Showing posts with label HappenedMadeleine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HappenedMadeleine. Show all posts

Saturday, June 19, 2021

What Happened to Madeleine McCann: Hope Persists as Months Turn into Years and Police Chase New Leads

What Happened to Madeleine McCann: Hope Persists as Months Turn into Years and Police Chase New Leads

  • After 14 years, Kate and Gerry McCann refuse to give up on finding answers, undeterred by dueling theories about their daughter’s disappearance.
  • Watch: Madeleine McCann: A Never-Ending Search 14 Years Later

    This is the final installment of a three-part series. Read parts one and two here.

    When Kate and Gerry McCann went home on Sept. 9, 2007, they told the reporters crowded around to witness their departure from Portugal that their decision to leave in no way meant that they had given up searching for their daughter Madeleine, who had been missing for four months.

    They were reluctant to go, Kate recalled in her 2011 book Madeleine, but going back to their lives in England was “what was right and fair” for their twins, Sean and Amelie, who at 2 years old were still unaware that something so devastating had happened. Their big sister’s fourth birthday had solemnly passed on May 12, nine days after she disappeared. 

    The McCanns and three other families had arrived on April 28 for a sunny holiday at the kid-friendly Ocean Club in Praia da Luz. They were all supposed to go home on May 5.

    True Crime Survivors, Elizabeth Smart
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    Instead, when Gerry, a cardiology specialist, and Kate, a GP who practiced part-time, returned to the Leicestershire village of Rothley, Portugal’s Polícia Judiciària had just officially named them suspects in their daughter’s disappearance, suggesting that Kate at the very least had hid Madeleine’s body after a fatal accident in their apartment.

    The McCanns adamantly maintained their innocence (then and ever since) and vowed never to stop looking, remaining hopeful that answers would be forthcoming—even if they weren’t the ones they wanted.

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    The PJ also still had questions for the friends the McCanns had been vacationing with. None of them were ever considered suspects, but that didn’t stop them from feeling as if they’d been accused of something.

    Matthew and Rachael Oldfield, David and Fiona Payne, Dianne Webster (Fiona’s mother), and Russell O’Brien and Jane Tanner—the group Kate and Gerry were having dinner with the night Madeleine disappeared, dubbed the “Tapas Seven” in media reports—had been asked by police not to discuss the case with the press. But fed up with tabloid speculation and insinuations, as well as leaks that seemed to becoming from the cops who warned them to stay silent, they released a statement in October 2007 flatly denying that they had done anything other than try to help the investigation. 

    “We wish to state that there is categorically no ‘pact of silence’ or indeed anything secretive between us—just the desire to assist the search for Madeleine,” they said. “From day one, the police in Portugal told us not to discuss our statements. It is incredibly frustrating for us that the fact we have done as we were asked to by the Portuguese police is still being looked upon as suspicious. Everything we have done, and continue to do, has been to help with the search for Madeleine and to end this nightmare for Gerry and Kate.”

    What Happened To Madeleine McCann Series, Kate McCann, Gerry McCannEddie Mulholland/Shutterstock

    Talking to the BBC in April 2008, Rachael recalled, “We were made to understand we could face two years prison for speaking out, so as a group we’ve not said anything from day one…We would have loved to have put the record straight.”

    Portuguese police re-interviewed all seven that month (in the U.K.) and once again the common memory from the night of May 3, 2007, was that Kate was hysterical and Gerry was equally devastated.

    “I’ve never heard a man make the noises he made, and Kate, Kate was just…you just can’t put into words how they were,” Dianne Webster told police.

    As Madeleine’s fifth birthday approached, Kate guessed that if she had known a year prior that her daughter would still be missing after 12 months, “I’m sure I’d have gone under,” she wrote.

    Joe Giddens/PA Wire

    But while she shared that it took her years to be able to glean much pleasure from anything, unable to even go to dinner or concentrate on a movie or soccer game, and Gerry too had good days as well as horrible ones, they had to press on sooner than they might have otherwise because Sean and Amelie needed them. 

    In her book, Kate called the twins, then 6 years old, “remarkably well-adjusted, well-rounded and emotionally in tune.”

