The purpose of this site is for information and a record of Gerry McCann's Blog Archives. As most people will appreciate GM deleted all past blogs from the official website. Hopefully this Archive will be helpful to anyone who is interested in Justice for Madeleine Beth McCann. Many Thanks, Pamalam

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The Expresso Interview *

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The McCanns give their first interview, since being released from their arguido status, to Expresso. Published 06 September 2008.
 
Gonçalo Amaral and his wife, Sofia Leal, both respond to the article.

The headline reads: 'Gonçalo Amaral is a disgrace'
The headline reads: 'Gonçalo Amaral is a disgrace'

Short 'teaser' for tomorrow's Expresso interview, 05 September 2008

The Expresso interview, 06 September 2008
The Expresso interview Expresso (no online link, appears in paper edition only)
 
Article by: Raquel Moleiro and Rui Gustavo
06 September 2008
Thanks to 'astro' for translation
 
Maddie case: In their first interview since they quit being suspects in the disappearance of their daughter, Kate and Gerry McCann spoke about the re-launch of the investigation, the fear that they felt in Portugal and the unshakable certainty that Madeleine was abducted

"Nothing in the process says that Madeleine has died"

Q – What are you presently doing to find Madeleine?
 
Gerry – We have had private investigators working with us for several months. Now that the case has been archived, it's easier because we accessed the process. We carried out new interviews with those that had already testified. And we interviewed others who approached us and had never spoken before.
 
Kate – As we didn't know what the PJ had done, we repeated everything that seemed important to us.

Q – Do the new witnesses offer clues about the disappearance?
 
Gerry – Some report sightings, but it's not likely that they lead to our daughter. We are more interested in people that offer credible information that can be verified through photographs or in another form; people who know who may be involved.

Q – What impression did you get from the process? Were you shocked over its contents?
 
Gerry – We were investigated into the smallest detail. There are entire volumes about us. We can jump those. It must be disquieting information that will not help us to find Madeleine.
 
Q – Don't you think that everything that was possible to do, was done? The investigation reached Poland, the Netherlands, Spain, Morocco…
 
Gerry – Morocco is a good example of what went wrong. A sighting was reported and it was said that there were cameras at the petrol station. When the inspectors went there, they concluded that there were none. The truth is that there were none in the pump area, but in the shop. And when the PJ returned, the tape had been recorded over.
 
Kate – It's difficult to describe how it feels to have our daughter taken away… We want to see action everywhere. We wanted spotlights, we wanted helicopters, we wanted everyone on the street, searching.

Q – If Madeleine had disappeared in England, would things have been different?
 
Gerry – If it had happened in a British city, I have no doubts. But I don't know if it would have been different if we had been in a small village in Scotland. Clearly, the English police are more experienced in abductions, they are more alert.
 
Q – If you have an important clue concerning Madeleine's whereabouts, will you transmit it to the Portuguese police?
 
Gerry – If something needs to be done in Portugal, we'll have to. We cannot go around breaking doors down or arresting people. But only when we feel that we cannot advance any further on our own.

Q – Do you trust the Portuguese authorities, after having been considered suspects?
 
Gerry – We wouldn't mind if we had been investigated at the beginning, if they thought that could help. But months later, when the evidence had been lost? It's that once the suspicion is installed, we can never prove our innocence again.
 
Q – Didn't you find it strange that the dogs found traces of blood in your room and in your rental car…
 
Gerry – There was no blood found! The indicia are worthless if they are not corroborated by forensic information. And they were not.
 
Q – 40 apartments were investigated and the dogs only marked yours. Ten cars and they only reacted to yours.
 
Gerry – These dogs' frailty was proved by a study that was carried out in the USA, in the case of a man that had been accused of murder. They had ten rooms, and in each room four boxes were placed, containing vegetables, bones, trash. Some contained human remains. They stayed there for ten hours. Eight hours after the boxes were removed, the dogs came in. And the dogs failed two thirds of the attempts. Imagine the reliability when these dogs test an apartment three months after the disappearance of a child.
 
Q – Were you surprised when you were made arguidos?
 
Kate – It was not surprising after weeks with the media saying that we were suspects. And there we have to ask why the information that reached the media was disfigured. Why do the newspapers say that blood was found in the apartment when the police report does not confirm it? Why was it said that the DNA that was found in the car was a 100% match with Madeleine's?
 
Gerry – In a way, we would like to have been accused so we could defend ourselves openly. Now, reading the process, there is no evidence that justifies the suspicion, apart from the dogs' action. There was never a sustained explanation. And the questioning: 'What happened to Madeleine? How did you get rid of her? Who helped you? Where did you put her?' All fantasy! If they had found DNA – so what? And if Madeleine had hurt herself inside the apartment – why would that be our fault?
 
Q – Do you investigate information that point towards Madeleine's death?
 
