Author Topic: Whatever happened to the crack team of ex-FBI agents hired by the McCanns?  (Read 14385 times)

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Offline Admin

Whatever happened to the crack team of ex-FBI agents hired by the McCanns?

13 August 2008

Kate and Gerry McCann have hired a team of crack U.S detectives to lead the hunt for their missing daughter Madeleine, it has emerged.

The unnamed US firm is said to have been offered a £500,000 six-month contract by the Find Madeleine Fun to help spearhead the search.

A friend of the McCanns said: 'The hunt for Madeleine is becoming more and more international and it was felt that a truly international firm was now needed to lead the inquiry.

"These really are the big boys. They are absolutely the best, but they are extremely secretive and cloak-and-dagger about what they do.

'Since their appointment, Metodo has very much taken a back seat and they are now concentrating primarily in Portugal and Spain and across the Straits of Gibraltar into north Africa, where they have their main contacts.

'The American agency is pretty much handling everything else.'

The secretive firm is said to employ ex-FBI, CIA and U.S special forces, according to the Daily Mirror.

The McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell, said: 'Kate and Gerry made it clear from the outset they would leave no stone unturned in finding Madeleine and that means employing the very best people in any given field.

'It is correct that an international firm of investigators have been appointed.

'But I am unable to say anything at all about them because of the covert nature of their work and the need for secrecy, not only in looking for Madeleine, but also in relation to previous operations.'

The McCanns now have detectives working around the world at a reported cost of £166,000 a month.

Among the possible sightings they are following up, apparently ignored by Portuguese police, is one by a British yachtsman on the Caribbean island of Margarita last May.

The appointment of the U.S firm comes after it was revealed that a suspected sighting of Madeleine in Brussels was ruled out by police.

A blonde girl had been seen with a woman in a hijab at the KBC bank in the Belgium capital and the McCanns had been treating the sighting as a priority.

However their hopes were dashed when a man came forward and confirmed that the girl was his daughter out with her nanny.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1044260/McCanns-hire-crack-team-ex-FBI-agents-Madeleine.html

Offline Mo Stache

The 6 month contract came to and end. And seeing we never heard of them again, it would appear the contract was not renewed for a further term. 

Offline faithlilly

The 6 month contract came to and end. And seeing we never heard of them again, it would appear the contract was not renewed for a further term.

But who were they ? Does Kate mention them in her book ?
Brietta posted on 10/04/2022 “But whether or not that is the reason behind the delay I am certain that Brueckner's trial is going to take place.”

Let’s count the months, shall we?

Offline Mo Stache

Madeleine fund in chaos as private eyes are axed after draining £500,000, 23 August 2008
By DANIEL BOFFEY and MILES GOSLETT
Last updated at 10:14 PM on 23rd August 2008



A team of private investigators working behind the scenes to find Madeleine McCann has been axed after being paid £500,000 from publicly donated funds.

The Find Madeleine Fund quietly engaged the services of a US-based company which was awarded the lucrative six-month contract earlier this year.

The company, Oakley International, which boasts former British security service and FBI contacts, was hired to monitor the Madeleine Hotline, carry out detective work and review CCTV footage of possible sightings of the missing girl around the world.

A source revealed that the company had also spent resources in an attempt to infiltrate a paedophile ring in Belgium.

However, the company's contract will now not be renewed. The Mail on Sunday has learned that double-glazing tycoon Brian Kennedy, who has been underwriting the fund's search for Madeleine, has conducted a review of the agency's work and has become unhappy with the progress it was making.

The deal was abruptly ended following a meeting last week after the fund brought in independent monitors to assess how the money was spent.

The cost of employing the agency - run by a Briton, Kevin Halligen - has drained the Madeleine fund and there is now less than £500,000 left.

The development is likely to dismay the thousands who gave to the appeal, and raise questions about how the fund has been administered.

Mr Kennedy, who owns Sale Sharks rugby club, was said to be 'angry' because he believed Oakley's bills, estimated to be more than £80,000 a month, were too much for the results they achieved.

A source said: 'There is a sense that they were meaning well but hadn't got as far as they should for the money involved.

'Brian Kennedy thought their work was far too pricey and wanted to know where the money was being spent. He wasn't satisfied with their answers and the contract was not renewed.

'Madeleine's parents, Gerry and Kate, have been kept informed all along and agree with the decision. A lot of people were asking questions about where the money was being spent.'

Oakley International won the contract after an introduction by another company, Red Defence International (RDI), based in Jermyn Street, Central London.

Listed as being involved with both companies was Mr Halligen, 47, a communications expert. He is given as the 'contact name' for Oakley International Group, a company registered in Washington DC as the manufacturer of search and navigation equipment.

The company says it has annual sales of £33,000 and only one employee, who appears to be Mr Halligen.

The address given for the company is 2550 M Street NW Washington, which is the downtown office of Patton Boggs, one of the largest and most powerful law companies in America.

