Former
detective Gonçalo Amaral has responded defiantly to the
outcome of the civil action brought against him by Kate and Gerry
McCann over his book about the investigation into their daughter’s
disappearance.
The
McCanns were awarded €500,000 plus interest in damages, but Amaral
is adamant the book was not defamatory and was within his rights to
freedom of expression. His views on the case are contained in an
interview published in the Portuguese weekly magazine Nova
Gente and reproduced on the website of Projecto Justiça
Gonçalo Amaral.
“With
my book I did not defame, nor did I have the intention to defame
anyone, but merely to report what happened during the first five
months of the investigation, thus replying to the attacks against my
good name and my professional dignity.”
The
information in the book is all in the Portuguese police case files
and this was not in question during the McCann’s civil action, he
said.
Asked
if he felt wronged by the McCann’s legal action against him, Amaral
insisted the parents were primarily
responsible for their daughter’s disappearance because “they
practiced a crime of exposing and abandoning defenceless
children. The fact that they lost their daughter did not
give them the right to sue anyone or to be compensated,” he said.
“They
can’t escape their guilt, which is enough to rob them of their
sleep, to provoke a lack of appetite and even rage, but against
themselves and not against someone who only wrote down what happened
during the first five months of the investigation, according to what
is in the case files.”
That
Madeleine’s younger siblings may someday read his book and become
traumatised by it did not concern him, he said.
“Those
two children were also abandoned for over five nights in a row and
surely they will understand that what is written there is the result
of a criminal investigation. There is a question that those two
children will certainly ask when they grow up ,but that question will
be directed at the parents: why were they abandoned, left to their
own devices?”
As
to what really motivated him to write Maddie:
A Verdade da Mentira (Maddie, the
Truth of the Lie), Amaral said he wrote it because his good name and
professional honour, as well as that of those who worked with him,
had been severely attacked.
Essentially
the book was a way to reply to the
insults he and his colleagues had been subjected to by the British
press and others. “Deep down, that was it: they say we are
incompetent, they say we are a third world police force, drunkards,
fat, lazy, etc., etc., and the Judiciary Police does not set out to
defend us. Therefore I turned to writing, reporting the investigation
that had been carried out, so people could draw their own
conclusions.”
In
his latest interview, Amaral had no qualms about stating his views on
the civil action or the McCann couple: “I am a free man and like
any other citizen in this country I have the right to express my
opinions.”
He
agreed that as a result of the court action he and his family had
suffered greatly. “My life is gone. If I am alive, it’s due to
the heart that I have.” But he does not intend to let the matter
rest there or give up without a fight.
He reiterated
that he will fight “until the last legal instance.” He intends to
appeal the €500,000 damages verdict and is considering suing the
McCanns.
“Each
thing in its own time, it won’t be only the McCanns, but their
group of friends, and other people and entities that will be sued.
There is an illicit action that was indeed performed, the neglect in
guarding their children, which caused direct damages to many people,
not only to myself, but for example to the Ocean Club workers who
were fired and saw their lives change, many of them unjustly, passing
from mere employees and heads of family to suspects in a criminal
investigation while they had nothing to do with the matter.”
Meanwhile
in the UK, the Mirror newspaper
reports that Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan Police
Commissioner, as saying that the search for Madeleine will not end
until all avenues are exhausted. He was reacting to
concerns raised by the Police Federation about the millions of pounds
of public money devoted to the case.
Sir
Bernard said of the investigation: “It’s moving on apace at the
moment in terms of the relationship with the Portuguese and that is
to be welcomed. As long as there’s a basis for doing the
investigation we will continue.”
2 comments:
John Tully's remarks were weeks ago. Bernard Hogan Howe waited until Cameron was back at 10 Downing Street before making this statement. Cameron authorised Operation Grange because Rebekah Brooks, the then editor of The Sun "persuaded" him to do so. The McCanns now have ample funds to offer a reward for information about their daughters disappearance; why do they not do so?
Interesting that BHH talks on an "investigation" and not about a "search. But then he is a very experienced cop, and knows perfectly well . . .
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