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Statements and newspaper reports concerning Jeremy Wilkins
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PJ Files: Wilkins reports sighting of
"Rasta" man to the PJ, 04 May 2007
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| Processo 01, Volume Ia, Page 119 |
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| Processo 01, Volume Ia, Page 120 |
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REPORT OF EXTERNAL DILIGENCE
Date:
2007/05/04 Location: Praia da Luz - Lagos Entity determining the diligence: Employee
who performed it: Manuel P., Inspector
Description and result of diligence:
Following various informal conversations related to the area of research, we were contacted by a British citizen named JEREMY
MICHAEL WILKINS, holder of passport no. XXXXXX, owner of mobile phone no. +447XXXXXX, living at XXXXXX. He spends his
holidays at, "WATERSIDE GARDENS," block G4 APT 0 (about 50 metres from the apartment where the small child was)
Stated:
1. that yesterday, between 20h30 and 21 hours, while he was in "THE TAPAS" bar,
he noticed a person of around 1.70, with long blond hair, apparently of the "rasta style", and dressed in green
military-style clothes;
2. that this person did not stay very long and their behaviour was somewhat strange, since they
seemed to be a little nervous;
3. he was alone, he did not speak to anyone and left soon afterwards;
4. the informant maintains that he has never seen this person in the village;
NOTE: The bar "THE TAPAS"
is an annex to the restaurant where the parents of MADELINE were having dinner, when she allegedly disappeared;
Signed...
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PJ Files: Gonçalo Amaral's
fax to British police with suggested line of questioning for Jeremy Wilkins, 07 May 2007
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 510 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 511 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 512 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 513 |
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FAX
CONFIDENTIAL/URGENT
To:
Detective Chief Superintendent Robert Hall From: Goncalo Amaral - C.I.C. no D.I.C. de PortimAo
Date: 07-05-2007 No pages : 03 N / ref: Inq. 201107.0
GALGS Subject: Request for Collaboration
In furtherance of your operation TASK and
international police cooperation please see the following points:
1. Could you consider making enquiries to question
JEREMY MICHAEL WILKINS (UK Passport No. XXXXXX, DOB XXXXXX). Wilkins was staying at the Ocean Club resort at the time of Madeleine's
disappearance and may have vital information. Wilkins lives at the following address, XXXXXX. Wilkins is contactable on the
following telephone numbers XXXXXX and XXXXXX. We would like the following points covered if possible;
- Did
Wilkins travel with anyone else?
- If he has children and what age are they?
- If he knows the group
of people which MADELEINE MCCANN was part of and the apartment block where the guests were staying;
- If he knows
MADELEINE'S parents and in particular her father GERALD MCCANN;
- When did he met GERALD MCCANN and in what
circumstances;
- Did he play tennis with GERALD McCANN? Did he meet with him apart from playing tennis?
- Did he come to know the routine of GERALD McCANN and his family (his wife and children); If he did, when GERALD was having
dinner with his wife and friends where were the children and how were they looked after?
- When was the last time
he was with GERALD McCANN, when not playing tennis, before the disappearance of MADELEINE;
- On the day of the
disappearance, was JEREMY out with his children in the evening? Did he meet GERALD and at what time? Where was GERALD coming
from at this time?
- Exactly where was this meeting with GERALD (please obtain confirmation of the exact location
on the attached map)? What was the distance of this meeting from GERALD'S apartment? Can Jeremy provide a sketch map of
the location? What did they talk about at this time and for how long?
- When he was talking with GERALD, did any
of Gerald's group pass by? If so, who?
- When he was talking with GERALD did he see whether anyone passed by
carrying a child in the road near the apartment block?
2. In the spirit of police to police cooperation we request
the presence of a British criminal analyst who may be able to assist the enquiry;
Also the collaboration of the
UK's "Child Exploitation on Line Protection" may be useful if they wish to send one of their officers to provide
assistance to the investigation;
3. We would like further information (by telephonic analysis if thought necessary)
relevant to the investigation about the following subjects:
- GERALD McCANN and KATE HEALY contactable on telephone
numbers XXXXXX, XXXXXX and XXXXXX. - MATTHEW DAVID OLDFIELD and RACHAEL MAMPILLY, contactable on telephone numbers XXXXXX, XXXXXX
and XXXXXX. - RUSSEL JAMES O'BRIEN and JANE MICHELLE TANNER, contactable on telephone numbers XXXXXX and XXXXXX. - DAVID ANTHONY PAYNE, contactable on telephone number XXXXXX, FIONA ELAINE PAYNE, contactable on telephone number XXXXXX
and DIANNE WEBSTER, contactable on telephone number XXXXXX.
Namely if there is any indication of motive for anyone
in the UK to kidnap the daughter of GERALD McCann.
Regards
P/O Coordinator of Criminal Investigation
(Goncalo Amaral)
Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 513
This page confirms
the fax was successfully completed at 17:05 on 07 May 2007
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PJ Files: Jeremy Wilkins first statement
to British police, 07 May 2007
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 494 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 496 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 497 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 505 |
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| Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 506 |
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Leicestershire Constabulary
FROM:
Rob Waddington DC 1582 TO: Portugal Incident Room AREAILPUIDEPT: Major Crime Intelligence
Unit DATE: 7 May, 2007
SUBJECT: statement of Jeremy Wilkins
Please find attached statement gtom Mr Wilkins, as requested.
Unfortunately, we were not able to get hin to see
the map that you provided, but he has prepared a sketch plan.
Regards
Rob
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WITNESS STATEMENT
Statement of Jeremy Wilkins
This statement (consisting
of 8 page(s) each signed by me) is true to the best of my knowledge and belief and I make it knowing that, if it is tendered
in evidence, I shall be liable to prosecution if I have wilfully stated in it anything which I know to be false or do not
believe to be true.
Signed.................................. Date 7/5/07
I am the above named person and [missing word] at an address known by the Police.
This statement
describes my holiday to the Algarve and conversation with Jerry [sic], the father of Madeline [sic] on the evening of her
disappearance.
On Saturday 28th March April 2007 we arrived at the OCEAN CLUB RESORT, GARDEN APARTMENTS,
PRAIA DA LUZ, ALGRARVE [sic].
I was with my wife Bridgette O'DONNELL, my XXXX
daughter XXXX who is three (3) and 'XXXX' my son who is eight (8) months. We were placed into the apartment within
block G4, apartment number letter O. There are about fifteen (15) to twenty (20) apartments within each block.
The McCann family were within the next block.
On Monday 30th April 2007 I joined the tennis lessons provided by
'MARK WARNER' the tour operator. There were five (5) [word missing] in the group. There were [word missing] (3) females
and a male I knew to be JERRY.
He is white of pale complexion, about 5'10'' to 6' 00''
with a soft GLASWEGAN [sic] accent. He has dark brown hair which was short. He was of athletic build.