Kate – We want to find her alive, but if she is dead we want to know.

Q – Do you still believe that she's alive?
 
Kate – There are great possibilities that she is alive, aren't there? There is nothing in the process to indicate that something bad has happened to her…
 
Q – But there are no indicia that she has been abducted, either.
 
Gerry – We firmly believe that she was abducted by a man, minutes after I went to see her in the bedroom. There are two independent witnesses that saw a child of around four years of age being carried that evening. Our friend Jane Tanner and also the Smith family.
 
Q – The PJ discredits Jane Tanner's testimony. They say that when she saw said man with the child, you [Gerry] were chatting nearby and it was impossible that you hadn’t seen him as well…

Gerry – I didn't see her because my back was turned to the location where she passed. I was talking to a friend. And there is also the couple with children that saw a man carrying a child with pyjamas that were similar to Madeleine's, blond hair, the same age.
 
Q – Later on, that family stated that the man they saw was Gerry…
 
Gerry – At that time I was at the restaurant. The fact that we became suspects has probably influenced the Smiths' testimony.

Q – Was it a coincidence that you were made arguidos on one day and returned home the next day?
 
Gerry – They questioned us on that day because the PJ knew about our return.
 
Q – Were you afraid of being arrested?
 
Kate – Obviously. At a certain point we didn't know very well what could happen.
 
Gerry – From the information in the newspapers, of course we were afraid. It was scary.
 
Q – Being in England, you would not be extradited anymore.
 
Gerry – We asked the inspector that was in charge of the case if he had any objection: the answer was no. It's obvious that we were afraid that people might think we were escaping, but it was better not to be in Portugal at that point in time.
 
Q – Why?
 
Kate – Because of the hostile environment. We couldn't even leave the house.
 
Q – Why did Kate refuse to answer questions during your interrogation, that Gerry accepted to clarify the next day?
 
Kate – I was advised by my Portuguese lawyer not to reply.
 
Gerry – I received the same advice but decided to disobey. My plan was to remain silent, but the first question was: 'Are you involved in your daughter's disappearance?' It was nonsense and I decided to answer. From there onwards, I replied to all of them.

Q – Why didn't you authorise the police to see the messages that you sent and received on your mobile phone on the eve of Maddie’s disappearance.
 
Gerry – Nobody asked to see my messages. On the day before and on the day of the disappearance I did not receive or send 16 messages. I could hardly write a text message. I received three or four phone calls and two were from work. After the disappearance I received hundreds. And when the police asked me for the registry, I told them to ask the service provider. My phone only registers the last ten.
 
Q – The chief inspector in the case, Tavares de Almeida, writes a report where he says that your friends lied to save you, that Maddie died in the living room, and that you hid the body.
 
Gerry – What can we say? You will have to ask the police chiefs why they wrote that, why they saw us as suspects.

Q – The majority of crimes where the victims are children are committed by the parents.
 
Gerry – Not in the case of abducted children. And this is a case of an abducted child. It's an exceptional case.
 
Q – When he archived the case, the prosecutor said that the investigation can be reopened if a new clue appears. Do you think that is possible?
 
Kate – Of course! It could happen at any moment. All that it takes is for one person to make the phone call that we wait for so much. We know that she was abducted in Portugal and we vehemently believe that someone knows or suspects something.
 
*
 
"Mr Amaral's behaviour is a disgrace"

They have not read the book that is a best-seller in Portugal. And they don't spare the author and former PJ inspector

Q – Former inspector Gonçalo Amaral remains convinced of your involvement in Madeleine's disappearance. Did you read 'The Truth of the Lie', the book that he wrote?
 
Kate and Gerry – No.
 
Kate – Why would I?
 
Gerry – I won't learn anything from reading it.
 
Q – It was a success in Portugal.
 
Gerry – Was it? How many copies did it sell?

Q – Approximately 200 thousand. Next week, it is released in Spain.
 
Gerry – That is what can be called illicit enrichment.
 
Q – Your English lawyers already have a translated copy and they are analysing it. Do you intend to sue Gonçalo Amaral?
 
Gerry – At this moment we are focused on what we can do to find Madeleine and not in suing anyone.
 
Kate – All that I am going to say about this – because I'm not going to waste any time on Mr Amaral – is that as a professional and as a person his behaviour has been a disgrace.
 
Q – Aren't you curious to know what the book says?
 
Kate – What for? It must be nothing but a load of rubbish. It is so secondary… It certainly won't help to find our daughter. My consolation is that on the cover he calls her Maddie, the name that the media have invented. We never called her anything like that.
 
Q – But you do know the theory that Gonçalo Amaral defends: Madeleine accidentally died in the Ocean Club apartment and you concealed the body.
 
Gerry – It really is a waste of time. And we need all the time that we can get to analyse the investigation's documents, which contain a lot of information that we didn't know about.
 
