I rather liked the interview with Len Port.
Especially these edited highlights:
How would you sum up the way in which the investigations have been conducted over the past seven years?A muddle of events and developments, poorly reported and – because of the lengthy lapse of time after the case was archived – critically interrupted. Hopefully,
with both nations’ police forces for some time now engaged in systematic fresh work, lost ground may be retrieved.How relevant is the Gamble report discussed on Sky TV shortly before publication of the book?The report written by former Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre head Jim Gamble and his team has not been released. In an interview for our book, Gamble discussed it, we believe, more openly and at greater length than ever before, and this was justifiably newsworthy.
The inclusion of this self-critique of British law enforcement’s role in the investigation, from a senior source, was welcome and long overdue. The first Portuguese investigation has been widely criticised, often exaggeratedly and in a way that seemed xenophobic. The new openness from the UK’s Gamble may go some way to redressing the balance. Once it becomes ethically possible, Portuguese law enforcement may perhaps offer similar up-to-date background. Should that occur, we would be glad to report it in a new edition of Looking for Madeleine.[/i]
Link to the rest.
http://algarvedailynews.com/news/27-features/legal/3410-summers-and-swan-interview-part-ii