As part
of the lesson we were paired off together. We engaged in general conversation, mainly about tennis, and football. I got the
impression that he was good company, gregarious and chatty. The tennis lesson lasted about an hour. We were signed up for
four (4) lessons in total. I can't recall if I saw JERRY again that day.
On Tuesday 1st MAY 2007 we again had
a tennis lesson together. After the lesson, this time we had a game of 'doubles' together with two (2) of his [word
missing]. At this point I established that Jerry and his family had come away with a group of other families, four (4) in
total. The game lasted about one hour and a quarter.
After the game we walked together with a third male called
Russell or Matt to pick the children up from the 'MINI CLUB'. This is a crèche provided by the holiday company.
We would take them there at 9 am every day until 12:30pm. I realised that Jerry had three (3) children. A girl called
MADELINE and [word missing] 2 twins who were about two years of age. MADELINE was about three (3). This club would cater for
three (3) to five (5) year olds. The Club was split into two (2) groups: the 'SHARKS' and the 'LOBSTERS'.
My son daughter was in the SHARKS group. I believe MADELINE was in the LOBSTERS so they didn't
interact as far as I know. I don't believe that I saw the family again that day.
On Wednesday 2nd
May I could see it was raining and the tennis lesson was postponed. It was re-scheduled for 2.30 pm. I found this out at a
later date and missed the lesson. I arrived about five (5) minutes before the end and realised this fact. I saw the usual
people at the tennis lesson. I then went back to my apartment. That evening myself and my partner attended the 'TAPAS'
restaurant which is part of the hotel complex at the swimming pool. We sat down to eat at 7.30 pm. After about forty five
(45) minutes JERRY appeared as did one of his friends. I believe this was Russell. They sat at the next table. We naturally
engaged in conversation about everyday things. We spoke about childcare. That night we were att my family
were using the crèche facility. We found out that the group of families were using occuping [sic]
ground floor flats near the swimming pool as they were leaving the children by themselves in order for them to go to the restaurant
in the evening. They would then go regularly to check the children who would be asleep.
I found out that Jerry
was a cardiologist in a hospital. At this time his wife was putting the children to bed. We received a call from the crèche
informing us that our son was awake. My partner left first and I followed shortly afterwards. The amount of time I spent with
JERRY was about fifteen (15) to twenty (20) minutes. He remained in the restaurant. By the time we left, JERRY was with about
seven (7) other people. I picked up my daughter from the crèche and then returned to the apartment.
On Thursday
3rd May 2007 at 10 am I went to the tennis lesson as usual and Jerry was there and a female. The other two (2) females were
not present. We again engaged in general conversation and played the lesson for an hour. I went to the pool where BRIDGETTE
was. I think JERRY'S wife, KATE was already by the pool and he joined her. JERRY and KATE were speaking to the tennis
coach. We weren't really involved in a conversation by JERRY would say the odd [word missing] and get involved
in [word missing].
At 12.30 pm we went to pick XXXX [daughter] up from the crèche as usual. Everyone
left the pool at about the same time. I didn't see JERRY or KATE.
We returned to our apartment. We decided
to spend the evening-in, watching television. Our son was awake and unable to sleep. I decided to take him for a walk in his
pram. I left about 8.15 pm – 8.30 pm. I was pushing the pram around the complex and went to the toilet near the bar.
I couldn't see inside the restaurant. As I got the baby to sleep, I was on my way back to the apartment. I came out of
the top road. I met him near some stairs and a ground floor flat.
There was a gate leading up to some stairs. I
was pretty certain that he had left the apartment. We spoke for a few minutes. He said 'you're on walking duty'.
I said I was staying in and the pro's and con's and what to do with the children. He said that if he was staying two
(2) weeks, he may stay in one night. I don't remember anyone else walk past with a child. The conversation lasted for
about three (3) to five (5) minutes. He was acting completely normal from what I know of him so far.
I then walked
back to the apartment. I had dinner, watched a DVD and went to bed at about 11 pm.
The doorbell woke us up at about
1 am. It was the resort manager who I knew to be John and one of Jerry's friends. I think his name was Matt. He is white,
slim, tall with greying hair. From previous conversations I knew him to be a diabetic specialist. We met him on the plane
on the way to the destination. Matt said words to the effect that Jerry's daughter had been abducted, and that Jerry said he
had seen me and wanted to know if I had seen anything. I said 'You're joking'. I offered help but they said there
was nothing that could be done at that stage. We remained in the apartment but could see people around the pool and at
the front with torches. I also saw the police arriving. We then went to bed. The following few days it was a sombre atmosphere
around the apartment complex. I last saw JERRY and KATE on SATURDAY 5th MAY 2007 at about 4 pm - 5 pm. We
were sitting by the pool. I walked over to JERRY and wanted to let him know I was thinking about him. I shook his hand. He
was quiet but wasn't crying. I thought it was brave of him and his wife to go to the pool. I said 'Hello' to KATE.
I didn't know what to say in that situation. She looked really upset. That was the last time I physically saw JERRY and
KATE. Myself and my family left the complex at 7.30 pm and flew back to GATWICK that evening, arriving at 4 am on SUNDAY.
I have drawn a map of the complex and marked an ‘X’ where I saw JERRY on Thursday evening. I [word
missing] this as JW/2 [actually marked as JW/1]. I have also produced a map from the holiday brochure also with an ‘X’
where I saw JERRY on THURSDAY. I exhibit this as JW/2.
Signed and witnessed
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Processo 02, Volume IIa, Page 506
Fax request for translation of Jeremy Wilkins'
statement into Portuguese, with 'maximum urgency', sent on 08 May 2007 at 11:53 am
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Madeleine Case - A Pact of Silence, 30 June 2007 (Jeremy Wilkins
name made public for the first time)
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Madeleine Case - A Pact of Silence SOL
By Felicia Cabrita and Margarida Davim 30 June 2007 Thanks to
Astro for translation
- Extract -
Only Jane saw the man carrying a child
But there is a witness whose deposition contradicts this
theory. Jeremy Wilkins - a TV producer who had met Maddie's father during their holidays and used to play tennis
with him - was walking his eight months old son at that time. He met Gerry, who went out through the apartment's back
door after having checked on the children, and the two men exchanged a brief conversation. At that time, if one is to believe
the first accounts, Jane would have left Tapas in the direction of the apartment's main entrance, and would have crossed
paths with both of them. "It was a very narrow road and I think it would have been almost impossible to walk by without
me taking notice", Jeremy says, pointing out the fact that he saw no man carrying a child, as Jane states.
But
Jane continues to guarantee that, at the top of the street, she saw a man with a child in his arms.
Although the
area is scarcely lit, and the situation did not make her suspicious at the time, she describes the beige trousers, the dark
thick jacket and the black classic-style shoes in a detailed way. Once again, Jeremy disagrees: "If that happened, I
would have likely seen it".
