Author Topic: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann  (Read 1364750 times)

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Offline pegasus

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2775 on: March 27, 2014, 03:55:50 PM »
Bold bit: MSM speak for "The same landmass"
Yes they turned 28.8 miles into "close to". Let's be thankful they did not say "inches away from PDL".

Estuarine

  • Guest
Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2776 on: March 27, 2014, 05:37:05 PM »
Yes they turned 28.8 miles into "close to". Let's be thankful they did not say "inches away from PDL".

Well it is only inches (mm)  on the map.

icabodcrane

  • Guest
Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2777 on: March 31, 2014, 12:25:26 AM »
There is an interesting article in The Algarve News,  written by journalist Len Port

I'm  hopeless at cut and paste,  but has anyone here read that recent article,  and care to comment on it  ? 

Offline Wonderfulspam

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2778 on: March 31, 2014, 12:29:28 AM »


Update: Madeleine McCann’s case in a right old muddle – by Len Port

News of the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann seems to be going round in circles. ‘Revelations’ turn out to be old stories recycled. ‘Key suspects’ come and go and are then brought back again. ‘New leads’ seem to be leading nowhere.
 
The British newspaper Mirror on March 25 declared: “Mirror investigation reveals that sicko David Reid was hiding in the Algarve at the time Madeleine McCann was taken from Praia da Luz.” The Daily Mail followed with much the same story.
 
Far from this being news, Reid’s criminal record and presence in the Algarve village of Carvoeiro was written about by the News of the World in 2006. Similar reports appeared in newspapers in Portugal in May 2008.
 
A popular musician and well-known locally as ‘Irish Dave’, Reid admitted he had served 18 months of a three-year sentence for indecent assault and gross indecency, as a result of complaints from his own children.
 
But he insisted he was not a pedophile and told reporters in 2008 he was “glad the skeletons are out of the closet.” He hoped people would let him “live in peace.”
 
Of course he was not counting on a ‘revelation’ as a result of a Mirror ‘investigation’ six years on.
 
The gist of the latest statement from the Met police in London on their investigation also sounded remarkably similar to what has long been in the public domain, but the so-called ‘quality’ press, along with the tabloids, churned it out as if it were not only a hot new lead, but even “a breakthrough.”

The Met statement appealed for further information on “a potential linked series of twelve crimes which occurred between 2004 and 2010, mostly in low season, whereby a male intruder has gained access to mainly holiday villas occupied by UK families on holiday in the Western Algarve.”
 
In four of the cases, the intruder is alleged to have sexually assaulted five white girls, aged between seven and ten years, in their beds.
 
Senior ex-police officers, led by former detective inspector Dave Edgar and hired by parents Kate and Gerry, looked into sexual attacks on at least five English girls between 2004 and 2007. Their findings were described in some detail by the News of the World in May 2009.
 
Kate McCann also wrote about the assaults in her book published in May 2012: “One of the most concerning and upsetting pieces of information to emerge quite early was the record of sexual crimes against children in the Algarve. This discovery made me feel physically sick. I read of five cases of British children on holiday being sexually abused in their beds while their parents slept in another room. In three further incidents, children encountered an intruder in their bedrooms, who was presumably disturbed before he had the chance to carry out an assault.”
 
Yet even The Times last week felt moved to report that “A sex attacker who preyed on young British girls holidaying with their families on the Algarve is a key suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann seven years ago, police said today.”
 
Other “key” suspects over the past few months have included Gypsies, British cleaners, bogus East European charity workers and two mystery German-speaking men, but according to the latest Met statement, witnesses described the supposedly lone sex attacker as “having dark (as in tanned skin) with short dark unkempt hair.”
 
The Met did not identify the latest “key” suspect, but a headline in the Guardian the day after the Met appeal read: “Madeleine McCann suspect died in 2009.”
 
It called this a “revelation” gleaned from “a source close to Portuguese investigators.”
 
We had read it all before, of course.
 
Early last November, the Daily Mail, among many other papers, named and carried a photograph of a 40-year-old black African, saying the Portuguese police believed he may have killed Madeleine two years before he died in a tractor accident.
 
This disclosure came soon after all the BBC Crimewatch fuss over new e-fit images that turn out not be new at all, depicting a man who certainly did not look like a black African.
 
