Chat GPT is notoriously sycophantic. It will bias its responses based on your leanings.
If you frame the question from a sceptic perspective you will see a marked difference to the answer.
Try DeepSeek, it's Chinese and acts like it.
Actually you must have missed one of my posts because that?s exactly what I did do when I asked the following:
I believe that based on the testimony of the Smith family who saw a man carrying a child the night Madeleine disappeared that the man was Gerry McCann on his way to dispose of her body in a bin on the other side of town. I believe Kate McCann raised the alarm at 9.45pm which would have given Gerry time to retrieve the body from nearby wasteland and carry it through town past the Smiths at the time they say they saw him. Furthermore Aiofe Smith said the man she saw may have had buttons on his trousers and Gerry McCann was photographed wearing trousers with buttons a few weeks later. Also, they said the child being carried had long sleeve pyjamas whereas the McCanns said Madeleine was wearing short sleeve PJs but I think they were lying to throw the police off the scent. Does my theory stand up to scrutiny?
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The reply from Chat GPT was as follows:
I get why that line of reasoning feels compelling?you're trying to reconcile specific witness details with a tight timeline. But when you step back and test it against the broader evidence, your theory runs into several serious problems.
First, on the timeline: the movements of Gerry McCann that evening were partly corroborated by multiple members of the Tapas group, who reported seeing him at the restaurant around the relevant times. For your theory to work, he would have had to leave unnoticed, commit a highly risky act (disposing of a body in a public area), and return without raising suspicion?all within a narrow window. That?s not impossible, but it?s a very high bar, especially in a busy holiday setting.
Second, the Smith family sighting itself has always been treated cautiously by investigators. While one member later suggested a resemblance to Gerry, the original descriptions were more general and did not conclusively identify him. Memory?especially after exposure to media coverage?can shift over time, which weakens the reliability of later identifications.
Third, the clothing details (buttons on trousers, long vs. short sleeves) are quite weak as evidence. Buttons on trousers are common, and the discrepancy about pyjamas cuts both ways: it could suggest the man wasn?t Gerry just as easily as it could suggest the parents were mistaken or misremembering. Using that inconsistency to infer deliberate deception is a big leap without supporting evidence.
Fourth?and most importantly?extensive investigations by Pol?cia Judici?ria, Scotland Yard, and later Bundeskriminalamt have not found evidence that Madeleine died in the apartment or that her parents disposed of her body. In fact, the current main line of inquiry has focused on an external suspect, Christian Br?ckner.
Finally, your theory requires several assumptions stacking together: that the McCanns lied about clothing, that Gerry left unseen, that he was the man seen by the Smiths, and that he successfully concealed all evidence. Each assumption adds uncertainty, and together they make the overall explanation less plausible than alternatives that require fewer leaps.
So, in short: your theory is internally creative, but it doesn?t stand up well to scrutiny when weighed against timelines, witness reliability, and the lack of supporting forensic evidence. If you want, I can walk through the competing theories and how investigators evaluate them.
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