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Maddie: The Secret Witness, 16 September 2007
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Maddie: The Secret Witness News of the World (no longer available online)
TV boss holds vital clue to mystery
By Dominic Herbert & Ross Hall 16 September
2007
THIS is the secret witness whose bombshell testimony could clear the McCanns.
Pictured here for the first time, Jeremy Wilkins' evidence blows holes in the police theory that Gerry
and Kate killed four-year-old Madeleine.
Wilkins — seen outside his north west London
home — was the man heart surgeon Gerry McCann, 38, spoke with for up to 15 minutes outside the holiday apartments —
moments after checking on his children for the last time.
What the TV producer witnessed
makes the statement he gave to police a key piece of evidence in the event of a trial.
A
friend of Wilkins told the News of the World: "He is entirely convinced of Kate and Gerry's innocence. He believes
they are a decent family caught up in an unimaginable nightmare."
We can reveal Wilkins
constantly INSISTED to Portuguese detectives that Gerry was totally calm and unflustered as they chatted—far removed
from the behaviour that might be expected of a man covering up the death of his daughter.
But
another part of Wilkins' evidence ironically helped shift the police focus AWAY from their original kidnap theory.
For the 36-year-old holidaymaker turned the investigation on its head when he revealed a VITAL
FLAW in the statement given by key witness, Jane Tanner (right), who claims she saw a man carrying a child away from the apartment
complex.
Based on what he has said, Portuguese sources confirmed that police have doubts
about Miss Tanner's evidence.
One said: "Her account has raised more questions than
answers. She is high on the list of people we need to speak to again."
Wilkins was refusing
to expand on what he has told police. His girlfriend Bridget O'Donnell —who was in Praia da Luz with the producer
and their eight-month-old son—said: "We have decided it's not appropriate to talk about what happened."
Wilkins' pal added: "He came back from the holiday totally shell-shocked. He was part
of a British crowd which included the McCanns who became friends as they holidayed in Portugal.
"He played tennis with Gerry the day before Madeleine disappeared. He has barely said a word about the whole case.
He feels as a potential witness that would be inappropriate."
Wilkins—whose production
company Zig Zag has made a string of controversial TV programmes—is likely to be re-interviewed as Portuguese detectives
desperately try to build a case against the McCanns.
Some of the seven diners who were at
the tapas restaurant with the couple on May 3 have already travelled back to Portugal once before to go over events leading
to Madeleine's disappearance.
Next time they may be quizzed in the UK by British police assisting their EU
counterparts on the inquiry.
Wilkins' crucial encounter with Gerry took place at 9.10pm on the main street
outside the apartments next to the McCanns'—and at the entrance to a narrow alleyway that runs past the back of
them.
The two were both tennis fans and had played each other during the course of the holiday.
On the night Maddie disappeared Wilkins was taking his eight-month-old son for a walk.
When he bumped into Gerry the two men chatted for up to 15 minutes before the surgeon returned to the tapas
bar.
It was during this period of time that Tanner, 37, another member of the McCanns' party, said she WALKED
PAST the two men on her way back to her apartment to check on her youngsters.
She told police
that she saw a dark-haired man, aged about 35, carrying a child who could have been Maddie's wrapped in a blanket at 9.15pm—when
Gerry and Wilkins would still have been chatting.
But Wilkins, viewed by police as a completely
independent witness, told cops he could not recall anyone walking past him. And in all the time he was there he saw NO MAN
carrying a child.
The TV executive is convinced he would have seen Jane Tanner pass by.
He said: "It was a very narrow path and I think it would have been almost impossible for
anyone to walk by without me noticing."
And he also believes he would have seen the mystery man and child
who would also have been just yards away.
Cops asked mum-of-two Tanner—on the holiday
with with her partner Dr Russell O'Brien, 36—whether it was possible that the man and child she saw was Wilkins
with his son.
Check
But a source told us: "She was adamant that it was not Jeremy Wilkins and his child. She is certain she saw someone
else and stands by her account."
Gerry and Tanner returned to the restaurant separately
shortly afterwards and it was at 10pm that Kate McCann went to check on the children and found Madeleine gone.
Wilkins'
importance in the inquiry has only been highlighted because police are troubled by possible inconsistencies in the McCann
friends' statements, including discrepancies in the times various people recall arriving at the restaurant.
The Portuguese police believe the McCanns may have been involved in Madeleine's disappearance and think
one may be covering up for the other.
Officers are probing an unlikely "three-hour window
of opportunity" between 6pm and 9pm when they suspect Madeleine was killed in the apartment and her body hidden somewhere
nearby. Forensic evidence gathered so far including DNA or body fluid samples is thought to be inconclusive.
Portuguese police say they could name more official suspects in the coming weeks.
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PJ Files: Jeremy Wilkins second statement
to British police, 31 October 2007
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| Processo 13, Volume XIIIa, Page 3407 |
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| Processo 13, Volume XIIIa, Page 3408 |
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| Processo 13, Volume XIIIa, Page 3409 |
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LEICESTERSHIRE CONSTABULARY
OFFICER'S REPORT
To: Receiver From: DC 1756 Mike Marshall Incident: Op Task No. of pages: 3 Date: 05/11/07
Jeremy WILKINS and Bridget O'DONNELL [Address]
During the evening of Wednesday 31 October
2007, Jeremy and Bridget were visited at their home address by DC 1756 and DC 4356 from the Leicestershire Op Task team. This
visit was organised to attempt to gain background information in relation to the McCann's and members of their group whilst
on holiday in the Prai Da Luz resort.
Contact was made as result of their previous interaction with the OP Task
Team and their willigness to discuss their relationship with the group.
Both Jeremy and Bridget work within the
television production industry producing documentary programmes. Bridget previously worked alongside the Police on the Crime
Watch television programme and was aware of the importance for the need of collating background information.
Jeremy
and Bridget have been married for several years and have two children, XXXX (F) 3 yrs and XXXX (M) 8 months. It may be of
interest to note that these names are Hebrew names and spellings have been checked.
They chose that specific period
to go to the Praia Da Luz resort because of the childcare facilities and the fact that it was the cheapest week of the season.
They flew to the resort on Saturday 28 April 2007. Whilst on the plane they came into conversation with Russell O'Brien
and Mathew Oldfield due to their children being of the same age range and the fact that they were playing together on the
plane.
They were also aware of the presence of their partners, Jane Tanner and Rachel Manphilly.
Upon
arrival in the resort they were allocated apartment O in block G4. This block being situated near to the tennis courts
and adjacent to the block in which the McCann’s apartment was situated. It is on the junction of Rua 1 De Maio and Rua
Dr Agostinho da Silva, with Rua Dr Francisco Gentil Martins running parallel.
Jeremy first met Gerry at a tennis
coaching session held by staff associated with the Mark Warner resort on the first Monday of their holiday (30/05/07).