    “Unfortunately for us, a new normality is a family of four,” Gerry told the BBC in 2017. “But we have adapted and that’s important. The last five years, in particular, has allowed us to really properly devote time to looking after the twins and ourselves and of course carrying on with our work. At some point you’ve got to realize that time is not frozen, and I think both of us realize that we owed it to the twins to make sure that their life is as fulfilling as they deserve.”

    Alban Donohoe, Pool/AP Photo

    Meanwhile, Kate and Gerry were officially cleared, along with fellow suspect Robert Murat, on July 21, 2008, Portugal’s attorney general’s office announcing there was no evidence that Madeleine had come to serious harm.

    At the same time, the PJ said they were halting their investigation.

    Kate wrote that she and her husband weren’t sorry to hear it, that they were “far from convinced that there was any real investigation taking place anyway.” They had already hired private investigators to continue the search.

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    London’s Metropolitan Police formally opened their own investigation into Madeleine’s disappearance in May 2011, calling it “Operation Grange”—and Portuguese prosecutors followed suit that October.

    DPA/ZUMApress.com

    In October 2013, Scotland Yard ruled out one once-promising lead: They had finally managed to confirm that a man the McCanns’ friend Jane Tanner saw at 9:15 p.m. on May 3, 2007, carrying a barefoot child in light-colored pajamas was just another vacationing Brit with his own kid.

    Later that month on an episode of the BBC’s Crimewatch, Scotland Yard shared new composite images based on the accounts of another couple who reported seeing a man awkwardly carrying a child fitting Madeleine’s description on the street about 500 yards away from the McCanns’ apartment, headed in the direction of the beach, closer to 10 p.m. that night. According to the Met, more than 300 calls and 170 emails came in directly after the program aired.

    But whatever information was relayed, it did not lead to any notable developments. And so would be the case for years.

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    Ahead of the 10th anniversary of Madeleine’s disappearance, Kate and Gerry told the BBC’s Fiona Bruce that they did still have hope that their daughter might be found, noting that sometimes miracles happened—such as the discovery in 2013 of three young women in Cleveland who’d been held captive for a decade, or the fact that Jaycee Dugard, kidnapped at 11 in 1991, was found alive 18 years later.

    “We tried everything in our power to not have a long, protracted, missing-person case like this,” Kate said. “It’s devastating and we really threw ourselves into trying to do everything we could to help find her. It looks like that hasn’t worked yet. But you know we are still looking forward…We still hope.”

    Getty Images; Shutterstock; Melissa Herwitt/E! Illustration

    And then last June came the announcement that there was a new suspect: a man in prison in Germany for drug offenses who, according to German authorities, has a long criminal record that includes convictions for child sexual abuse.

    On June 3, 2020, Metropolitan Police Detective Chief Inspector Mark Cranwell said that his office had received information about the man in 2017 and had been investigating ever since in a joint effort with the Polícia Judiciária and Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (the BKA). By then, only a handful of detectives were still on the case, down from the initial 30 investigators assigned to Operation Grange in 2011.

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    While Cranwell said their job was to “follow the evidence, maintain an open mind and establish what happened on that day in May 2007,” Braunschweig state prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters told reporters the next day, per Reuters, “We assume that the girl is dead. The public prosecutor’s office in Braunschweig is investigating a 43-year-old German national on suspicion of murder.” Wolters told the BBC that they had evidence “strong enough to say that the girl is dead and strong enough to accuse a specific individual of murder—that strong.”

    However, he added, “One has to be honest and remain open to the possibility that our investigation could end without a charge, that it ends like the others have.”

    A few days later, Wolters walked his assessment back a bit, telling the Sunday Mirror that “a little bit of hope” remained that Madeleine was alive.

    According to the BBC and Associated Press, the suspect, Christian Brückner, was also convicted in 2019 of the 2005 rape of a 72-year-old American woman in Praia da Luz and sentenced to seven years in prison, which he began serving in January upon completion of his drug-related sentence.

    Miguel Villagran/Getty Images

    Friedrich Fulscher, Brückner’s attorney, said last summer that his client denied having anything to do with Madeleine’s disappearance and had no plans to cooperate with the German prosecutor’s office.

    Brückner—who lost his appeal on the rape conviction in November—broke his silence only recently, the now 44-year-old releasing a statement from prison directed at Wolf and fellow prosecutor Ute Lindemann alleging he was being unfairly persecuted. He has not been charged in the McCann case.