The Guardian’s source said the dead man had been at the center of Portuguese police inquiries since they reopened the case last October, but they had not drawn any definite conclusions about him.
 
He “could” have been involved in the five assaults on white girls – and even the disappearance of Madeleine – but it was no more than a “possibility,” the source said.
 
The Guardian also ran a story last week headlined: “Madeleine McCann: a breakthrough that could be devastating.”
 
It did not mean devastating to the widow of the smeared African, a man with no record of child molestation and no opportunity to defend himself.
 
The Guardian explained that by identifying a series of sex attacks, the Met Police had made a breakthrough in its investigation, but that based on similar cases, “it could mean an end to hopes that Madeleine is alive.”
 
It is a hope many have long abandoned. Even Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood, the senior British investigating officer, has conceded she may have died in the apartment.
 
Portuguese detectives and prosecutors, as well as specialist British investigators and a British police dog handler, came to that conclusion years ago.
 
The former lead detective in the original Portugal investigation, Gonçalo Amaral, reiterated in a recent interview his firm belief that Madeleine died in the apartment the same day or night she disappeared.
 
As reported in the Algarve Resident, he claimed his investigation was marred by high-level political involvement, which left DNA samples untested and key witnesses overlooked.
 
Amaral and his many supporters completely reject the notion that Madeleine was abducted – and, indeed, there is no hard evidence to support the theory.
 
In using the term ‘abduction’ or ‘kidnapping’ of Madeleine McCann, the mainstream media rarely qualify this assertion with words such as ‘alleged,’ ‘possible’ or ‘suspected.’
 
Nor were such words used when Redwood said last week: “The Metropolitan Police Service continues to offer a reward of up to £20,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the abduction of Madeleine McCann from Praia da Luz, Portugal on May 3rd, 2007.”
 
Twenty thousand pounds! It’s a far cry from the £2.5 million reward offered within days of Madeleine’s disappearance, and a drop in the ocean compared to the millions Kate and Gerry have since received in donations, on top of the amount the Met has spent so far in its fruitless search.

http://portuguese-american-journal.com/update-madeleine-case-in-a-right-old-muddle-by-len-port/
I stand with Putin. Glory to Mother Putin.

icabodcrane

  • Guest
Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2779 on: March 31, 2014, 01:29:29 AM »
Thankyou WS

Quite a fearless little article,  isn't it  ?   

...  and nothing in it that can be denied either 

Offline sadie

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2780 on: March 31, 2014, 01:33:51 AM »
Yes they turned 28.8 miles into "close to". Let's be thankful they did not say "inches away from PDL".
Not far by car, especially if he lived in between.

Offline pegasus

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2781 on: March 31, 2014, 03:16:20 AM »
Quote
The Metropolitan Police Service continues to offer a reward of up to £20,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the abduction of Madeleine McCann from Praia da Luz, Portugal on May 3rd, 2007.
IMO it would make sense to change one word to "disappearance".
It's a suitably generic word, which avoids predicting the solution before it's solved, and should not offend anyone.

Offline jassi

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2782 on: March 31, 2014, 08:19:31 AM »
IMO it would make sense to change one word to "disappearance".
It's a suitably generic word, which avoids predicting the solution before it's solved, and should not offend anyone.

It certainly would, but any such change now would be leaped upon as a significant departure from previously, even if it were just tidying up official language. Then we'd then have endless argument over exactly what it signified.

I believe everything. And l believe nothing.
I suspect everyone. And l suspect no one.
I gather the facts, examine the clues... and before   you know it, the case is solved!"

Or maybe not -

OG have been pushed out by the Germans who have reserved all the deck chairs for the foreseeable future

Offline Mr Gray

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2783 on: March 31, 2014, 08:27:48 AM »
It certainly would, but any such change now would be leaped upon as a significant departure from previously, even if it were just tidying up official language. Then we'd then have endless argument over exactly what it signified.

good point and absolutely true

Offline sadie

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2784 on: March 31, 2014, 10:03:56 AM »
IMO it would make sense to change one word to "disappearance".
It's a suitably generic word, which avoids predicting the solution before it's solved, and should not offend anyone.
In general terms "disappearance" is fine, but when describing the reward of £20,000, that is for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the abduction of Madeleine McCann. 

