crime-fighting society.
 
It can only be erased with an official apology to Madeleine's tormented parents.

 
Madeleine revelations offer few facts, 07 August 2008
 
Madeleine revelations offer few facts BBC News
 
By Steve Kingstone
Page last updated at 17:55 GMT, Thursday, 7 August 2008 18:55 UK