He found Gerry to be amicable and willing to chat. He paired with Gerry for part of the lesson and described him as
"Good company if not a little gregarious".
He did not meet up with Gerry or any of the group again until
Tues 1 May 07.
This was again during a tennis session and it was at this time he met some of the group and realised
that the people he met on the Plane were indeed part of the group.
Jeremy explained that he used the crèche
facility provided by the resort. This was a child care facility which allowed parents to leave their children, aged between
3 – 5yrs old, with trained staff at various times of the day. He recalled walking to the crèche with Gerry who
had left Madeleine with the staff. This was about 1230 hrs on Tues 1 May. He then went on to explain that the children could
be left with the staff during the evening and that most would be picked up before 10pm. It was not an unusual sight to see
people walking through the site at night with a child in their arms asleep. The crèche would also provide a blanket
to cover the child if required. He had taken up this facility hence his knowledge of the procedure.
Jeremy and
Bridget had visited the Tapas bar on several occasions during which they noticed that the group had reserved a table for every
night of their holiday. This appeared to be contrary to the set down procedure of not booking a table any further than three
days ahead. The group appeared boisterous but good natured with Gerry being the central figure. His gregarious character making
him appear to be the central figure in the group and almost holding court. However they did notice that David Payne was equally
gregarious and almost playing along with, if not up to, Gerry.
Jeremy and Bridget became aware that although the
McCanns had taken up the use of the crèche facility during the day, they had not done so for the evening hours and
had left the children in the apartment but were checking on them regularly and that other members of the group appeared to
be doing the same.
They expressed surprise over this as the McCanns apartment was set in a location that appeared
vulnerable. They were aware that the apartment was a corner building and with easy access from the road. The apartments were
not very secure and entry could easily be gained.
They went on to explain the events of the 3 May 2007.
He went to play tennis at 1030hrs and noticed Gerry was there. He engaged in general conversation with him as well as a
female member of Gerry's group, but he could not name her. After which they all went to the pool. Both Gerry and Kate
were present this time and spent the majority of the time talking with the tennis coach. The coach appeared to be talking
about her life in general and both Jeremy and Bridget noticed that Gerry and Kate were listening intently to her. Jeremy thought
this to be courteous of them considering they did not know her.
At 1230hrs both Jeremy and Bridget went to pick
up their children from the crèche. They did not have any interaction with the group again that afternoon. They decided
to spend the evening in the apartment. Their son was unable to sleep so about 2015hrs, Jeremy took him, in the pushchair for
a walk. He walked around the main area of the resort and eventually ended up in the Tapas bar where he used the toilet facility.
He was unable to state what time this was. His son was still awake so he walked in the area of the ocean club gardens and
walked along the alleyways in that general area. He eventually made his way along Rua Dr Francisco toward the direction of
Rua Dr Agostinho. At this time he was walking on the right side of the road passing the Tapas bar area to his left. He noticed
the bad street lighting and although it was not completely dark there was enough light to see clearly. As he approached the
corner of the McCanns apartment, he saw Gerry appear from the area of the gate. He crossed the road and engaged in general
conversation with Gerry. At this time they were stood with Gerry’s back to the building near to the gate and Jeremy
facing him. Rua Dr Agostino was about 10 – 15 meters to his right and the pathway leading to the front of the apartment
blocks about 5 meters to his left.
He was adamant that he did not see any one else in the area. When spoken to
in reference to Jane Tanner walking by, he again stated that he saw no one. He also stated that he did not see or hear anyone
to his right. He was aware of the recent picture in the papers re the person with a child wrapped in a blanket and in a males
arms alledgedly walking across the junction to his right but again stated that he did not see any one.
The conversation
with Gerry lasted for about three minutes during which Gerry was chatty and in his normal self. Jeremy then made his way back
to his apartment.
They went to bed about 2300hrs but were waken about 0100hrs by a knock at the door. On answering
the door they spoke with the resort manager and a person they knew was a member of the group but they only knew him as Matthew.
It was then they found out that Madeleine was missing.
They had no further contact with the family apart from seeing
them in passing whilst at the resort.
Several weeks later, Jeremy received calls from Gerry in relation to gaining
permission from him to use his name in a portfolio of evidence being compiled by an organisation employed by the McCanns.
They were very persistent and made several attempts to contact him both at work and at home. They had no objections to being
included but were concerned as to the method being used.
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My months with Madeleine, 14 December 2007
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My months with Madeleine The Guardian It was a welcome spring break, a chance to relax at a child-friendly resort in
Portugal. Soon Bridget O'Donnell and her partner were making friends with another holidaying family while their three-year-old
daughters played together. But then Madeleine McCann went missing and everyone was sucked into a nightmare
Bridget O'Donnell Friday December 14 2007

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| Bridget O'Donnell. Photograph: Graeme Robertson |
We lay by the members-only pool staring at the sky. Round and round, the helicopters clacked and roared.
Their cameras pointed down at us, mocking the walled and gated enclave. Circles rippled out across the pool. It was the morning
after Madeleine went.
Six days earlier we had landed at Faro airport. The coach was full of people like us, parents
lugging multiple toddler/baby combinations. All of us had risen at dawn, rushed along motorways and hurtled across the sky
in search of the modern solution to our exhaustion - the Mark Warner kiddie club. I travelled with my partner Jes, our three-year-old
daughter, and our nine-month-old baby son. Praia da Luz was the nearest Mark Warner beach resort and this was the cheapest
week of the year - a bargain bucket trip, for a brief lie-down.
Excitedly, we were shown to our apartments. Ours
was on the fourth floor, overlooking a family and toddler pool, opposite a restaurant and bar called the Tapas. I worried
about the height of the balcony. Should we ask for one on the ground floor? Was I a paranoid parent? Should I make a fuss,
or just enjoy the view?
We could see the beach and a big blue sky. We went outside to explore.
We settled
in over the following days. There was a warm camaraderie among the parents, a shared happy weariness and deadpan banter. Our
children made friends in the kiddie club and at the drop-off, we would joke about the fact that there were 10 blonde three-year-old
girls in the group. They were bound to boss around the two boys.
The children went sailing and swimming, played
tennis and learned a dance routine for the end-of-week show. Each morning, our daughter ran ahead of us to get to the kiddie
club. She was having a wonderful time. Jes signed up for tennis lessons. I read a book. He made friends. I read another book.
The Mark Warner nannies brought the children to the Tapas restaurant to have tea at the end of each day. It was a
friendly gathering. The parents would stand and chat by the pool. We talked about the children, about what we did at home.
We were hopeful about a change in the weather. We eyed our children as they played. We didn't see anyone watching.
Some of the parents were in a larger group. Most of them worked for the NHS and had met many years before in Leicestershire.
