
Our Madeleine McCann: Colin Stagg, Mad Dogs And Lucy Cavendish, And Amaral’s True Lies
MADDIE WATCH - Anorak’s at-a-glance guide to press coverage of Madeleine McCann
SUNDAY PEOPLE: “We’ll savage bungling cops on Oprah [Winfrey] show - CLEARED McCANNS VOW TV ONSLAUGHT”
Cleared?
“At noon tomorrow a judge will formally lift the cloud of suspicion.”
Is that a fact?
The couple are likely to focus their fury on top cop Goncalo Amaral, who was kicked off the Madeleine case last October following allegations of incompetence and attacks on his British police counterparts.
“I’LL NEVER HAVE MY LIFE BACK – MURAT” - ‘I don’t know if I will ever be able to shake off the stigma of being ‘that Maddie man‘.”
“People say there is no smoke without fire and there may always be some who still doubt me. I have to live with that for the rest of my life.”
Let’s play a game of word association: Colin Stagg.
He’s the one set up by those bungling UK cops. Colin Stagg was accused of murdering Rachel Nickell on Wimbledon Common. Colin Stagg is innocent.
There being no forensic evidence, they were forced to look for likely suspects, and in Colin Stagg they found a man who ideally suited the tabloid agenda. He was runtish and rat-like, and yet also into body-building. He lived on his own. He was given to wearing dodgy-looking singlets and he was a devotee of the ancient pagan religion called Wicca. He had a picture of the Cerne Abbas giant inscribed on a black-painted wall in his flat.
Someone said that they had seen him, or a man very like him, on the common on the morning of the murder - and that was enough.
SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY: “After 445 days of missing Maddie, cloud of suspicion over parents lifts”
Tomorrow Kate and Gerry McCann hope the suspicion that they played a role in her disappearance from a Portuguese beach resort will finally – and officially – be lifted.
Hope? But in The People it’s a fact?
The Portuguese authorities are believed to be ready to remove the official arguido – suspect – status from the couple and clear them of any involvement in Madeleine’s disappearance from Praia de Luz in May last year.
Believed.
SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: “Madeleine McCann abduction leaves family holidays haunted by fear”
The exodus to the sun starts this weekend - but since the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, parents are feeling paranoid about the safety of their offspring. Foreigners think we are mad, reports Lucy Cavendish from Mallorca
Mad pervs and Englishmen…
Says Lucy Cavendish:
You can always spot the English abroad. Not by the way they dress or their sunburnt skin but by how protective they are of their children.
Always!
“I feel I can’t leave my children alone for a second,” says Joanne Brown as she sits in a café next to the beach at Port de Soller in Mallorca. “It’s a nightmare. I’ve always been conscious of where my children are on holiday, but now I feel much more aware of them. If I shut my eyes for a moment, I feel terrified that they won’t be there when I open them.
Abracadabra. Fish ‘n’ chips. Poof!
But ever since last May, when three-year-old Madeleine McCann disappeared from her bedroom in Praia da Luz, Portugal, there is an almost tangible parental fear that underlies family holidays: that someone will take our children and we will never see them again.
Matchsticks in the eyes. Don’t dare to look away.
Post-Maddie, holidaying abroad has become a minefield. The parameters have shifted. Where once parents might have left children in a play area/on the beach/in a café while they quickly whipped off to go to the loo/order a meal/get some drinks, now we dare not. We reappraise all the time, scan people’s faces on beaches, by the swimming pool, in the play area. We are constantly asking ourselves: who is safe? What is safe? Are kids’ clubs fine? Are the staff vetted properly?
Anorak advocates the CoZee Reins – modelled on the penal system of Alabama, these handy chains with optional heavy ball attachment ensure the kidz are kept within shouting distance.
Tell Armani to “come ‘ere or I‘m, gonna kill yer”, and see her find no way of escape”.
On holiday with the Lucy Cavendishes:
One night, my 11-year-old son asked if he and his brothers, aged five and three, could sleep in this separate room. “Of course!” I replied.
Later on, when they were asleep, I got myself into a terrible panic. My eldest son had said he didn’t want to lock the door in case any of them needed to go to the loo in the night. This seemed to make sense.
At 2am, I woke up in a hot sweat. I imagined nameless, faceless marauders creeping up from the beach, slipping into the place and making off with one of them.
I woke my husband up. “The boys are ALONE!” I screamed. “It’s not going to happen here,” he said, immediately knowing what I was referring to. “This is Devon.”
