I don't think it's unreasonable for her to think that at least one intelligent, knowledgeable Portuguese person in authority might be able to see through the allegations against them, or was that hoping for too much do you think? Was their alleged guilt so very obvious to the entire Portuguese nation that not one single Portuguese person ever said to themselves "hmm...maybe they didn't do it and maybe the police are wrong, or worse trying to stitch them up...?" Is that a completely inconceivable scenario in your view, and one that Kate should have known better than to hope for?
I am not quite sure if you are talking about people inside the investigation or people outside the investigation.
Nor am I sure if you are talking about a time when the investigation was active in Portugal, or whether you mean when it had been archived.
Paulo Rebelo, what little of him I have dug up, seems to have worked within the legal framework, and his team provided an archiving report that certainly does not 'stitch the McCanns up', so I find that phrase to be without merit and in very poor taste.
Why anyone in Portugal, other than officers who had sat in on the case or had been part of command hierarchy, would have had an accurate picture of what was going on,
before the investigation was archived, is beyond me. Amaral's watch was leaking, despite supposed judicial silence. Team McCann had a PR spokesman on board, despite supposed judicial silence.
Whether there were significant leaks from the Portuguese side during Rebelo's watch, I do not know. If anyone can fill me on what if anything leaked during that period, please enlighten me.
This move us to post-archive and post book launch.
The archival report was now available to UK and Portuguese media, so the question is, did any media outlet make a big deal of it? On either side?
I have seen a number of Amaral interviews from this phase. I do not collate or index such interviews, so please don't ask me for cites. I have yet to see one in which Amaral was not challenged on his theory, with the interviewer obviously trying to extract further details for the delectation of the audience. I have seen more than one where some other talking head would agree that Amaral's theory was not unreasonable. I suspect, but cannot prove, that a number of the more preposterous claims, such as the freezer one, have this source as their origin.
And here is the interesting point. Team McCann, complete with UK PR person Clarence, chose the UK media as the battleground. They went after a peanut sized organisation in Portugal, but none of the big boys. And when the restrictions of judicial secrecy had been lifted (and arguido status) they chose not to deploy any talking head in Portugal.
So who did not stand up to Amaral? Answer, in the first instance, Team McCann. Then they tried to blame the Portuguese for not doing what they could have and should have done themselves.