Now they lived in different parts of the UK, and this holiday was their opportunity to catch up, to introduce their children,
to reunite. They booked a large table every night in the Tapas. We called them "the Doctors". Sometimes we would
sit out on our balcony and their laughter would float up around us. One man was the joker. He had a loud Glaswegian accent.
He was Gerry McCann. He played tennis with Jes.
One morning, I saw Gerry and his wife Kate on their balcony, chatting
to their friends on the path below. Privately I was glad we didn't get their apartment. It was on a corner by the road
and people could see in. They were exposed.
In the evenings, babysitting at the resort was a dilemma. "Sit-in"
babysitters were available but were expensive and in demand, and Mark Warner blurb advised us to book well in advance. The
other option was the babysitting service at the kiddie club, which was a 10-minute walk from the apartment. The children would
watch a cartoon together and then be put to bed. You would then wake them, carry them back and put them to bed again in the
apartment. After taking our children to dinner a couple of times, we decided on the Wednesday night to try the service at
the club.
We had booked a table for two at Tapas and were placed next to the Doctors' regular table. One by
one, they started to arrive. The men came first. Gerry McCann started chatting across to Jes about tennis. Gerry was outgoing,
a wisecracker, but considerate and kind, and he invited us to join them. We discussed the children. He told us they were leaving
theirs sleeping in the apartments. While they chatted on, I ruminated on the pros and cons of this. I admired them, in a way,
for not being paranoid parents, but I decided that our apartment was too far off even to contemplate it. Our baby was too
young and I would worry about them waking up.
My phone rang as our food arrived; our baby had woken up. I walked
the round trip to collect him from the kiddie club, then back to the restaurant. He kept crying and eventually we left our
meal unfinished and walked back again to the club to fetch our sleeping daughter. Jes carried her home in a blanket. The next
night we stayed in. It was Thursday, May 3.
Earlier that day there had been tennis lessons for the children, with
some of the parents watching proudly as their girls ran across the court chasing tennis balls. They took photos. Madeleine
must have been there, but I couldn't distinguish her from the others. They all looked the same - all blonde, all pink
and pretty.
Jes and Gerry were playing on the next court. Afterwards, we sat by the pool and Gerry and Kate talked
enthusiastically to the tennis coach about the following day's tournament. We watched them idly - they had a lot of time
for people, they listened. Then Gerry stood up and began showing Kate his new tennis stroke. She looked at him and smiled.
"You wouldn't be interested if I talked about my tennis like that," Jes said to me. We watched them some more.
Kate was calm, still, quietly beautiful; Gerry was confident, proud, silly, strong. She watched his boyish demonstration with
great seriousness and patience. That was the last time I saw them that day. Jes saw Gerry that night.
Our baby
would not sleep and at about 8.30pm, Jes took him out for a walk in the buggy to settle him. Gerry was on his way back from
checking on his children and the two men stopped to have a chat. They talked about daughters, fathers, families. Gerry was
relaxed and friendly. They discussed the babysitting dilemmas at the resort and Gerry said that he and Kate would have stayed
in too, if they had not been on holiday in a group. Jes returned to our apartment just before 9.30pm. We ate, drank wine,
watched a DVD and then went to bed. On the ground floor, a completely catastrophic event was taking place. On the fourth floor
of the next block, we were completely oblivious.
At 1am there was a frantic banging on our door. Jes got up to
answer. I stayed listening in the dark. I knew it was bad; it could only be bad. I heard male mumbling, then Jes's voice.
"You're joking?" he said. It wasn't the words, it was the tone that made me flinch. He came back in to the
room. "Gerry's daughter's been abducted," he said. "She ..." I jumped up and went to check our
children. They were there. We sat down. We got up again. Weirdly, I did the washing-up. We wondered what to do. Jes had asked
if they needed help searching and was told there was nothing he could do; she had been missing for three hours. Jes felt he
should go anyway, but I wanted him to stay with us. I was a coward, afraid to be alone with the children - and afraid to be
alone with my thoughts.
I once worked as a producer in the BBC crime unit. I directed many reconstructions and
spent my second pregnancy producing new investigations for Crimewatch. Detectives would call me daily, detailing their cases,
and some stories stay with me still, such as the ones about a girl being snatched from her bath, or her bike, or her garden
and then held in the passenger seat, or stuffed in the boot. There was always a vehicle, and the first few hours were crucial
to the outcome. Afterwards, they would be dumped naked in an alley, or at a petrol station with a £10 note to "get
a cab back to Mummy". They would be found within an hour or two. Sometimes.
From the balcony we could see
some figures scratching at the immense darkness with tiny torch lights. Police cars arrived and we thought that they would
take control. We lay on the bed but we could not sleep.
The next morning, we made our way to breakfast and met
one of the Doctors, the one who had come round in the night. His young daughter looked up at us from her pushchair. There
was no news. They had called Sky television - they didn't know what else to do. He turned away and I could see he was
going to weep.
People were crying in the restaurant. Mark Warner had handed out letters informing them what had
happened in the night, and we all wondered what to do. Mid-sentence, we would drift in to the middle distance. Tears would
brim up and recede.
Our daughter asked us about the kiddie club that day. She had been looking forward to their
dance show that afternoon. Jes and I looked at each other. My first instinct was that we should not be parted from our children.
Of course we shouldn't; we should strap them to us and not let them out of our sight, ever again. But then we thought:
how are we going to explain this to our daughter? Or how, if we spent the day in the village, would we avoid repeatedly discussing
what had happened in front of her as we met people on the streets? What does a good parent do? Keep the children close or
take a deep breath and let them go a little, pretend this was the same as any other day?
We walked towards the
kiddie club. No one else was there. We felt awful, such terrible parents for even considering the idea. Then we saw, waiting
inside, some of the Mark Warner nannies. They had been up most of the night but had still turned up to work that day. They
were intelligent, thoughtful young women and we liked and trusted them. The dance show was cancelled, but they wanted to put
on a normal day for the children. Our daughter ran inside and started painting. Then, behind us, another set of parents arrived
looking equally washed out. Then another, and another. We decided, in the end, to leave them for two hours. We put their bags
on the pegs and saw the one labelled "Madeleine". Heads bent, we walked away, into the guilty glare of the morning
sun.
Locals and holidaymakers had started circulating photocopied pictures of Madeleine, while others continued
searching the beaches and village apartments. People were talking about what had happened or sat silently, staring blankly.
We didn't see any police.
Later, there was a knock on our apartment door and we let the two men in. One was
a uniformed Portuguese policeman, the other his translator. The translator had a squint and sweated slightly. He was breathless,
perhaps a little excited. We later found out he was Robert Murat. He reminded me of a boy in my class at school who was bullied.
Through Murat we answered a few questions and gave our details, which the policeman wrote down on the back of a bit
of paper. No notebook. Then he pointed to the photocopied picture of Madeleine on the table. "Is this your daughter?"
he asked. "Er, no," we said. "That's the girl you are meant to be searching for." My heart sank for
the McCanns.