But, as every parent now knows, it doesn’t matter if it’s Devon or Praia da Luz. Everyone is afraid of the stranger, the person out there who, in our minds, wants to steal and harm our children.
Was that her husband screaming?
THE GUARDIAN: “Madeleine police chief to launch ‘explosive’ book”
Gonçalo Amaral, who was chief of the criminal investigation police for the Algarve region, has scheduled a news conference in Lisbon on Thursday to launch the book, just three days after the widely expected announcement tomorrow that the case is being shelved by prosecutors for lack of evidence.
In the book, provisionally entitled True Lies, Amaral is also likely to reopen his assault on the role of the British police in the investigation. He has publicly suggested that they were influenced throughout by the leads which Madeleine’s parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, wanted pursued.
He is said to be convinced that Madeleine is dead, while the McCanns have continued to press investigators to follow the trail of potential kidnappers and ensure their daughter’s safe return.
THE SUNDAY TIMES: “Murder most modern- Kate Summerscale’s prize-winning account of an 1860 killing shows how little we’ve changed”
Ed Caesar looks at the 1860 murder of Saville Kent in The Suspicions of Mr Whicher.
What is most striking about her account (and this, perhaps, is what won the judges’ favour) is that it echoes contemporary culture. The huge interest in, and continual theorising about, the disappearance of an infant; the castigation of detectives for their incompetence; the swings of compassion towards or against suspects — all mirror the case of our own missing child, Madeleine McCann.
Our Maddie.
SUNDAY HERALD: “Courts make editors think hard before delving into private lives - Judiciary increasingly taking the view that public interest must be stronger than potential harm”
Although Madeleine McCann “aguido” Robert Murat’s £600,000 payout last week from 11 newspapers after successfully suing for the separate offence of defamation, editors are being forcefully reminded to think longer and harder about what stories papers can and should run.
Indeed. A current story in Correio da Manha has not repeated in the UK press about the case.
Posted: 20th, July 2008 | In: Broadsheets, Madeleine McCann, Tabloids Comments (431) | Follow the Comments on our RSS feed: RSS 2.0 | TrackBack | Permalink
Comments





July 20th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
Chenier
I’m sure I read a conversation between Duncan and Saul - something about making the purple tutu’s short enough to distract from the occasional duff note ( or was that Duff beer? )
July 20th, 2008 at 12:04 pm
What a beautiful dog! look at that!
NOT for people who are allergic to doggies tho”
English defended the use of the dogs - Correio da Manhã
Traces – Finding the trail of a death changed the direction of the investigation
http://joana-morais.blogspot.com/2008/07/english-defended-use-of-dogs-correio-da.html
July 20th, 2008 at 12:03 pm
Ps I hope you can bloody well sing - you’re the lead in next years Eurovision entry.
——————————————-
I see; those earplugs DuncanR has been handing out had better be good…
July 20th, 2008 at 12:00 pm
Chenier
Good thinking batman!
Ps I hope you can bloody well sing - you’re the lead in next years Eurovision entry.
July 20th, 2008 at 12:00 pm
DuncanR
The smoothing iron? gee…. dangerous household that is! ironing Coco”s giant blue sardines?
July 20th, 2008 at 11:58 am
‘a fully armed guard of private detectives’
Not enough; enlist the ghurkas in DuncanR’s garden.
They may not be very tall but I’d back them against M3 any day…
July 20th, 2008 at 11:58 am
The 404 error is wonderfully ironic!
July 20th, 2008 at 11:56 am
chenier
aye…what a headache,those 2 aint they?
I think you sing rather well
July 20th, 2008 at 11:56 am
âde says…
“i do hope they blab freely on the oprah show
and set themselves up for slander cases
excellent fun
they just can’t help being complete arseholes
every time they open their whiney mouths”
Yes, as this sad tale has unwound it has become increasingly clear that the McCanns have very shallow philosophies… I think that it is possible that they believe that they are telling the truth and doing the right things… only they cannot really tell right from wrong. Scary that they are doctors, and responsible for the well-being of others, but then this is not entirely surprising.
They were responsible for the well-being of their children, too.
Many people I know that are successful in a financial and social way are very shallow - they achieved these things because it is all that they focused on. Others are capable of focusing on deeper things, and are therefore dismissed as less successful by those who cannot see beneath the veneer.