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    “Charging someone with a crime is one thing,” began his handwritten message, dated May 8 but released June 14, according to The Telegraph. “It is something completely different, namely an unbelievable scandal, when a public prosecutor starts a public prejudicial campaign before proceedings are even opened. You have proved worldwide, through arbitrary convictions in the past and through scandalous prejudicial campaigns in the present, that you are unsuitable for the office of an ‘advocate for the honest and German people who trust in justice,’ and that you bring shame to the German legal system.”

    And that’s where the investigation lies at the moment, authorities in Germany voicing their grim suspicions, while Scotland Yard presses on

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    When reached earlier this month, a Met spokesperson confirmed to E! News that the McCann case remained open but they were unable to comment further about their active investigation—which is still a missing-person inquiry. 

    Scotland Yard did say last year that they’ve yet to see “definitive evidence whether Madeleine is alive or dead”—and that remains the case. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick told reporters in December that they were working “really, really closely” with German authorities, yet she “would not expect necessarily every single piece of material to be shared with us.”

    “We’re continuing to work very closely with our colleagues in the BKA…and the PJ,” she continued. “We do have our small team still working on that and there’s no significant change for us in terms of our resourcing or posture…We will continue until the time that it is right, either because much more light has been thrown on this and, or, somebody has been brought to justice. Or, if we feel we have exhausted all possible opportunities. We’re not any of those stages at the moment, and the team continues.”

    A source close to the investigation told the Telegraph in January, “At this stage there is no evolution. Of course I would like to see an end to this, but there is no reason to think that [Brückner] could take us to Madeleine, and that is the most important thing.” In a New Year’s message, the McCanns said the “hope, energy and determination to find her and uncover the truth remain steadfast.”

    FRANCISCO LEONG/AFP/Getty Images

    Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns’ longtime spokesman, didn’t respond to interview requests. Gerry and Kate, whose twins turned 16 on Feb. 1, released a new statement in May, still heartbroken, but also still refusing to snuff out that flicker of possibility.

    “Every May is tough—a reminder of years passed, of years together lost, or stolen,” read their post on the Find Madeleine website, the couple having never joined social media. “This year it is particularly poignant as we should be celebrating Madeleine’s 18th birthday. Enough said.

    “The Covid pandemic has made this year even more difficult for many reasons,” they continued, “but thankfully the investigation to find Madeleine and her abductor has continued. We hang on to the hope, however small, that we will see Madeleine again. As we have said repeatedly, we need to know what has happened to our lovely daughter, no matter what. We are very grateful to the police for their continued efforts.

    “We still receive so many positive words and good wishes despite the years that have gone by. It all helps and for that we are truly grateful—thank you.”

    Tuesday, June 8, 2021

    What Happened to Madeleine McCann: A Child Goes Missing, Precious Time Is Wasted and the Nightmare Begins

    What Happened to Madeleine McCann: A Child Goes Missing, Precious Time Is Wasted and the Nightmare Begins

  • Madeleine McCann, 3, vanished from her family's apartment at a beachfront resort in Portugal on the night of May 3, 2007, and her parents have been holding out hope for answers ever since.
  • Watch: Madeleine McCann: A Never-Ending Search 14 Years Later

    Gerry McCann checked on the sleeping children at 9:05 p.m., and they were snug in their beds.

    The Glasgow native returned to dinner with his wife, Kate McCann, and five fellow vacationers, the group from England in the middle of a 10-day holiday at the seaside resort town of Praia da Luz—”beach of light”—in southern Portugal. The various members of the party, enjoying wine and food at the Ocean Club’s poolside tapas restaurant, would get up periodically to make the 100-yard walk to look in on their kids back in their respective apartments. 

    It was Kate’s turn to go at 9:30 p.m., but Dr. Matthew Oldfield, rising at the same time to check on his daughter Grace, offered to look in on the McCann children. He reported back to the group that all was well.

    Shortly after 10 p.m., Kate, a general practitioner who had worked part-time since becoming a mother of three, entered apartment 5A through the open back patio door and headed toward the bedroom where she and Gerry had left 3-year-old Madeleine in her Eeyore pajamas and 2-year-old twins Sean and Amelie fast asleep. As she has remembered in her multiple retellings of that night, Kate felt that the bedroom door she’d left slightly ajar was more open than before. Pulling the door toward her, it slammed, propelled by a breeze coming through the bedroom window that wasn’t supposed to be open. 

