I think the provenance that an inquiry into the handling of Madeleine McCann's case by the PJ was certainly warranted at the time is that when the case was reviewed there were found to be so many avenues for investigation which had not been pursued at the time.
The incompetence of the initial investigation certainly warranted an internal inquiry ... which perhaps happened to an extent if Goncalo Amaral's dismissal from the case is anything to go by.
The disgrace of the press disinformation campaign the content of which remains meat and drink to those who have maintained the hounding of Madeleine's family over nearly eight years, certainly merited being addressed at the time, as it was to a degree when the British press apologised and paid for their foul misrepresentation.
Although not wiping out the witch hunts of the past the more recent developments in Madeleine McCann's case have moved the goalposts for the current witch hunts and have shown them for the marginalised self misinformed vehicles they are.
Sure thing an International inquiry into the handling of Madeleine's case is warranted ... but how stupid would it be to divert from the reopened cases in Portugal and Britain?
We are where we should have been in 2007 ... and nothing could mitigate that fact.
I think lessons have been learned and I think there is a spirit of co-operation between the forces of both countries which was absent when Goncalo Amaral deployed limited resources to spy on his British opposite numbers in 2007.
I doubt if a spokesperson today would feel the need to reiterate what in April 2008, the family spokesman said ...
**
snipMitchell said the PJ's performance meant the time had come for an "international inquiry" into their handling of the Madeleine case. "What we want is not just an investigation of this latest leak, but a much wider inquiry into their conduct.
"It's the sort of thing that could be done peer to peer - maybe by officers from Europol, someone senior from Scotland Yard, or the FBI.
It's not about blame, but learning the necessary lessons."
It is an extraordinary demand, born of exasperation, which is certain to be resisted in Portugal.
Yet an examination by The Mail on Sunday of the PJ's record --not only in its failure to find Madeleine, but in the previous two Algarve cases where children have disappeared or been murdered - suggests it may well be justified.
"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."
**
snipIn the Portuguese criminal justice system, confessions are still regarded as they were in the days of the Inquisition - as the "queen of proofs".
British police, it has to be said, sometimes used to operate in a similar way.
But it has its drawbacks, as shown by the succession of miscarriages of justice based on false confessions, such as the Guildford Four and Birmingham Six IRA cases.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-560696/Madeleine-The-damning-case-police-Britains-investigative-reporter.html#ixzz3QpTyTc47