
Madeleine McCann: The First Robert Murat, McCanns’ Neglect Charge And Old Portugal
MADDIE WATCH - Anorak’s at-a-glance guide to press coverage of Madeleine McCann
SUNDAY PEOPLE: “MCCANNS FACE NEW CHARGE
EXCLUSIVE SCANDAL OF PLAN TO CHARGE MADDIE MUM ‘KEYSTONE COP’ FURY”
A shock new plan to charge Kate McCann over daughter Maddie’s kidnap was last night condemned as “spiteful and shameful”. British legal experts branded bungling Portuguese detectives “Keystone Cops” for considering neglect charges.
But are these comedy cops the only ones who think the McCanns erred?
One lawyer said: “After an inquiry costing millions and unprecedented international help, these Keystone Cops still haven’t got a clue what happened to Madeleine. The investigation was a mess from Day One.”
Says McCanns’ spokesman Clarence Mitchell: “We haven’t heard through official channels if they are considering this charge. But you’d have to ask yourself, ‘Why now?’”
Or why not now?
MAIL ON SUNDAY: “Madeleine special investigation: The damning case against the Portuguese police - and how Kate and Gerry are coping one year on”
At the holiday home where Madeleine was last seen:
The apartment gate was padlocked, but in the little paved front yard, a purple hibiscus and some dusty geraniums were coming into bloom. The Algarve spring is finally coming.”
Such are the facts in this special investigation.
“It’s a new season,” said a British woman who works in a local restaurant. “It’s tragic they haven’t found Maddie. But the time has come to move on.”
Moving on:
Of course, moving on is one thing Madeleine’s parents, Kate and Gerry, cannot do. They remain arguidos, official suspects, - as does Robert Murat, a British expat living in Praia da Luz who has strenuously protested his innocence - still supposedly being investigated on the grounds that they may have caused her death or disappearance.
“Intellectually, they have grasped what has happened,” said Gerry’s elder brother, John. “Emotionally, they have learnt, to an extent, to cope: one’s psychology adapts. But they haven’t really come to terms with it. There are times when they can seem cheerful, but then the devastation bursts through. Madeleine’s disappearance is a cataclysm that is horrendous for them, and horrendous for all of us close to them.”
“It’s an intense, full-on existence for both of them,” said the McCanns’ spokesman, Clarence Mitchell. “Gerry is back at work [as a cardiologist] full-time, but when he gets home the campaign to find Madeleine is like having a second job.”
And what of Portugal, Britain’s oldest ally?
“You have to remember: until 1974 Portugal was a dictatorship,” said a veteran Algarve journalist, who asked not to be named. “That was the climate in which the PJ was created. Their methods were pretty rough.”
Rough?
Brutal treatment of suspects was routine. One expatriate British woman told me how a friend of her mother had been arrested in the late Eighties on suspicion of breaking and entering a house - only to be savagely beaten in custody.
“She was bruised all over her body. Of course, the police said they hadn’t done anything, and were never called to account,” the woman said.
Rough. Very rough:
“This is Heartbeat country,” another expat said.
Heartbeat, Why do you miss when my baby kisses me? Greengrass - take him to the ‘pit’
“People talk to the police, and so often they think they know who’s guilty, but can’t prove it. So they make an arrest and turn up the pressure in the hope of getting a confession.”
Portugal. A place of rare dangers:
Thirty miles east of Praia da Luz lies the resort of Albufeira, where a collection of clifftop villas known as Val Novio was once a thriving development, favoured by British expats. Now largely abandoned, it was there, on November 19, 1990, that Rachel Charles, aged nine, went missing.
Neil McKay, a Bafta-winning TV scriptwriter who has specialised in factual dramas about crime, was on holiday nearby with his father at the time. “We were sitting in a bar having a beer one evening,” he recalled.
“This English guy came in, saying a little girl had disappeared two days earlier but the police were refusing to mount a proper search. He said her family wanted every British tourist or expat to meet on the beach at seven next morning to try to find her.
“So we went. There must have been more than 200 of us. Tragically, it didn’t take long to find her body, hidden among some pines.”
Those Portuguese police:
Len Port, now an Algarve publisher who covered the case for The Portugal News, said: “The police search was highly inefficient, as, frankly, was everything else about the case. The way the police handled it was desperately amateurish - and ultimately, a travesty of justice.”
Just as they would later do with the McCanns, the PJ soon hit on a suspect who knew the victim and her family. But according to Port, who attended his trial, it had “no real evidence. It was an unjust trial”.
Robert Murat:
The defendant was Michael Cook, a British expat businessman who had taken part in the search, and in 1992 he was convicted and sentenced to 19 years. Having protested his innocence, he was released in 2002. Last week, he told of his ordeal for the first time.
“This has ruined my life,” he said. “I still carry the scars from the six times I was stabbed in prison; as for the times I had the s*** kicked out of me, I long ago lost count.”
Posted: 20th, April 2008 | In: Madeleine McCann Comments (1,270) | Follow the Comments on our RSS feed: RSS 2.0 | TrackBack | Permalink
Comments





April 21st, 2008 at 8:26 am
the mccann troll saul spreads much disharmony
April 21st, 2008 at 8:22 am
Meercat
Doctors are rubbish at treating asthma in Britain - 2 asthmatics die a week.
I was lucky. I got treated by a Dutch doctor and he thinks exercise is better than drugs.
April 21st, 2008 at 8:19 am
Karen - excellent, like meercat said, its far better not to use ventolin and the like if you can control it naturally
April 21st, 2008 at 8:09 am
113 Karen
That’s a brilliant way to manage a medical condition. I’m going tell my asthmatic friend about it. Makes a nice change from management plans and ventolin.