Kate – You just have to cross, loosely, his theory with the process in order to understand that the facts that he reports are not correct.

Q – There is a theory that defends that the coordinator was removed from the investigation due to British political pressure.
 
Gerry – Who dismissed him?

Q – The PJ's national director.
 
Gerry – Then you have to ask him if he was pressured. Or if Gordon Brown discussed the case with him. He surely didn't.
 
Q – He also resigned. And largely due to this process.
 
Gerry – That was not what I was told. Apparently he had a vision of the police itself that was different from the one held by the Justice Minister.
 
Q – In a final analysis, they both left the PJ because the investigation failed.
 
Gerry – That's not our fault. I do not criticize the authorities over not trying to find Madeleine. It doesn't matter anymore. Now all that matters is that we do everything to try to find her, through our own methods.
 
Q – Did you ever get to know Gonçalo Amaral?
 
Kate – The question is the other way around: did he get to know us?
 
*

There are photographs of her all over the house

Gerry has returned to his work as a cardiologist. Kate did not exercise medicine again. Twins Sean and Amelie fill up her days as a mother.

Q – How has your life changed with the disappearance of Madeleine?
 
Gerry – Independently of what happens, it will never be the same again. If you talk to the parents of other abducted children, they also mention this parallel life which we entered. Sean and Amelie, being so young, force us to introduce a certain normality in our lives, to make it normal for them. And it's them who, for moments, make it normal for us. But it will never be normal for us. They are aged three and a half, and they are very, very happy.

Q – Did you explain to the twins what happened to their sister?
 
Kate – They perceive Madeleine's absence perfectly. I have no doubt whatsoever. But they don't know the details. They know that she disappeared and that we're looking for her.
 
Gerry – We were advised concerning what we should tell them, how and when. Larger explanations are kept for later. We realise that they miss their older sister. They know that her not being with us is not a good thing, and they hope that she returns.
 
Q – How do you keep Madeleine present in your lives?
 
Kate – There are photographs of her all over the house. And we speak about her with the twins every day – it's an important part of their lives. Sean and Amelie talk about her and still include her in their playing… If they receive sweets, they say "Let's keep one for Madeleine". Or "When she comes home I'll give her this or that". It's endearing and it makes our days less difficult.
 
Q – Did you fear that you might lose custody over Sean and Amelie because your behaviour was considered to be negligent?
 
Gerry – We were not negligent, we did what any reasonable parent would do. But we deeply regret what happened, because in our action, someone saw an opportunity to take Madeleine. I'm an optimistic person. I never thought that something like this could happen.

Q – Did you change the manner in which you deal with Sean and Amelie?
 
Gerry – We are more protective and less trusting. We never left our children alone again and many families will never do so again because of us.
 
Kate – Now we think about everything that can happen, about predators, abductors. We don't even let go of them in the shopping centre.
 
*

€1.200.000

The McCanns say that the fund has spent €1.2 million with the private investigation. But the reward of €3 million still stands

Q – How much have you spent on the private investigation so far?
 
Gerry – Approximately one million pounds, over the past ten months, paid with money from the Find Madeleine fund. A substantial sum was also spent on our defence, but two benefactors have covered that expense, which means that the fund was solely used in the search for our daughter.

Q – Do you maintain the offer of 2.5 million ponds to whoever finds Madeleine?
 
Gerry – We do not control that reward, but everything leads me to believe that it still stands. And that there will also be money available for whoever supplies credible information.
 
Kate – It's a lot of money, but we cannot set limits, a child is priceless. We'll pay whatever is necessary.
 
Q – Is there still money left in the fund?
 
Gerry – There is still some money left. Recently, British newspapers ('Express newspapers') paid us compensation of 550 thousand pounds, which fed the fund. That had an important impact. And there are still donations, people who send money directly.

Q – But less than in the beginning, before you were made arguidos.
 
Gerry – Of course! Those who were in doubt stopped contributing. Many write to us asking for forgiveness because they believed in our guilt. We know that we have to make an effort for people to know that there is no evidence that Madeleine is dead and that we were not involved in the disappearance.
 
*

Other issues

Dogs – "We read everything that we found about these dogs that detect cadavers. It was due to them that we became suspects"

Clues – "The sightings continue. Since May we received one thousand phone calls and an equal number of emails, some containing relevant data"

Media exposure – "Appearing in the media was never good. We did it to publicise Madeleine's face and to find her. We failed"

Background
 
Details of two hours of conversation

Kate and Gerry are different. More relaxed, or conformed. It is difficult to tell. "The twins force us to a certain normality", the mother explains. It's been 16 months and the mystery of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann remains unsolved.
 
The parents have already been victims of a tragedy and suspects of a terrible crime. The process was archived, but they are judged every day. Gerry agrees: "From the moment when the suspicion is installed, we can never prove our innocence".
 