The word there has to be abduction, cos that is what they are talking about the reward being for.



Offline slartibartfast

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2785 on: March 31, 2014, 01:23:01 PM »
In general terms "disappearance" is fine, but when describing the reward of £20,000, that is for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the abduction of Madeleine McCann. 

The word there has to be abduction, cos that is what they are talking about the reward being for.

A reward of £20,000, that is for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the disappearance  of Madeleine McCann. 

Seems to work.
“Reasoning will never make a Man correct an ill Opinion, which by Reasoning he never acquired”.

Offline sadie

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2786 on: March 31, 2014, 01:50:33 PM »
A reward of £20,000, that is for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the disappearance  of Madeleine McCann. 

Seems to work.
Yep, I guess you are right, but it doesn't have an urgent ring to it..

But they are after an abductor, so why not use the proper word?  It has much more urgency about it too.

Offline John

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2787 on: March 31, 2014, 11:49:47 PM »
This is a direct quote from the Met website...

The Metropolitan Police Service continues to offer a reward of up to £20,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the person(s) responsible for the abduction of Madeleine McCann from Praia da Luz, Portugal on 3 May 2007. "

Surely the use of the term 'abduction' is not compatible with the comment made last week by SY that Madeleine might not have left the apartment alive.

www.met.police.uk/madeleine-mccann-appeal/
A malicious prosecution for a crime which never existed. An exposé of egregious malfeasance by public officials.
Indeed, the truth never changes with the passage of time.

stephen25000

  • Guest
« Last Edit: April 01, 2014, 08:51:29 AM by stephen25000 »

Offline Wonderfulspam

Re: Latest news on the search for Madeleine McCann
« Reply #2789 on: April 01, 2014, 09:04:08 AM »
The Portugal Resident
31 March 2014

 
As British television networks once again descend on Praia da Luz in the run-up to the seventh anniversary since Madeleine McCann went missing, a local resident has come out fighting.

"It's time to turn things round," she told us. "Every year it is the same ... British journalists arrive and dredge up more nonsense about Luz. We are meant to be overrun with child molesters, burglars, homosexuals, Eastern European child-snatchers ... Whatever next? Will it be the Taliban?

"They are back again now and this time they have interviewed a homeless person and a 'prophet'," the long-term resident told us on Saturday. "They have paid for these interviews. Now, they are apparently looking for a well-known gay man.

"These are the stories the British newspapers are looking for! They are not interested in the views of the real people of Luz - all of whom are fed up to the back teeth with the village being shown in such a bad light."

The "homeless person" - a "perfectly pleasant man, but never sober" - is not a representational figure of local residents, explained the woman, and the "prophet" is someone who wears a turban and "walks around with a pole with a light on the top of it".

"Neither can be considered typical Luz residents, but nor are they in any way threats to the community," she added.

The expat woman, who asked not to be named as she has "no wish to be a hero", said: "It is time Luz had a voice."

"Last year, when the news people were asking questions as they do every year, I went up to the interviewer and said I would like to say a word or two.

"I said I wanted to know why they weren't interviewing the McCanns for gross negligence that had led to a fatal result. He just dropped me because they don't want to hear anything like that. They only want to report about people they can label as "weirdos".

"Quite honestly, I feel it is time Luz turned round and sued the McCanns for slander.

"I would like to stand as a voice for Luz. Who will want to come here after all the negative publicity? The British newspapers paint the village as one full of terrible people. This is grotesquely unfair. It has got to stop!"

As is so often the case, concern over speaking out has left this voice of Luz for now unnamed. She told us "everyone feels the same" - and behind the scenes few would disagree.

A high-ranking staff member at Luz Ocean Club told the Resident earlier this year: "Luz has taken such a battering over the last seven years. It really is time to do something for this community - help it rally round." But, like the anonymous "voice of Luz", the man asked not to be identified.

Meantime, the Ocean Club is one of the prime movers behind a community triathlon event planned later this month precisely to promote the picturesque village "before the holiday season gets underway".

http://portugalresident.com/%E2%80%98please-help-luz%E2%80%99-plea-as-madeleine-%E2%80%9Ccircus%E2%80%9D-descends-on-village-again
« Last Edit: April 02, 2014, 03:54:08 AM by John »
I stand with Putin. Glory to Mother Putin.