April 21st, 2008 at 8:05 am
Just_me
I don’t believe in cruelty to innocent humans.
I only go to singing lessons to improve my breathing and prevent Asthma attacks. It works - I haven’t had to use my inhaler for nearly 2 years.
April 21st, 2008 at 8:00 am
Hi & Bye Karen….enjoy your singing
post some on you tube for us!
April 21st, 2008 at 7:59 am
Morning Just_me and Brandon
I have to go now - I’ve got a singing lesson.
I think the raising-awareness thing was always overkill. I have a strong suspicion that Gerry really wanted a media career - it might be crass, but it seems everyone who gets in the news or on T.V. for any reason, wants a media career.
April 21st, 2008 at 7:56 am
Brandon - not just yet, but I doubt it will be long lol
See ya Ade, have a good day
April 21st, 2008 at 7:55 am
off to grease me chain
back later maybe
have fun
April 21st, 2008 at 7:55 am
Not joing me in the ‘hairy anorak divorce’ club then ? lol
Yes thanks I will look forward to it!
The only similarity to me and CSN is that…………………. I cant!!!!!
April 21st, 2008 at 7:52 am
errrr, not quite ok, but not as bad
I’ll pour you one for when you get back
April 21st, 2008 at 7:51 am
Hi Just_me
Everything ok? Ineed a double expresso too!
April 21st, 2008 at 7:50 am
Brandon - it wasnt the same without you yesterday
April 21st, 2008 at 7:50 am
BBL
Have to comb my sideburns
April 21st, 2008 at 7:50 am
Morning Brandon - good post. Why would anyone need to raise awareness here, or anywhere else, I dont think anyone on the planet needs reminding after it was thrust in our faces for months on end.
April 21st, 2008 at 7:49 am
Whoops!!!
Sorry a day off anorak and my fingers go ally funny
April 21st, 2008 at 7:48 am
DuncanR
Bye.
April 21st, 2008 at 7:47 am
* Published Date: 21 April 2008
*
* Location: Hastings
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Compassion fatigue
On Reflection with Julia Taylor
On Reflection with Julia Taylor
On Reflection with Julia Taylor
Click on thumbnail to view image
By Julia Taylor
Almost a year ago, when Madeleine McCann went missing, I was genuinely saddened by her disappearance.
But now I’m not.
That sounds heartless doesn’t it? I don’t mean it to, because nothing should detract from the fact that a child went missing, and had it been my child, or someone I knew, I would still be heartbroken 12 months later.
When I studied the sociology of news at university (I know, I could have been finding a cure for cancer, but unfortunately my brain was geared to more Mickey Mouse matters), a phrase that was bandied about was “compassion fatigue”.
Briefly, this is what happens when the national media cover an event to such an extent as to saturate the news with it, until the point where the average person is so bored by the coverage of it that they become apathetic.
I think
it came to a head for me when I was working in Essex, and several bored housewives decided they would mark the 100th day since Madeleine went missing with the release of 100 balloons on a school playing field.
I think my first question was, well, why?
And the chief bored housewife organiser did not have an answer.
Okay she did. Her answer was: “To raise awareness.”
This was at a point where, even three months after her disappearance, she was still in the press. Awareness? In Braintree? Why?
It was sad then, and it still is now, but I can’t bring myself to feel any grief for one particular missing child.
I guess I’m partly to blame for covering these unnecessary awareness-raising events, when it’s got to a point now where a family’s grief should remain private.
I think the time has come now when the whole issue should be (excuse the turn of phrase) put to bed.
April 21st, 2008 at 7:44 am
Karen/Ade
Have to log off now and go to work.
One of the other Moderators will answer any other questions you have - if you ask nicely
April 21st, 2008 at 7:44 am
Morning All
- suffering from severe lack of sleep, double espresso needed methinks
April 21st, 2008 at 7:44 am
DuncanR
Was it like Dog Borstal - but for Mods?
Did you get treats if you remembered the libel laws?
April 21st, 2008 at 7:42 am
Ade
‘are all mods off their rockers?
+++++++++++++++++++
It helps !!!
April 21st, 2008 at 7:38 am
are all mods off their rockers?
was it foretrolled?
_____________________________
prerequisite
-meercat
April 21st, 2008 at 7:32 am
1093 - Karen
++++++++++++++++++++++
It’s a painful process !!!
April 21st, 2008 at 7:25 am
Duncan R
How come Mods are mods? How does it happen?
April 21st, 2008 at 7:21 am
1086 - meercat
++++++++++++++++++
Sorry the biscuit tin’s empty
(Think June ate them all!)
April 21st, 2008 at 6:55 am
Sorry, no time for pleasantries or to read over 1000 comments.
I hope someone else commented on this.
“Says McCanns’ spokesman Clarence Mitchell: “We haven’t heard through official channels if they are considering this charge. But you’d have to ask yourself, ‘Why now?’””
So it isn’t official, so is saying they’re going to charge her with neglect, as is just, but G should be included, too, but since I’m choking, I feel certain this is another smokescreen. Yawn.
Oh yeah, as to “why now” it should have happened wayyyyy before now.
April 21st, 2008 at 5:37 am
Truly, I have never worn a slip!
April 21st, 2008 at 5:18 am
Leave them on Duncan, the next shift is on the bus - I’ll spruce up the parlour.
April 21st, 2008 at 5:17 am
Yes, so sorry to disturb your slumber.
Enjoy your remaining minutes and seconds.