This is the first interview since the process was archived, on the 21st of July. It is scheduled in Rothley, a small village in the British Midlands where nobody suspects the McCanns' guilt. Even less the owner of the Court House Hotel, which is installed in a medieval building and where the interview is held, in the late afternoon last Monday. There is tea with milk and biscuits. There is no guide and there are no forbidden questions.
 
In almost two hours of interview, Kate and Gerry, both 40, clearly state the intention that supports their availability for the conversation. "We believe that in Portugal someone knows about Madeleine, that it is where the solution for our daughter's disappearance lies". And they want that person, whether singular or collective, to know that they search for him, that they ensure his anonymity and that they will even give him 2.5 million pounds if he tells them where Madeleine is.
 
Every day, in their very British house of little bricks, they study a little more of the process of the Polícia Judiciária's investigation, which they personally consult as it is being translated. They understand "nothing" of Portuguese. From a first reading they reinforced their hope of finding Maddie alive. Nothing tells them that she is dead. The volumes about themselves, from the time when they were made arguidos, have been put aside. "We do not intend to read them".
 
They remind them of the days when they were afraid of being arrested in Portugal, accused of Madeleine's death.

The Expresso interview

Transcript of video

By Nigel Moore

Gerry McCann: There were samples of DNA from the car, which are so mixed up; at least five different people's.

(...)

Gerry McCann: No one has asked to see any of my text messages. There is no way there was 16 messages on the day, or even, you know, the day after. You know, the day after we got hundreds of text messages.

Kate McCann: Gerry hardly ever sent text messages until after Madeleine was taken.

Gerry McCann: So, you know, that is... it's actually rubbish.

(...)

Gerry McCann: If you believe what was written in the papers then, of course, we feared it [pause] and the situation for us had, errr... was very frightening, of course it was. Because, ultimately, again...

Interviewer: [interrupting] But that's why you decided, I'm sorry... that's why you decided to come home?

Gerry McCann: No.

Kate McCann: No, they could still have arrested us, couldn't they? They could have stopped us from going home.

Interviewer: No, not if you're here. [i.e. in the UK]

Kate McCann: No, but they could have stopped us from going home.

Gerry McCann: There was no, you know, we... Our departure was cleared with the authorities. We had told the PJ we were going to leave on that weekend and, after our interviews, our lawyer absolutely clarified: 'Were we allowed to go?' There were no bail conditions, and the next day we, through the British Consul, we asked if we could leave and the senior investigators were put to the question: 'Do you have any objections?' and the answer was: 'No'.

Gonçalo Amaral responds to the Expresso interview, 10 September 2008
"It is false, wrong, most of the replies are not true" tvmais (no online link, appears in magazine only)
 
Hernâni Carvalho
10 September 2008
 
Nobody is searching for Madeleine McCann anymore, but within the same week, an English newspaper revealed five minutes of the dogs' work looking for Maddie, the McCanns spoke to 'Expresso' and Gonçalo Amaral spoke in an exclusive to 'tvmais'. It doesn't look like the same process anymore.
 
The former PJ coordinator who directed the Maddie case, Gonçalo Amaral, is more accessible. He received 'tvmais' in his home in Portimão and he agreed to read the interview that the McCanns gave to 'Expresso' with us. He agreed to reply to the same questions, but he gave very different answers. "It is false, wrong, most of the replies are not true", was what we heard him say most often. Concerning his relationship with the couple, he says they knew each other well. "They knew who I was and they knew what my functions were." Gonçalo Amaral left a challenge for Maddie's mother: "The lady should explain herself better. When she said that my personal behaviour was a disgrace, was she referring to me as a father?".
 
Concerning the couple’s accusations, the former coordinator said very little. "I don't know the McCanns' concept of illicit enrichment. I wrote the book to defend my reputation, my dignity and that of all those who worked with me. I intend to continue to contribute to the discovery of the truth. Not everything one does in life is done for money. The statements from that couple seem to appear following an organized campaign of defamation that targeted me during and after the investigation. It will be interesting to discover who is actually responsible for that campaign."
 
During the same week in which the McCanns spoke to 'Expresso', the PJ's officer who was responsible for the Maddie case, Gonçalo Amaral, answered the same questions, in an exclusive for 'tvmais'. The result could hardly be more different.
 
What impression did you get from the process? Were you shocked over its contents?
 
(The McCanns mentioned entire volumes of investigations about them.)
 
It is false. There were not those volumes about the McCanns that they mention in interviews.
 
Don't you think that everything that was possible to do, was done? The investigation reached Poland, the Netherlands, Spain, Morocco…
 
(The couple refers examples of what went wrong with the PJ in Morocco.)
 
