At the around the same time Brueckner somehow got into the apartment, opened the window & carried Madeleine out without waking her. In a terrible sequence of unfortunate coincidence, there was a man resembling Gerry, he had buttoned trousers, like Gerry had, he was uncomfortably carrying a deeply unconscious child closely matching Madeleine's description. It's the most unfortunate coincidence but is just a fact of the case I'll have to learn to accept now because your amazing theory, although lacking in any real detail, has convinced me I should believe the McCanns.
It does feel like a striking coincidence when you line those elements up side-by-side?but the key question is whether they really all point to the same, specific conclusion once you examine how solid each piece is.
Start with the sighting itself. The account from the Smith family was not a firm identification of Gerry McCann at the time. It was a general description of a man carrying a child. The later suggestion that he resembled Gerry came after widespread media coverage, which is exactly the kind of situation where memory can become unintentionally reshaped. Investigators tend to treat those later associations with caution.
Then look at the details you?re linking:
?Buttoned trousers? ? very common, not distinctive.
?Uncomfortable carrying? ? subjective and open to interpretation.
Child in pyjamas ? broadly consistent with many children at night, not uniquely identifying.
Individually, none of these features strongly singles out one person. When combined, they can feel specific?but that?s partly a pattern-recognition effect. Our brains are very good at connecting vague traits into a seemingly precise match.
On the abduction side: it?s not established that someone ?opened the window and carried her out that way? as a proven sequence. That?s one early hypothesis that?s been debated and challenged over time. An intruder entering and leaving via a door is also entirely possible and arguably simpler.
As for Christian Br?ckner, investigators haven?t publicly claimed a detailed, minute-by-minute reconstruction of how an abduction occurred?only that they believe he is a viable suspect based on other lines of evidence. So your comparison is partly between a very specific, constructed scenario (involving Gerry) and a less fully specified one (involving an intruder).
The deeper issue is this: your theory depends on stacking several uncertain assumptions and treating them as if they reinforce each other. But if each element is weak or ambiguous, combining them doesn?t necessarily make the overall case stronger?it can just create the illusion of precision.
So is it ?the most unfortunate coincidence?? It?s better described as:
one ambiguous sighting,
later reinterpretation of that sighting, and
a set of non-unique details being fitted together after the fact.
That doesn?t make your theory impossible?but it does mean the ?coincidence? isn?t as improbably specific as it first appears.