As the day drew on, the media and more police arrived and we watched from our balcony as reporters
practised their pieces to camera outside the McCanns' apartment. We then went back inside and watched them on the news.
We had to duck under the police tape with the pushchair to buy a pint of milk. We would roll past sniffer dogs, local
police, then national police, local journalists, and then international journalists, TV reporters and satellite vans. A hundred
pairs of eyes and a dozen cameras silently swivelled as we turned down the bend. We pretended, for the children's sake,
that this was nothing unusual. Later on, our daughter saw herself with Daddy on TV. That afternoon we sat by the members-only
pool, watching the helicopters watching us. We didn't know what else to do.
Saturday came, our last day. While
we waited for the airport coach to pick us up, we gathered round the toddler pool by Tapas, making small talk in front of
the children. I watched my baby son and daughter closely, shamefully grateful that I could.
We had not seen the
McCanns since Thursday, when suddenly they appeared by the pool. The surreal limbo of the past two days suddenly snapped back
into painful, awful realtime. It was a shock: the physical transformation of these two human beings was sickening - I felt
it as a physical blow. Kate's back and shoulders, her hands, her mouth had reshaped themselves in to the angular manifestation
of a silent scream. I thought I might cry and turned so that she wouldn't see. Gerry was upright, his lips now drawn into
a thin, impenetrable line. Some people, including Jes, tried to offer comfort. Some gave them hugs. Some stared at their feet,
words eluding them. We all wondered what to do. That was the last time we saw Gerry and Kate.
The rest of us left
Praia da Luz together, an isolated Mark Warner group. The coach, the airport, the plane passed quietly. There were no other
passengers except us. We arrived at Gatwick in the small hours of an early May morning. No jokes, no banter, just goodbye.
Though we did not know it then, those few days in May were going to dominate the rest of our year.
"Did you
have a good trip?" asked the cabbie at Gatwick, instantly underlining the conversational dilemma that would occupy the
first few weeks: Do we say "Yes, thanks" and move swiftly on? Or divulge the "yes-but-no-but" truth of
our "Maddy" experience? Everybody talks about holidays, they make good conversational currency at work, at the hairdresser's,
in the playground. Everybody asked about ours. I would pause and take a breath, deciding whether there was enough time for
what was to follow. People were genuinely horrified by what had happened to Madeleine and even by what we had been through
(though we thought ourselves fortunate). Their humanity was a balm and a comfort to us; we needed to talk about it, chew it
over and share it out, to make it a little easier to swallow.
The British police came round shortly after our return.
Jes was pleased to give them a statement. The Portuguese police had never asked.
As the summer months rolled by,
we thought the story would slowly and sadly ebb away, but instead it flourished and multiplied, and it became almost impossible
to talk about any-thing else. Friends came for dinner and we would actively try to steer the conversation on to a different
subject, always to return to Madeleine. Others solicited our thoughts by text message after any major twist or turn in the
case. Acquaintances discussed us in the context of Madeleine, calling in the middle of their debates to clarify details.
I found some immunity in a strange, guilty happiness. We had returned unscathed to our humdrum family routine, my
life was wonderful, my world was safe, I was lucky, I was blessed. The colours in the park were acute and hyper-real and the
sun warmed my face.
At the end of June, the first cloud appeared. A Portuguese journalist called Jes's mobile
(he had left his number with the Portuguese police). The journalist, who was writing for a magazine called Sol, called Jes
incessantly. We both work in television and cannot claim to be green about the media, but this was a new experience. Jes learned
this the hard way. Torn between politeness and wanting to get the journalist off the line without actually saying anything,
he had to put the phone down, but he had already said too much. Her article pitched the recollections of "Jeremy Wilkins,
television producer" against those of the "Tapas Nine", the group of friends, including the McCanns, whom we
had nicknamed the Doctors. The piece was published at the end of June. Throughout July, Sol's testimony meant Jes became
incorporated into all the Madeleine chronologies. More clouds began to gather - this time above our house.
In August,
the doorbell rang. The man was from the Daily Mail. He asked if Jes was in (he wasn't). After he left I spent an anxious
evening analysing what I had said, weighing up the possible consequences. The Sol article had brought the Daily Mail; what
would happen next? Two days later, the Mail came for Jes again. This time they had computer printout pictures of a bald, heavy-set
man seen lurking in some Praia da Luz holiday snaps. The chatroom implication was that the man was Madeleine's abductor.
There was talk on the web, the reporter insinuated, that this man might be Jes. I laughed at the ridiculousness of it all
and then realised he was serious. I looked at the pictures, and it wasn't Jes.
Once, Jes's father looked
him up on the internet and found that "Jeremy Wilkins, television producer" was referenced on Google more than 70,000
times. There was talk that he was a "lookout" for Gerry and Kate; there was talk that Jes was orchestrating a reality-TV
hoax and Madeleine's disappearance was part of the con; there was talk that the Tapas Nine were all swingers. There was
a lot of talk.
In early September, Kate and Gerry became official suspects. Their warm tide of support turned decidedly
cool. Had they cruelly conned us all? The public needed to know, and who had seen Gerry at around 9pm on the fateful night?
Jes.
Tonight with Trevor McDonald, GMTV, the Sun, the News of the World, the Sunday Mirror, the Daily Express,
the Evening Standard and the Independent on Sunday began calling. Jes's office stopped putting through calls from people
asking to speak to "Jeremy" (only his grandmother calls him that). Some emails told him that he would be "better
off" if he spoke to them or he would "regret it" if he didn't, implying that it was in his interest to
defend himself - they didn't say what from.
Quietly, we began to worry that Jes might be next in line for some
imagined blame or accusation. On a Saturday night in September, he received a call: we were on the front page of the News
of the World. They had surreptitiously taken photographs of us, outside the house. There were no more details. We went to
bed, but we could not sleep. "Maddie: the secret witness," said the headline, "TV boss holds vital clue to
the mystery." Unfortunately, Jes does not hold any such vital clues. In November, he inched through the events of that
May night with Leicestershire detectives, but he saw nothing suspicious, nothing that would further the investigation.
Throughout all this, I have always believed that Gerry and Kate McCann are innocent. When they were made suspects,
when they were booed at, when one woman told me she was "glad" they had "done it" because it meant that
her child was safe, I began to write this article - because I was there, and I believe that woman is wrong. There were no
drug-fuelled "swingers" on our holiday; instead, there was a bunch of ordinary parents wearing Berghaus and worrying
about sleep patterns. Secure in our banality, none of us imagined we were being watched. One group made a disastrous decision;
Madeleine was vulnerable and was chosen. But in the face of such desperate audacity, it could have been any one of us.