It is false. The PJ never went to Morocco because of Maddie. The sightings were always treated by the local authorities.
 
If Madeleine had disappeared in England, would things have been different?
 
(Gerry says yes because the English police is more experienced in abductions.)
 
Why did the McCanns never want to present a formal complaint about the girl's disappearance with the English authorities? They have the legal competence to receive the disappearance of any British subject! Maybe the couple would have to explain the circumstances under which the little girl disappeared… Why do the McCanns insist in hiring private detectives? And by the way, has the English police already found the girl that disappeared in England, on the same day as Maddie?
 
If you have an important clue concerning Madeleine's whereabouts, will you transmit it to the Portuguese police?
 
(Gerry said that only when the couple feels that they cannot advance any further on their own.)
 
I don’t know whether they will do it. But in order not to feel alone, they should contact the English police…
 
Do you trust the Portuguese authorities, after having been considered suspects?
 
(Gerry explains that the couple was only investigated months after the disappearance and that once the suspicion is installed, they cannot prove their innocence.)
 
The McCanns never trusted the Portuguese police. That is the feeling that I have. And it seems that they don’t trust the English police, either.
 
Didn't you find it strange that the dogs found traces of blood in your room and in your rental car…
 
(Gerry states that "No blood was found!")
 
What is strange is the blood and the odour that were marked by the dogs in a car that was rented 23 days after the girl's disappearance.
 
40 apartments were investigated and the dogs only marked yours. Ten cars and they only reacted to yours.
 
(Gerry states that the dogs failed a test in the USA.)
 
The dogs only marked locations and items that were used by the McCanns, which is an indicium that cannot be simply erased and which must be clarified.
 
Were you surprised when you were made arguidos?
 
(Gerry says that the media spent weeks saying that the McCanns were suspects)
 
They knew it already. When they were summoned, Mrs Kate reacted aggressively and screamed at the inspector who notified them. There is a detailed report of that in the process, written by the person who notified them. The worries that were expressed by Mrs Kate at that moment are very curious.
 
Do you investigate information that point towards Madeleine's death?
 
(We want to find her alive, Kate stated.)
 
The McCanns were the first who gave a signal that the little girl could be dead. They hired a South-African expert who finds dead missing people and it was Mrs Kate who gave us an email that mentioned that the little girl was dead.
 
Do you still believe that she's alive?
 
(Kate: "There are great possibilities that she is alive, isn't it? There is nothing in the process to indicate that something bad has happened to her…")
 
Maddie is dead. The Public Ministry went further and objectively mentioned homicide.
 
But there are no indicia that she has been abducted, either.
 
(Kate refers that Jane Tunner [sic] and the Smith couple saw a man with a little girl.)
 
The only indicia with credibility result from the depositions that were given by the Smith family. They speak about a man carrying an inanimate child on the way to the beach area.
 
The PJ discredits Jane Tanner's testimony. They say that when she saw said man with the child, you [Gerry] were chatting nearby and it was impossible that you hadn't seen him as well…
 
(Gerry says he didn't see because his back was turned while he was chatting with a friend.)
 
Jane Tanner's testimony has evolved in an inverse manner to human mentality. Initially, she had seen only a person at a distance. As time went by, she started remembering details in such a manner that at the end, she even remembered the texture of the clothing that the man and the little girl were wearing. That was how she pointed at Murat. The only deposition that is credible is the Smiths'.
 
Later on, that family stated that the man they saw was Gerry…
 
(Gerry says that he was at the restaurant at that time.)
 
The time at which the alarm of the disappearance was raised was never confirmed. The time that was reported by the Smiths always places Mr Gerry away from the dinner table. I know that the Smiths exist since the 16th of May, 2007. The McCanns probably do, as well. Why did they never wish to mention them in public. Whoever took the little girl on that evening did in fact cross ways with the Smiths.
 
Was it a coincidence that you were made arguidos on one day and returned home the next day?
 
("The PJ knew about our return.")
 
It was no coincidence. We knew about the couple's departure since the day that the dogs started working.
 
Were you afraid of being arrested?
 
(Obviously… It was scary)
 
False. They always knew that the crimes that were at issue, according to the Portuguese law, would not give origin to a detention unless caught in flagrant. "Concealment of a cadaver and simulation of a crime".
 
Being in England, you would not be extradited anymore.
 
(Gerry: "It was better not to be in Portugal at that point in time.")

Theoretically, extradition is an instrument of international judiciary cooperation…
 
Why?
 
(Kate: "Because of the hostile environment.")
 
They were made arguidos in order to have more rights. They used them well.
 
Why did Kate refuse to answer questions during your interrogation, that Gerry accepted to clarify the next day?
 
(Kate says she was advised by the lawyer not to reply, Gerry says he was advised as well but preferred to disobey.)
 
