The newspapers are aware that Carter Ruck will jump on any attempt to defame the McCanns. This is what the law is for. Defamation is a tort with a set procedure for assessing whether the law has been broken. The Newspapers know that if they print defamatory articles, they risk being successfully sued for libel. Hence they are keeping on the right side of the law and avoiding defamation. If they find any evidence of the Mccann's criminality (the Portuguese AG could not) then they can print the story and defend it by justification. There is no body of evidence to allow them to do this, so they do not.
Do you think newspapers should have a licence to defame any person they wish to?
Of course not.
I believe that because there was no news, people checked the PJ files and made their own conclusions and not that the news had a right to defamation This was an answer to,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
You have to consider why the problem still remains when not a single myth or rumour about Madeleine's parents has been printed by a UK newspaper in over five years.