This is not to say that successful people are all shallow! Some are not, far from it. But many are… and you can identify them as the ones that can’t spot the ironies in financial and social success. They are the ones that spend beyond their means and try to make their kids into things that they don’t want to be in order to keep up the veneer. These are the ones that have children because they make good fashion accessories. They are the ones that have their pets killed (euphemism: put to sleep) when they become inconvenient.
July 20th, 2008 at 11:56 am
DuncanR ….. ‘Tis an ill wind that blows a whiff of sardines through the air. Big sardines and … aliens ……
July 20th, 2008 at 11:55 am
Noseycow Says:
July 20th, 2008 at 11:50 am
Jo
You don’t think I’d let my gorgeous daughter anywhere near that place without a fully armed guard of private detectives do you?
) and a bloke from the Hacienda(spanish tax) to make sure the work is carried out correctly
******
Dont wowwy…I”ll put my boots on
I”ll call M3.They will come with stuffed prawns (for lunch,hope she is not allergic to…fraud tho”
404 first,gosh I forget every single time
July 20th, 2008 at 11:54 am
Jo,
It’s me who needs to know; one of my personal quirks.
Though I’m not the singer…
July 20th, 2008 at 11:52 am
Duncan
You sure you haven’t been living in my closet? that descriptions sounds frighteningly familiar.
July 20th, 2008 at 11:52 am
Jo - I’m here - never fear! The dog’s just decided to conk out now. But will be here for another wee while!
July 20th, 2008 at 11:51 am
chenier
err…who needs to know? the mccanns? dont they already know?
Let me do a 404 before posting please…. grr
July 20th, 2008 at 11:51 am
Noseycow Says
Are you on ‘duty’ at the moment?
++++++++++++++++++++++
No.
I’m dashing away with the smoothing iron - and staring out at a ‘jungle’. ( I’m sure I just saw some Gurkha’s lurking amongst that grass !!! )
Just popped by on my way to get the next pile out of the tumble dryer (sigh)
July 20th, 2008 at 11:50 am
Jo
You don’t think I’d let my gorgeous daughter anywhere near that place without a fully armed guard of private detectives do you?
July 20th, 2008 at 11:48 am
bye matt
9 sharp tomorow
July 20th, 2008 at 11:48 am
Noseycow Says:
July 20th, 2008 at 11:42 am
Duncan
NO! she’s got to do mine first!
*****
…bbbut…didnt you say she was going to rothley first?to moan the lawn?
July 20th, 2008 at 11:46 am
# âde Says:
July 20th, 2008 at 11:37 am
brandon flours Says:
July 20th, 2008 at 11:33 am
Oh Well have to get ready for mass, funny how I slink in the back, and hide behind St Jude
there’s a place called st judes in plymouth
someone told me st jude is the patron saint of lost causes
or maybe she was trying to tell me something…
————————–
No shes right, thats why I hide behind him. All the truly sorrowful sinners lurk there
No priest has managed to prise me off him yet
July 20th, 2008 at 11:45 am
Coco…you re back?
July 20th, 2008 at 11:45 am
Duncan
Are you on ‘duty’ at the moment? smiles sweetly
July 20th, 2008 at 11:43 am
see you later matt
July 20th, 2008 at 11:42 am
Duncan
NO! she’s got to do mine first!
July 20th, 2008 at 11:41 am
Time for town.
Good sleuthing !!!!
July 20th, 2008 at 11:39 am
Noseycow Says
daughter has just ‘offered’ to mow the lawn
++++++++++++++++++++
While she’s in the mood, tell her to come round do mine !
July 20th, 2008 at 11:37 am
brandon flours Says:
July 20th, 2008 at 11:33 am
Oh Well have to get ready for mass, funny how I slink in the back, and hide behind St Jude
there’s a place called st judes in plymouth
someone told me st jude is the patron saint of lost causes
or maybe she was trying to tell me something…
July 20th, 2008 at 11:34 am
Dilema’s dilema’s daughter has just ‘offered’ to mow the lawn - later.
Now I know that when the boys get back from footy training she’ll be ensconced in guitar hero or off on her bike with them and it won’t get done. But do I risk offending her and doing it myself???
Wheres that Parenting book the mcc’s promised us?
July 20th, 2008 at 11:33 am
well, this just about sums it up…
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=q8PG1lT99Fo
July 20th, 2008 at 11:33 am
Oh Well have to get ready for mass, funny how I slink in the back, and hide behind St Jude and I have hardly done anything that wrong
…. yet some people just skip past noses in the air and sit right at the front all pious and smug!!!