Wrong. The questioning was not the same. There were questions that were asked from Kate, to which only she could answer. Those questions remain unanswered until this day.
 
Why didn't you authorise the police to see the messages that you sent and received on your mobile phone on the eve of Maddie's disappearance.
 
(Gerry: "Nobody asked to see my messages.")
 
False. The couple signed an authorisation and a document was made with the reading of their telephones' registry. When we read those registries, we detected calls that had been erased and other curiosities that were noted in the process files…
 
The chief inspector in the case, Tavares de Almeida, writes a report where he says that your friends lied to save you, that Maddie died in the living room, and that you hid the body.
 
(Gerry: "Ask the police why they saw us as suspects.")
 
Wrong, just read the process.
 
The majority of crimes where the victims are children are committed by the parents.
 
(Gerry: "Not in the case of abducted children.")
 
And even in abduction cases, very often, they are related to the parents.
...........................................................................................
The "Sun" newspaper reduced 3 hours into 5 minutes
 
The dogs that are trained to detect cadaver and human blood odour were proposed to carry out searches in Praia da Luz by the English policemen themselves. Expert Mark Harrison suggested the use of British dogs that are experts in detecting cadavers, in a report that he sent to the English police. The searches that Keela and Eddie carried out in Praia da Luz were taped on video. Tvmais has already accessed the three hours of images. British newspaper “Sun” reduced them into five minutes, changed the recording order and omitted parts of the dog handler’s explanations. Eddie and Keela are sniffer dogs of the springer spaniel breed, especially trained to detect cadaver and human blood odour. In the video, Eddie (that detects cadaver odour) can be seen in a garage where ten cars are parked. The dog runs towards the Renault Mégane [sic] that the McCanns rented 23 days after their daughter’s disappearance. Keela (trained to find blood traces) marked the boot of the same vehicle. In the same video, the dogs can be seen marking the McCanns’ apartment after searching in 40 apartments. Tvmais knows that these dogs have passed all the tests that they were subject to by the FBI, and that they never gave a single “false positive result”. According to expert Martin Grime, the dogs have not failed in over 200 searches that they have carried out until this day. Faced with the same tests, the FBI dogs did not complete one third of the tests. Keela and Eddie are protected by an insurance of 7.5 million euros each. English expert Martin Grime recently signed a millionaire contract with the FBI to work for American police. He has not left for the US yet, because the searches for cadavers in an English shelter are ongoing and the dogs are on location, fulfilling their mission to 100 percent.
............................................................................................
Truth or consequence?
 
When Gonçalo Amaral published “Maddie, the Truth about the Lie”, the McCanns’ spokesman announced that the couple would sue the former PJ investigation coordinator. Clarence Mitchell knew that he was bluffing. Any process against Gonçalo Amaral will allow him to reveal issues that were devalued within the Maddie process, during a trial. The devaluation prevented the process from reaching a court room. It would not be now that the couple would want some questions to get there. Furthermore, the McCanns continue to state that they have not read the book…
 
Once again, Mitchell bluffed.
 
Abduction, disappearance or death?
 
The FindMadeleine Fund was created on the presumption that the little girl disappeared because she was abducted. The fund started to receive money from members of the public who wanted to contribute to the ongoing search for the little girl. Several detectives were hired for that, despite the fact that the McCann couple never presented a complaint about the disappearance of Madeleine to the English authorities.
 
And they should, just like other British subjects did in the past. In order to search for Madeleine, among others, the detectives from agency Metodo 3 were hired, who promised to deliver the little girl on Christmas 2007. And Oakley International, which states that it employs former members of the FBI and from the British secret services. What is known from this agency’s work is the discovery that Mr Joaquim Agostinho, from Altura, in Monte Gordo, resembled the photofits? Tvmais has discovered that Oakley has presented 30.000 (?) euros during the fiscal year of 2007. Which seems to indicate that spies are on sale. But no. Just the two invoices that were written by these two agencies almost sank the FindMadeleine fund.
 
Some multimillionaires that used to contribute to pay for the detectives (Brian Kennedy, for example) stopped doing so. The fund that was founded to search for a missing girl, will presumably end as soon as someone proves that the little girl is dead. At least that is what the British law foresees. Until then, the search for the girl continues. The McCanns received a compensation of over 500.000 euros from the British newspapers. With a little more money that the FindMadeleine fund may still hold, the search will continue. Maybe at more modest prices.

Gonçalo Amaral interview in tvmais

Gonçalo Amaral interview in tvmais

Gonçalo Amaral interview in tvmais

Gonçalo Amaral interview in tvmais

Wife of investigator attacks Kate, 17 September 2008
Sofia Leal, Wife and Mother of the Daughters of Gonçalo Amaral
Wife of investigator attacks Kate Correio da Manhã
 
Open letter: Wife of Gonçalo Amaral reacts with irony to attack by Kate
 
17 September 2008 - 00h30
Thanks to Joana Morais for translation
 
Open letter to Mrs Kate Healy

Dear Madam,

You will forgive my boldness, but after I read your comment (in an interview to Expresso newspaper) concerning Gonçalo Amaral, my husband and the father of my daughters, I cannot avoid sending you these words of gratefulness. For many years, I have been trying to make myself heard in this sentiment that unites us both: "…as a professional and as a person his behaviour has been a disgrace."
 
