Madeleine
McCann, who disappeared in 2007: police have classed 38 people as “persons of
interest” to the inquiry. Photograph: Everton FC/PA
|
Madeleine McCann police seek intruder who attacked
girls at holiday homes
Detectives
investigating girl's disappearance look for dark-haired man who sexually abused
five girls in Algarve , Portugal
James
Meikle
theguardian.com,
Wednesday 19 March 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/mar/19/madeleine-mccann-police-intruder-girls-algarve
Police
investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann from a Portuguese holiday
resort nearly seven years ago say a lone intruder sexually assaulted five girls
aged between seven and 10 in
the Algarve
between 2004 and 2006.
The four
incidents – one involving two girls – were among 12 over six years up to 2010
being examined by officers in which a man entered holiday accommodation, mainly
villas, and mostly occupied by British families.
In six of
those incidents, the man, said to be dark-haired and tanned, sat on the
victims' beds. In nine of the 12 incidents there was no evidence of forced
entry or property taken. In three others there was "low-level" theft
involving cash or phones. Police said he appeared to "have a very, very, unhealthy
interest" in young white girls.
The man,
said to be unshaven with unkempt hair, spoke English slowly, with a foreign
accent, possibly with slurred speech. Some witnesses suggested he had a pot
belly while three victims suggested he had a distinctive smell, one involving
aftershave, another tobacco while a third just described "a funny
smell".
However, no
children were abducted.
Detectives
said too there had been an increase in "criminality" and burglary in
Praia da Luz that peaked in April 2007, shortly before Madeleine's
disappearance.
Scotland
Yard also revealed it was looking at 38 "people of interest" in
relation to Madeleine's disappearance, having dismissed 22 others from that
category. They were also trying to find out more about 530 known sex offenders
– 59 regarded as of high interest – across Europe .
Madeleine's
parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, have been informed of the latest developments.
Detective
Chief Inspector Andy Redwood, in charge of the hunt for Madeleine, accepted
there were differences between these cases and that of Madeleine's
disappearance but added that there was a possibility that Madeleine had not
left her family's holiday apartment alive when she disappeared in May 2007.
In most
cases now being examined, the incidents happened between 2am and 5am – later
than in the disappearance of Madeleine, then aged three, from a ground floor
apartment at the Ocean Club complex in Praia da Luz while her parents had
dinner with friends at a nearby restaurant.
Redwood
said the assumption that Madeleine had been alive when she left the apartment
"may not follow with all our thinking" on the case.
"These
offences are very serious and no one has been charged in connection with them.
We also need to eliminate this man from our inquiries and ascertain whether
these offences are linked to Madeleine's disappearance," he said.
"If
you have been a victim of a similar crime please come forward even if you
reported the incident to police in Portugal , or anywhere else, please
do not assume we have been made aware of it."
There was
also a "very close resonance" to some features of Madeleine's
disappearance, said Redwood.
"We really
need to identify the offender, to bring to a close the trauma and the tragedy
that these families have suffered, and then seek to establish whether this is
connected to Madeleine's disappearance."
He appealed
for information and gave details of a distinctive burgundy long-sleeved top the
attacker was said to have worn during two attacks – in the resort areas of Vale
de Parra and Praia da Gale. On one occasion it was described as having a white
circle on the back.
The appeal
will also be made via BBC's Crimewatch on Wednesday night.
Redwood
said if names were put forward, his team would be able to eliminate them from
inquiries, suggesting the police may have DNA evidence.
Nine of the
12 incidents was reported to Portuguese police at the time they happened, but
British investigators only learned of three when the victims came forward in
response to televised appeals last autumn.
In the
attacks, the suspect may have been in the villa or looking round the villa for
some time before committing the offences or being disturbed either by a parent
coming in, or the child waking up, say police. On two occasions the noise of a
refuse collection lorry could be heard nearby.
Of the 12
offences being investigated, four took place in Carvoeiro, six in Vale da
Parra, Praia da Gale district, and two in Praia da Luz.
Detectives
have previously suggested Madeleine may have been abducted in a planned
operation that had included individuals exploring the resort before hand.