    True Crime Survivors, Elizabeth Smart
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    A closer look revealed that Sean and Amelie were snoozing away in their cots, but the bed where she had tucked in Madeleine with her pink blanket and Cuddle Cat barely two hours beforehand was empty.

    “I couldn’t quite make her out in the dark,” Kate wrote in her 2011 book Madeleine (all proceeds from which went to Madeleine’s Fund: Leaving No Stone Unturned, which has financed search efforts). “I remember looking at it and looking at it for what was probably only a few seconds, though it felt like much longer.”

    Kate frantically searched the rest of the apartment, including in the closets and under the beds, calling for Madeleine, then ran to the restaurant. She recalled yelling, “Madeleine’s gone! Someone’s taken her!”

    According to journalist Danny Collins‘ 2008 book Vanished: The Truth About the Disappearance of Madeleine McCann, a hotel babysitter named Charlotte Pennington (the resort offered complimentary child care night and day) who was watching another family’s kids in a nearby room heard the cries and went over to 5A. Pennington remembered the distraught mom screaming, “They’ve taken her! They’ve taken her!”

    Within minutes the dinner party spread out all over the resort to look for the child, who was due to turn 4 on May 12, and resort management was alerted of the situation. In her book, Kate recalled the staff enacting “missing child search protocol” by 10:30 p.m. When police still hadn’t arrived five minutes later, Gerry asked Matt if he would go to the reception desk to make sure that they’d called authorities.

    What Happened To Madeleine McCann Series Part 1Getty Images; Shutterstock; Melissa Herwitt/E! Illustration

    Though it would seem as if a missing child would be a 10-alarm fire, two officers from the Guarda Nacional Republicana—a military force, but they serve as the equivalent of a U.S. city police force or highway patrol—didn’t show up until around 11:10 p.m. And their guess was that Madeleine had wandered off, perhaps in search of her parents, into the streets crisscrossing the resort. 

    The GNR did not immediately cordon off the area around 5A, as protocol often dictates for a crime scene, according to multiple witness accounts. So as word got around that a little girl was missing, guests and curious looky-loos flocked outside (and inside) apartment 5A—the back of which faced the pool and the tapas restaurant—smoking cigarettes and walking right up to the bedroom window, which soon became a hotbed of fingerprints and random DNA.

    According to Collins (who in his book thanked police and media contacts, as well as Interpol for aiding in his investigation), as one man ran his fingers over the sill, declaring, “Nothing to be seen here,” a British freelance reporter overheard and fired back, “Well, there bloody well wouldn’t be now, would there?” 

    Fellow vacationers did, however, help search for Madeleine until dawn, small groups walking the streets, combing the beach and peering into rubbish bins and anywhere else a small child could have ended up, on her own or by force.

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    Two more cops, these from the Polícia Judiciária (the lead crime investigation agency in Portugal, akin to the FBI), arrived on the scene about two hours after the GNR. Kate also felt that they were skeptical of her insistence that her daughter had been taken, though she did note that, unlike the GNR, they put up a piece of police tape across the bedroom door and one brushed the room for fingerprints.

    Still, a British forensics expert who arrived in Praia da Luz the following week later described it to the Evening Standard as the “worst preserved” crime scene he’d ever observed.

    Steve Parsons/PA Images via Getty Images

    Per transcripts of police interviews posted online, in his first statement to the PJ, given May 4, Matthew Oldfield said that, right before Gerry went to look in on his kids at 9:05 p.m., he himself had done a listening check outside the back windows, all of which were closed, of three apartments, including the McCanns’. He heard nothing amiss. When he went to check on the children again at 9:30, he entered 5A through the closed but unlocked patio door (left unlocked by Kate to make it easier for whomever from their party was making the rounds) and saw the bedroom door half-open.

    He didn’t go into the kids’ room but said he could see the twins asleep by the light he assumed was coming in through open shutters. He acknowledged not actually seeing if Madeleine was in bed or not. In any case, he said, all was quiet, which to him was an indication that all three were sleeping.

    Talking to police again on May 10, Matthew affirmed that he did not mention to the McCanns that the bedroom door had been half-open or that it looked lighter in the room than it did the first time he checked. He admittedly didn’t think anything of it.