And when I stroke my daughter's hair, or feel her butterfly lips on my cheek, I do so in the knowledge of what
might have been. But our experience is nothing, an irrelevance, next to the McCanns' unimaginable grief. Their lives will
always be touched by this darkness, while the true culprit may never be brought to light.
So my heart goes out
to them, Gerry and Kate, the couple we remember from our Portuguese holiday. They had a beautiful daughter, Madeleine, who
played and danced with ours at the kiddie club. That's who we remember.
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PJ Files: Jeremy Wilkins third statement
(Rogatory) to British police, 08 April 2008
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Leicestershire Constabulary
Witness statement
Testimony: Jeremy
Wilkins Age if under 18 years: Occupation:
This statement, consisting of five pages, each signed
by me, is true to the best of my knowledge and belief and I make it knowing that, if it is tendered in evidence, I shall be
liable to prosecution if I have willfully states in it anything I know to be false or do not believe to be true.
Date: 8 April 2008 Signature:
I am the above referenced person and live at the address previously given
to this police. I gave an earlier statement to the Metropolitan Police relative to my holidays in Portugal in May of 2007.
I stayed at the Praia da Luz resort from where Madeleine McCann disappeared. We arrived on Saturday, April 28, 2007.
Yesterday, I received a visit from Leciestershire police officers with the intent of clarifying some aspects and to obtain
any possible additional information. The conversation was recorded as was the interview which was conducted by the same agents.
I was told that these questions originated from the rogatory letter sent by the Portuguese authorities. I am aware that my
deposition is subject to the Portuguese Criminal Code in addition to British law.
I was asked to read my original
statement to refresh my memory for which I was given authorisation.
What follows are answers to the questions posed
to me in the following order:
Relative to the time I met Gerry McCann on the Thursday night of May 3, 2007;
As stated in my original deposition, I believe that I left the apartment around 20h30. I calculate that I met Gerry
on the road between 20h45 and 21h15. I am aware of the importance of this hour and am also aware that the media announced
our meeting time as 21h05. Even if this were correct, I have no idea from where such information originated. It is not possible
to give you a more exact time.
From which direction Gerry travelling when you met;
From previous conversations
had with Gerry, I am of the notion of the usual routine of the group in relation to checking on their children when they were
in the Tapas Bar. I also was aware of the location of the McCann apartment. Naturally when I met him that night, I assumed
that he had gone to check on the children. I cannot affirm if I saw him exactly leaving the apartment through the passageway,
and if he was heading towards the tapas Bar.
Relative to the exact location you met Gerry;
I left my
apartment pushing my son's pram so that he could sleep. I did not have a particular direction to follow nor did I have
a specific time to do this. I left the apartment and turned right. I walked via the lower street, looked to the building block
where the McCann apartment was situated and saw a woman dressed in purple clothing. I referred to this woman in relation to
the questions asked by Jane Tanner. At the next crossing, I turned right and continued on down the hill. At this point, I
saw a man that was coming from the road and was headed to the reception. I believe that he was with a woman but I cannot be
precise of any detail about her. It was a tall Caucasian man, with blonde hair in "rasta style" tied with a band
instead of free flowing. When I arrived, I headed to the WC near the pool area. He also was in the WC but appeared to be a
taking a long time. I do not remember if he was still in that place when I left. I did not see a woman in that zone. I had
never before seen this man and did not see him after this. The next morning, after having become aware of Madeleine's
disappearance, we went to breakfast and left the children in the club. Bridget and I returned to the apartment and minutes
afterward, a uniformed police officer, accompanied by a British man serving as interpreter, showed up. Later we came to know
him as Robert Murat. I do not remember if he gave me his details but recently when I was cleaning a bag, I came across a card
with his name and telephone number. I believe that he may have given this to me so that we could contact him in case we had
any additional information to offer. The police officer asked us if we had noticed anything out of the normal and Robert Murat
translated. I spoke to him of the "rasta man" and the police officer took some notes on paper. He also noted our
names and passport numbers. During the days that followed, as we passed through the police cordon, we noticed Robert Murat
on numerous occasions. On Friday, the 4th of May or Saturday, 5th of May 2007, at one of the police cordons, I again saw Robert
Murat. He told me that they had investigated the lead of the "rasta man" but that he was a local man and that everything
was okay. He thanked me for my collaboration. I never saw Robert prior to his visit to our apartment with the police officer.
After leaving the WC, I continued to walk around the back of the tennis court, and returned via the pathway opposite
the pool in the Tapas complex. Whilst walking the streets, I was hoping my son would fall asleep. Some of the walkways did
not have an exit and for this reason I walked practically in circles. When walking one of these paths, I came across a tourist
called Curtis with his girlfriend whose name I do not know. He also knew Gerry from the tennis lessons. I remember passing
by them but I assumed they were headed to dinner. Eventually, I left one road to the other side of the street to the pool
complex, between the McCann apartment and the Tapas Bar. In order to visualise this street, I believe it was the street most
used by the news agencies and journalists as all the parked cars indicated during the coverage period.
When I left
the street, I remember seeing Gerry on the other side of the same. I believe that there was some speculation in the press
regarding the circumstances of this encounter. I remember that I crossed the street to talk to Gerry. According to what I
remember, Gerry was walking when I spotted him. As I mentioned previously, I assumed that he had gone to check on the children
and was headed back to the Tapas Bar. From what I remember, the conversation happened right there on the pathway but
I am not certain who was located exactly where.
Relative to the time we conversed;
I am more certain
of this than I am of our relative positions.
The conversation lasted for approximately three to five minutes. We
spoke of the care of children and how they were getting along. He told me something like "he was on night duty".
I explained to him that I was returning to the apartment as my son was now sleeping. I assumed that Gerry was off to dine
with the group in the Tapas bar, but I cannot precisely say this came from him or if I figured this out from our previous
conversations regarding the checking system for the children. I remember that Gerry told me if he had stayed another week,
he would likely do as I was doing and would stay with the children one night. It appeared as though he was jealous of what
I was doing, but given that he was with a big group, he felt the obligation to meet with them every night, and the chosen
location was the Tapas bar. I believe that there was some sort of agreement with the tapas Bar as they appeared to have a
reservation every night and it was impossible for other guests to book at spot there.
I do not know if we were
face to face or side to side when this conversation occurred. As I had the pram with me I was rocking it so my son could sleep,
it seems to me that I was in the downward direction, but it is possible that I was in the opposite direction.
I
do not remember having seen anyone else at this time besides Gerry. After leaving each other, Gerry walked downward in the
direction of the Tapas Bar and I began to walk in the other direction, up the pathway. I turned left at the crossing and passed
the apartment. I did not meet anyone else during my walk and once in my apartment, I did not venture out again.