A source at the law firm said last night that the lawyer who represented Mr Halligen was unavailable for comment.

RDI, formed in 2005, bills itself as 'an experienced provider of crisis prevention, management and expertise'. It claims to have a presence in Washington DC and Virginia and representation in the Middle East, Africa and Central America.

However, its latest set of accounts is two months overdue and it faces being fined by HM Revenue & Customs.

Among the main players working on the McCann contract were Mr Halligen and Henri Exton, 57, who headed the Greater Manchester Police undercover unit until 1993. He then worked for the Government before moving into the private sector.

One day after a crisis meeting last week with the Madeleine fund administrators, Mr Halligen resigned as a director of RDI.

Mr Exton, of Bury, Lancashire, has the Queen’s Police Medal and an OBE. During the Seventies and Eighties his work included uncovering organised crime rings and recruiting supergrasses.

He also infiltrated football gangs, at one stage becoming a leader of the Young Guvnors, who followed Manchester City, and was forced to take part in organised incidents to preserve his cover.

Previously, the McCann fund had employed a Spanish detective agency called Metodo 3. However, the fund lost confidence in them, especially after they announced they would find Madeleine by last Christmas.

She had disappeared from the resort of Praia da Luz, Portugal, on May 3, 2007, nine days short of her fourth birthday.

A spokesman for the McCanns said yesterday: 'Kate and Gerry, the fund and their backers have always sought to employ the very best people and resources in the ongoing search for Madeleine.

'Kate and Gerry, via the fund and the backers, continue to employ many such resources and it is true that Red Defence and Oakley were part of those resources.

'I simply will not comment on any personnel, financial or operational details whatsoever.'

No one could be reached for comment at Oakley International or Red Defence International.

Mr Kennedy, estimated to be worth about £250million, became involved after being moved by the plight of the McCanns during the period they were made formal suspects – arguidos – in Madeleine's disappearance. Portuguese prosecutors dropped the couple's arguido status last month.

The 47-year-old made his money in double-glazing and home improvement ventures with companies including Everest windows. His Latium Group business empire has an annual turnover of about £400million.
- Telegraph & Daily Mail (no longer available on line) August 2008
« Last Edit: June 03, 2013, 04:22:00 PM by Admin »

Offline Mo Stache

Admin
I think you will find that the thread topic has been asked and answered.


amaraltheofficeboy

  • Guest
The 6 month contract came to and end. And seeing we never heard of them again, it would appear the contract was not renewed for a further term.

But who were they ? Does Kate mention them in her book ?

haven't you read the book?

Offline gilet

The 6 month contract came to and end. And seeing we never heard of them again, it would appear the contract was not renewed for a further term.

But who were they ? Does Kate mention them in her book ?

haven't you read the book?

If you have read the  book, then why did you ask the question?

amaraltheofficeboy

  • Guest
The 6 month contract came to and end. And seeing we never heard of them again, it would appear the contract was not renewed for a further term.

But who were they ? Does Kate mention them in her book ?

haven't you read the book?

If you have read the  book, then why did you ask the question?

and if she hasn't read the book - why not and why refer to it?

Offline faithlilly

The 6 month contract came to and end. And seeing we never heard of them again, it would appear the contract was not renewed for a further term.

But who were they ? Does Kate mention them in her book ?

haven't you read the book?

If you have read the  book, then why did you ask the question?

And if you wait for an answer to a question before posing another you tend to look less silly.  @)(++(*
Brietta posted on 10/04/2022 “But whether or not that is the reason behind the delay I am certain that Brueckner's trial is going to take place.”

Let’s count the months, shall we?

Offline Eleanor

Metodo3 did not say that they would find Madeleine by Christmas.  They actually said that they "Hoped" to find her by that time.
Meanwhile, The McCanns had very little choice as an independent investigation was forbidden in Portugal, so they went to a Spanish Company as being the nearest.

Halligen was a crook. as we all now know, but he didn't appear to be at the time.

Offline Admin

Oakley International.

This firm was run by Kevin Halligen and came highly recommended to the McCanns.  In her book however, Kate McCann describes the association as a "bad experience".  Kevin Halligen was later arrested on suspicion of fraud and is currently on remand at Belmarsh prison where he is fighting extradition to the US where he is wanted on charges for money-laundering and wire-fraud.

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/crime/article1877536.ece
« Last Edit: June 03, 2013, 04:29:07 PM by Admin »

amaraltheofficeboy

  • Guest
I think most people interested in the Mccann case are well aware of that admin.

Offline Mo Stache

Just for clarity - Metodo 3 and the "crack team of ex-FBI agents hired by the McCanns" are not the one and the same.

Offline Mrs. B

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/kevin-halligen-madeleine-mccann-parents-1895650

Kevin Halligen: Madeleine McCann parents may sue fraudster accused of £300,000 fund con


Offline gilet

Halligen was a con man of the lowest order. He conned lots of people including major corporations and possibly even governments. That he should have chosen to con the parents of a missing child is despicable.