Scotland
Yard last October issued efit images of a possible suspect with dark hair
reportedly seen carrying a child with blonde hair and possibly wearing pyjamas.
The
publication of the pictures on Crimewatch led to a huge response by the public
and this man has still not been excluded from the police inquiry.
Efits of
two fair-haired men seen near the McCanns' apartment were also released and
police in the UK and Portugal have
also been investigating break-ins around the resort, one of which occurred the
same week a year before Madeleine disappeared and involved a man involving a
man who entered a flat where young children were sleeping.
Fresh
appeals are also made in Ireland ,
the Netherlands and Germany .
Scotland
Yard has indicated its irritation with the slowness of the formal legal process
that would allow its officers to work on the ground in Portugal . The
Crown Prosecution Service has three so-called letters of request being
considered by the country's legal system, among 30 from Britain on the case now being considered across Europe .
Deputy
Assistant Commissioner Martin Hewitt, said: "I am frustrated the legal
process is as slow as it is." But he insisted: "We are seeing an
increase in the tempo of the investigation."
Scotland
Yard says officers involved in the case have made 26 "strategic and
tactical". visits to Portugal
as well as travelling to Spain ,
Belgium , Jersey ,
Switzerland , Holland and Germany
as well as working with colleagues across the UK ."
Police are
asking members of the public with information to call them on 0800 0961011
within the UK .
The number for non-UK residents is +44 207 1580 126. Callers can also contact
Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
PJ reabriu inquérito Maddie há meses
por causa de suspeito procurado agora pelos ingleses
Mariana Oliveira / PÚBLICO
19/03/2014 - 19:45
A Polícia Metropolitana de Londres anunciou nesta
quarta-feira estar a procurar um homem que abusou sexualmente de cinco meninas
no Algarve entre 2004 e 2006.
A Polícia Judiciária (PJ) esclareceu nesta quarta-feira que
a ligação entre o desaparecimento de Madeleine McCann e um homem que abusou
sexualmente de cinco meninas no Algarve, entre 2004 e 2006, corresponde à linha
de investigação descoberta pela equipa daquela polícia, criada no Porto, em
Março de 2011, para reanalisar o caso, e que fundamentou o pedido de reabertura
do inquérito do caso Maddie, em Outubro do ano passado.
Sem se pronunciar sobre o motivo que levou a Polícia
Metropolitana de Londres a anunciar nesta quarta-feira que procurava um homem
que abusou sexualmente de cinco meninas em Portugal, em casas arrendadas por
famílias britânicas no Algarve, fonte da PJ sublinha que a polícia portuguesa
“prossegue com a investigação, com a descrição e reserva que a tem
caracterizado”.
“As informações divulgadas hoje pela Polícia Metropolitana
de Londres correspondem à linha de investigação descoberta pela equipa da PJ
liderada pela Dr. Helena Monteiro e que fundamentou o pedido de reabertura do
inquérito”, afirmou uma fonte da PJ ligada à investigação deste caso,
contactada pelo PÚBLICO. E acrescentou: “Essa linha de investigação foi
oportunamente e simultaneamente dada a conhecer à Polícia Metropolitana e aos
pais de Madeleine McCann, durante uma reunião, em Outubro do ano passado, na
sede da PJ, em Lisboa.”
A fonte da PJ adiantou que as semelhanças entre os cinco
casos foram identificadas pela equipa da PJ do Porto e que, apesar de terem
existido queixas formais, as autoridades portuguesas nunca encontraram o autor
dos abusos sexuais, que poderá ter estado ligado ao desaparecimento de
Madeleine McCann, em Maio de 2007, de um apartamento arrendado pela sua família
num resort algarvio na Praia da Luz.
Contactado pelo PÚBLICO, um dos porta-vozes da Polícia
Metropolitana de Londres recusou-se a comentar os esclarecimentos feitos pela
PJ, rejeitando confirmar ou negar que os investigadores britânicos foram
informados há meses pelos portugueses sobre esta linha de investigação. Ficou
ainda por explicar o motivo por que a Scotland Yard decidiu anunciar nesta
quarta-feira que procura um abusador sexual.
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