Look at it closely:

a) Professionally

- As a Coordinator of Criminal Investigation for the Polícia Judiciária, my husband has always refused to sit around from 9 to 5 in the comfortable chair in his office, as his hierarchical status implies. Instead, he spent the day (and very often, the night) with the investigators on the terrain, coordinating searches, surveillances, apprehensions and other diligences 'in loco'. A disgrace!

But if it was only the fact that he was subject to the weather, it wouldn't be serious, as our climate is not too bad, as you know. The problem is that this dedication to the cause has earned him a non promotion in his career. Indeed, I will explain this to you, even because this case happened when the searches for your daughter were under way. My husband applied to the category of Superior Coordinator, and in between drug apprehensions, sequestrations and homicides, he somehow managed to produce a thesis about drug trafficking by sea, which he defended in Lisbon, in front of a Jury that congratulated him. Full of hope, Gonçalo Amaral returns to the Algarve and awaits the result. To his surprise, he was passed over by other colleagues (real coordinators, truth be told), because he had not been able to score points in the "professional formation" parameter. That's right, Mrs Kate, my husband spent his life working, involved in complex investigations, he was the man who apprehended the highest volumes of drugs in Portugal, but given the fact that he had no time to go to Lisbon to parade himself up and down the corridors of the PJ's Institute, he was not promoted. A disgrace, madam, a disgrace!

- As you probably know, even because you seem like a very well informed person to me, my husband's salary was less than 1.5 times the lowest salary in your country. But as a wife, as a mother and as a Portuguese citizen, I can't complain, because Gonçalo Amaral's salary was equal to 4.5 times the lowest salary in Portugal. But pay attention to the following, which is an example of what I'm going to explain next: At some point, an individual shoots a member of the PSP [urban police] and flees into neighbouring Spain. A PJ team follows him, including my husband. They stayed there for over two weeks. Now at that time, the international expense coverage was around 100 euros. As you can easily imagine, it's not possible to sleep and eat in Spain with this amount of money, much less shortly before Christmas and taking into account that the value will only be paid at around Easter time (if one's lucky). But Gonçalo Amaral never refused, not even for one day, to search for the escaped murderer, relaying the expenses onto our family accounts. And this is just one example among many. At some point in time, I suggested that we should create a fund or something similar to deal with these extraordinary expenses, but he never listened to me. You see, we also have mortgages to pay around here… A disgrace, Mrs Kate, a disgrace!

b) As a person, his behaviour has also been a disgrace, because to begin with we could never distinguish that he even had a personal life, due to the manner in which he dealt with the profession that he embraced. But if my good friend Mrs Kate allows me, I can offer you some examples:

- 5 years ago, a child named Joana "disappeared". Her mother, just like you, Mrs Kate, tried to project the case into the media, but she didn't make it any further than SIC…

Eight days later, came the confessions and the evidence: during an incestuous act between mother and uncle, the child was beaten, then dismembered and her body dumped who knows where. Mother and uncle went to jail, in a process that was coordinated by Gonçalo Amaral and which earned them almost 20 years in jail, each. But let us go a bit back in time. The child died on the 12th of September. On Christmas eve, our family was reunited for prayer, when my husband asked me to prepare a bag with some food and warm clothes, because he had not carried out his Christmas act of penance. Can you, Mrs Kate, imagine where Gonçalo Amaral went on that Christmas night under heavy rain and thunder? He went to the Olhão Prison, where João Cipriano, Joana's uncle, a confessed murderer and a clinically diagnosed psychopath, is detained. According to my husband, to simply offer an alimony to some beggar was not a sacrifice to him. The fact that he embraced and shared his Christmas meal with João Cipriano was the sacrifice that he offered to God, in memory of Joana. Is this not a disgrace? You should also know that every year, on the 12th of September, my husband has a mass celebrated in memory of Joana Isabel Cipriano Guerreiro. He says that nobody will ever remember the poor little girl again. Right, but they remember to unjustly accuse him of actions and crimes that he never committed. Isn't this a disgrace, Mrs Kate?