    His was one of many witness accounts that contributed to a Rashomon-worthy collection of perspectives from law enforcement, hotel staff, other guests and the group the tabloids would dub “the Tapas Seven.”

    Atlantico Press/ZUMAPRESS.com

    According to PJ files reviewed by Kate, the Polícia Judiciária brought tracker dogs—the kind that search for live people—to Praia da Luz at 8 a.m. the next day, May 4, but they weren’t deployed until 11 p.m. Meanwhile, road blocks went up at about 10 a.m. as the PJ set out alerting border and port authorities about the missing girl. A forensics team from Lisbon showed up during the day as well.

    In the 2017 Netflix docu-series The Disappearance of Madeleine McCannGonçalo Amaral, former chief investigating coordinator of the Polícia Judiciária and a 30-year veteran of the force when the child went missing, called the measures taken to search for Madeleine “inadequate.” He said that the first hours of the investigation garnered “what you might call the most ‘minimal’ inspection in terms of detail.”

    And in a case when the first few hours are crucial, investigators were relatively late to the scene, Amaral recalled, and “the lateness triggered a delay to the sequence of events.”

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    During those first pivotal hours, however, Gerry called his sister and brother-in-law, Trisha and Sandy, back in England, and they called the Foreign Office in London, the British Consulate in the Algarve and the British Embassy in Lisbon—a guarantee that within hours Madeleine’s disappearance would be front-page news back in the U.K.

    “He said, ‘Madeleine’s been abducted, she’s been abducted!'” Trisha, also her niece’s godmother, relayed to the Press Association on May 4, noting that she was headed to Portugal with their mother, Eileen McCann. “The door was lying open, the window in the bedroom and the shutters had been jemmied open. Nothing had been touched in the apartment, no valuables taken, no passports. They think someone must have come in the window and gone out the door with her.”

    (Per Collins, investigators determined that the shutters—a metal variety that were over all the back windows of the apartment building and could be raised and lowered from the inside—didn’t show signs of tampering, indicating no one had entered the apartment through the window.)

    Kate’s parents, Brian and Susan Healy, also flew down to Praia da Luz right away.

    Metropolitan Police

    Asked about Madeleine and her siblings having been left alone in the apartment while their parents went to dinner, Brian Healy told The Guardian, “It is not right to say that they just left them. They could see the chalet from where they were sitting in the restaurant, they were a hundred yards away. They went back every half hour to check on the children. When they returned at the end of their meal she was gone. My daughter can hardly speak. She is distraught, she is crying and in shock.”

    After being up most of the night, Gerry and Kate headed out at about 6 a.m. on May 4 to keep looking, feeling increasingly on their own despite the dozens of people who’d shown up to aid the search. Fliers with Madeleine’s picture had been put up all over the resort and at local businesses in the area.

    Later that day, Gerry and Kate sat down for separate interviews at the police station, after which they returned to the Ocean Club at around 8:30 p.m. to find the road outside jammed with reporters, photographers and TV crews. The couple drafted a statement and approached the cameras, Kate holding Madeleine’s Cuddle Cat.

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    “Words cannot describe the anguish and despair that we are feeling as the parents of our beautiful daughter Madeleine,” Gerry, a consulting cardiologist at Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, said to the crowd. “We request that anyone with any information relating to Madeleine’s disappearance, no matter how trivial, contact the Portuguese police and help us get her back safely.”

    “Please, if you have Madeleine,” he continued, “let her come home to her Mummy, Daddy, brother and sister. As everyone can understand how distressing the current situation is, we ask that our privacy is respected to allow us to continue assisting the police in their current investigation.” 

    James Ashe/eyevine/ZUMA Press

    Police followed up by announcing to the press that they weren’t “100 percent sure” that there had been a kidnapping.

    The Polícia Judiciária, however, maintained their suspicion that Kate and Gerry—and their friends—were hiding something. (All of them fervently denied keeping anything from police, collectively or individually.) At the same time, the rampant finger-pointing continued over leaving their children alone to go to dinner, the media happy to report on every single theory—and there were many—as well as question the McCanns’ parenting choices.

    Though the rest of their party had to return to their lives in England, Kate and Gerry remained in Portugal for what proved to be the summer from hell, giving interviews and pleading for information. They said they didn’t want to leave the country without Madeleine.

    This is Part 1 in a three-part series. Part 2 will be published Saturday, June 12.