Relative
to whether I know Jane Tanner;
Now I know her name, description of the clothes and photos which I have seen in
the press. At that time I knew of her as a member of the group but did not know her name. I do not remember having seen her
when I spoke with Gerry, but I believe I saw her when I first ventured out. She was stopped on the street in front of one
of the group's apartments when I passed her down towards the exit to my apartment. I do not know if it was her apartment
or not. I remember that she was wearing the colour purple.
Relative to the passerby/transient;
I can
affirm that it was a quiet street and it was very unlikely that someone could have passed by be in this way but this as an
assumption and I do not remember anything having happened.
Relative to anything strange in Gerry's behaviour;
I can affirm without any reservation that Gerry's behaviour was absolutely normal. He was not preoccupied and
conversed and appeared relaxed. He behaved in the same way as with the other times we met.
Relative to the
visibility and lighting conditions;
I believe it was dusk at the time I left and night time when I returned, but
I do not remember if it was already dark when I spoke with Gerry. There were no weather conditions that impacted visibility.
Given the lighting and the atmospheric conditions, I believe that it would have been possible to see if an individual was
near but, obviously, the greater the distance, the greater the difficulty in seeing. I would say that when I spoke with Gerry
it was possible to recognise someone I knew who was passing on foot at the crossing at the top of the hill or to describe
approximately someone unknown from that distance.
Relative to the return to Portugal to perform a reconstruction;
I spoke with the police for a long time regarding this topic. I had some reservation about the press' intrusion
into my personal life and the hurt that resulted. I actually think that I would prefer not to take part. I have helped the
investigation and am particularly interested in the investigative team gave me a solid base with would justify the reconstruction.
I was also asked question raised by the arguidos, to which I responded as follows.
Relative to my familiarity
with Gerry and Kate;
I got to know them on Monday, 30th of April 2007 when I arrived at the tennis lesson. I had
booked lessons and believed that Gerry had done the same. I believe that Kate was with Gerry before the first lesson but did
not play.
Relative to the encounters between the 29th of April and the 3rd of May;
I played against
Gerry in the tennis lessons and we played a game outside the lessons together with two friends who made up part of his group.
Kate was in the immediate area of the resort but the reason for our meetings was normally tennis. We got along well together.
Relative to seeing them with Madeleine and the other children;
I do not have grand memories of Madeleine
but did see her on some occasions with her parents in the crèche. My last memory of the twins, specifically, was in
the company of adults (I think they were friends that travelled here) in the pool zone and also on the day that we left, Saturday
5th of May, 2007.
I never saw any member of the family inside or possessing a vehicle.
Relative to the
encounter with Gerry and Kate on the 3rd of May 2007;
I had a tennis lesson with Gerry from 10h00 to 11h00. After
the lesson we went to fetch the children from the crèche. I saw Gerry and Kate near the pool relaxing. I remember that
they were talking to a British tennis instructor whose name is George or Georgina. I remember that she was telling them a
bit about her personal life. Later that day, I went once again to collect the children from the crèche and believe
I saw them there, but I cannot affirm with exactitude if it was that day or if had been on a previous day. We did not see
each other again on this day.
Relative to when I became aware of Madeleine's disappearance;
After
having gone to sleep on the 3rd of May, we were woken around 01H30 by the manager of the resort, John Hill and by a friend
of Gerry's. It was them who told me what had happened. I did not see or hear anything else than what has been stated in
this statement. I did not take part in any searches. I offered my help but it was not necessary. I did not see Gerry and Kate
again until the afternoon of our departure. They were in the tourist complex. This was on Saturday, 5th of May 2007. If was
a very emotional encounter and I did not know what to say to them. I went over to Gerry and gave him a pat on the shoulder
and spoke briefly with Kate. Together they appeared constrained and I became emotional as well.
Relative to the
meeting with Gerry McCann;
I have already testified to the time of our encounter in this statement and have also
spoken to the location where we met, when I saw him for the first time, what I observed regarding the details of our conversation.
The same applies to Jane Tanner.
Relative to the sighting in Dr. Francisco Gentil street;
From the location
where we met for our conversation, it is possible to see the top of the hill. I cannot confirm if I was always turned in this
direction. It is definitely possible that someone could have crossed holding a child without my noticing.
I do
not remember any other information or relevant details which could help this investigation.
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Exclusive: Who was the woman outside Maddie's flat?, 10 May 2009
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Exclusive: Who was the woman outside Maddie's flat? Sunday Express
By James Murray Sunday
May 10, 2009
A WOMAN was seen acting suspiciously outside Kate and
Gerry McCann's apartment just an hour before their daughter Madeleine was abducted.
The slim,
Portuguese-looking woman in a plum-coloured top and white skirt with long, dark, swept-back hair acted furtively when she
was spotted at 8pm on May 3 in 2007 near the Mark Warner Ocean Club complex.
She was standing under a streetlight
at a crossroads only 40 feet from where Madeleine was sleeping with her brother Sean and his twin sister Amelie.
Investigators are being urged to find her to see if she was in any way connected to a pockmarked prowler seen several times
outside the apartment in the day leading up to the kidnap.
Details of the mystery woman have only just become known
after a Sunday Express investigation into the baffling case was alerted by an elderly British woman who has lived in Praia
da Luz on Portugal's Algarve for more than 30 years.
Speaking from her villa near the Ocean Club, the woman,
who has asked not to be named, recalled: "On that night I went to the supermarket at the bottom of the road just before
it closed at 8pm.
"As I drove past the entrance to the Ocean Club I saw a woman standing opposite Apartment
5A the McCanns were staying in.
"Even at that time of night the streets were deserted, so I was surprised
to see someone there. I remember thinking it was unusual because it is just not the sort of place you would hang around.
"As I drove up to the junction she stepped around to the other side of the street lamp as though she didn't
want me to look at her. She was not carrying a bag or a mobile phone. I thought she might have been waiting for a lift but
no car came along while I was there.
"I turned right and could see quite clearly she was looking at Apartment
5A.
"As I approached another junction a small, brown car, with just one English-looking man in it swung round
and nearly hit mine."
When she heard that Madeleine had vanished she asked a relative to inform the police
about her sightings.
More than 30 people have so far phoned in about the artist's impression shown on a Channel
4 documentary last Thursday of a scar-faced man seen loitering outside the McCanns' apartment.
From Jeremy Wilkins statement:
Q. Relative to whether
I know Jane Tanner;
Jeremy Wilkins: 'Now I know her name, description
of the clothes and photos which I have seen in the press. At that time I knew of her as a member of the group but did not
know her name. I do not remember having seen her when I spoke with Gerry, but I believe I saw her when I first ventured out.
She was stopped on the street in front of one of the group's apartments when I passed her down towards the exit to my
apartment. I do not know if it was her apartment or not. I remember that she was wearing the colour purple.'

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| Jane Tanner in her purple/plum coloured top |
*
Note: Wilkins states that he set out with his child between 8.15pm and 8.30pm.
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