- There is a last episode that I will report to you, one that I still find hard to talk about. Last year, in May, we started to move our family to Portimão. My husband was supposed to enjoy a holiday period starting on the day after your daughter's disappearance. "For obvious reasons" that didn't happen. I started on a new job, looked for a house, moved house, and tried to integrate our daughters in new schools and new routines. All of this I did alone, without any help from my husband, who for obvious reasons, was looking for your daughter, Mrs Kate. In October, on his birthday, a week after our daughters started school, Gonçalo Amaral was dismissed and returned to Faro. This was supposed to be the time of the family's reunion and it turned out to be another separation. Isn't this a disgrace? Our daughters never managed to understand, and we never managed to explain to them what obvious reasons were those that rewarded in this manner a father who left his own daughters to go looking for a child that he had never met and whose parents had neglected her. It was a pity that my dear friend Mrs Kate was not around anymore at that date, because you could have been very helpful to me in explaining these "obvious reasons" that led to their father's dismissal, to our daughters.

Finally, I can only report to you that intimately, Gonçalo Amaral is precisely what the latinos are famed for: shameless, as my pudency does not allow me to write any further.

I ask you, my good friend, to forgive these confidences from a wife and mother, but I'm certain that you will understand. I finish this letter asking you to send your mother my most sincere praises. She sounded so sincere to me, when during an interview she referred that she felt like slapping the face of the person who left her grandchildren alone. She spoke so openly that she sounded like a genuine Portuguese grandmother

My dear friend Mrs Kate, without wishing to bother you any further, I would like to request one last favour from you: now that you have started to tell some truths, please continue, and let the world hear the truth that it has been waiting for.

Best regards,
Sofia Leal
Wife and Mother of the Daughters of Gonçalo Amaral
 

'Sarky' Note To Madeleine's Mum, 18 September 2008
'Sarky' Note To Madeleine's Mum Sky News

8:42am UK, Thursday September 18, 2008

The wife of the Portuguese detective, sacked from the Madeleine McCann investigation, has launched an emotional attack on the missing girl's mother.


It comes after Kate McCann branded Goncalo Amaral "a disgrace" in an interview with Portuguese newspaper Expresso.

Now Mr Amaral's wife Sofia has hit back in an open letter in another paper, Correio, addressing Mrs McCann as "my dear friend Mrs Kate".

Laden with sarcasm, Mrs Amaral begins: "You will forgive my boldness, but after I read your comment (in the Expresso interview) concerning Goncalo Amaral, my husband and the father of my daughters, I cannot avoid sending you these words of gratefulness."

She goes on: "As a coordinator of criminal investigation for the Polícia Judiciária, my husband has always refused to sit around from nine to five in the comfortable chair in his office, as his hierarchical status implies.

"Instead, he spent the day (and very often the night) with the investigators on the terrain, coordinating searches, surveillances, apprehensions and other diligences."

But she says "this dedication" stopped Mr Amaral from being promoted because "he had no time to go to Lisbon to parade himself up and down the corridors of the PJ's Institute".

"A disgrace, madam, a disgrace!" she writes.

Sky's crime correspondent Martin Brunt said: "She clearly feels her husband has been made a real victim. He really has been demonised.

"While some people may have a lot of sympathy for him and may have thought the press treatment here was unfair, he has in his book admitted that mistakes were made.

"Much of the criticism of his failed investigation appears to be justified."

The detective's wife refers in the letter to the case of Joana Cipriani, the young girl who vanished just seven miles from Praia da Luz, in a bid to demonstrate his good nature and dedication.

"Five years ago, a child named Joana 'disappeared'," she writes. "Her mother, just like you, Mrs Kate, tried to project the case into the media."

The girl's mother Leonor and her uncle Joao were jailed for her murder despite her body never being found.

Mrs Amaral says her husband shared a meal with the uncle at Olhao Prison the following Christmas "in memory of Joana".

She goes on: "You should also know that every year, on the 12th of September, my husband has a mass celebrated in memory of Joana Isabel Cipriani Guerreiro. He says that nobody will ever remember the poor little girl again.

"Right, but they remember to unjustly accuse him of actions and crimes that he never committed. Isn't this a disgrace, Mrs Kate?"

She goes on to describe the disruption endured by her family when Mr Amaral "left his own daughters to go looking for a child that he had never met and whose parents had neglected her".

Mrs Amaral adds: "It was a pity that my dear friend Mrs Kate was not around anymore at that date, because you could have been very helpful to me in explaining these 'obvious reasons' that led to their father's dismissal, to our daughters."

She ends the letter: "My dear friend Mrs Kate, without wishing to bother you any further, I would like to request one last favour from you: now that you have started to tell some truths, please continue, and let the world hear the truth that it has been waiting for."

"It's very unusual for the anonymous wife of a policeman to speak out in this way," says Brunt, "She clearly feels he has been very harshly treated.

"Some might feel the form of her attack on Kate McCann is very clever, it's dripping with sarcasm.

"She paints a picture of an over-worked, hard done-by detective that's very different to the image portrayed in the media."

With thanks to Nigel at McCann Files

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