Madeleine police issue e-fits of man

Written By Unknown on Senin, 14 Oktober 2013 | 19.12

14 October 2013 Last updated at 08:00 ET
E-fits released by police investigating Madeleine McCann's disappearance

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The images are based on statements and descriptions from two witnesses

UK police investigating Madeleine McCann's disappearance have released two e-fits of a man they want to speak to as a matter of "vital importance".

They will feature in a BBC Crimewatch appeal later over her disappearance on 3 May, 2007, in Praia da Luz, Portugal.

Police say a family saw the man carry a blond-haired child of three or four, wearing pyjamas, away from the McCanns' holiday apartment towards the beach.

Madeleine, from Rothley, Leics, was three when she went missing.

'Other sightings'
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Inquiry timeline

  • 3 May 2007: Madeleine disappears from apartment at Ocean Club, Praia da Luz. Police notify border police and airports and hundreds join a search for her
  • 12 May 2007: Parents make a fresh appeal for help on their daughter's fourth birthday
  • 15 May 2007: British-born Robert Murat is made an official suspect or "arguido"
  • 26 May 2007: Police issue description of man seen carrying what could have been a child the night Madeleine went missing
  • 17 June 2007: Portuguese police admit clues may have been destroyed because scene not properly protected in hours after disappearance
  • 11 August 2007: Police publicly acknowledge Madeleine could be dead
  • 7 Sept 2007: Detectives make Mr and Mrs McCann "arguidos"
  • 19 March 2008: McCanns accept £550,000 libel damages from Express newspapers over allegations they were responsible for Madeleine's death
  • 15 July 2008: Mr Murat settles for £600,000 in damages from UK newspapers which alleged he was involved in disappearance
  • 21 July 2008: Portuguese shelve investigation and lift "arguido" status of the McCanns and Mr Murat
  • 13 May 2011: UK PM David Cameron writes to McCanns announcing "new action" by Met Police
  • 25 April 2012: British police issue image of what Madeleine might look like aged nine
  • 4 July 2013: The Met Police launch a formal investigation and say they are investigating 38 "persons of interest"
  • 4 Oct 2013: Police say mobile phone records may hold key to solving case

The witnesses said the man was white, 20 to 40 years old and of medium build. He had short brown hair, was clean-shaven and of medium height, they added.

Det Ch Insp Andy Redwood, the senior Metropolitan Police investigating officer, said he could be the man who took Madeleine but there could be an innocent explanation.

The Met Police opened up a new investigation earlier this year and have been reassessing all the gathered material.

As a result, according to the police, the timeline and "accepted version of events" surrounding Madeleine's disappearance have significantly changed.

Det Ch Insp Redwood said he was now attaching more weight to the sighting of the man and the child at 10pm, which was later than the time it was previously believed Madeleine was taken.

Madeleine and her brother and sister were left in the apartment at 8.30pm while her parents dined with friends at a nearby restaurant. Her father, Gerry McCann, checked on them at 9.05pm and her mother, Kate, raised the alarm at 10pm.

Det Ch Insp Redwood said the child in the man's arms had not been crying, nor looked in distress.

He added: "Whilst this man may or may not be the key to unlocking this investigation, tracing and speaking to him is of vital importance to us.

"This is far from our only line of inquiry and there will be e-fits released of other sightings as well, who we are equally keen to trace.

"These people were seen on the day of Madeleine's disappearance and the days leading up to it."

Overseas appeals

A detailed reconstruction lasting close to 25 minutes and covering events leading up to and surrounding Madeleine's disappearance will also feature on Monday's Crimewatch.

A short clip released in advance by police shows actors playing Madeleine's parents leaving their holiday apartment for the nearby tapas restaurant.

A still from a BBC Crimewatch reconstruction shows diners in a restaurant

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Footage from the Crimewatch reconstruction has been released

They are then seen seated outdoors at a large poolside table, greeting friends as they come to join them for dinner.

In 2008, a Portuguese investigation into the case was dropped, but Scotland Yard began a review of the case in May 2011 and opened a formal investigation in July this year.

Speaking about the review-turned-investigation, Det Ch Insp Redwood said detectives had been able to "make massive steps forward" by drawing together all the material gathered to date and reviewing it as a whole.

He said his team had sought to "try and draw everything back to zero... take everything back to the beginning and then reanalyse and reassess everything, accepting nothing".

He added: "Praia da Luz is a popular holiday destination for many nationalities so our requests for help need to be repeated in many different countries."

He said he would travel to the Netherlands, Germany and Ireland to seek public support there, and would repeat the appeals in Portugal - "a key country for us to trace any outstanding witnesses".

In Germany, a special edition of the crime programme Aktenzeichen XY - Ungeloest which is translated as "File XY - Unsolved", will be aired on Wednesday night and will feature an appeal for information from Mr and Mrs McCann.

'Not to blame'
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"Start Quote

We're not the ones that have done something wrong here. It's the person who's gone into that apartment and taken a little girl away from her family"

End Quote Kate McCann

Former Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre head Jim Gamble - who carried out a review into the case in 2010 - said the appeal offered "an opportunity for everyone to help".

"It doesn't matter that you were not in Praia da Luz - you may watch something, you may see an e-fit, you may see some other information, they may talk about telephone numbers and something will click with you," he told BBC News.

"And that you will not know unless you watch."

Mr and Mrs McCann are expected to make a live appeal from the studio during the programme.

Ahead of its broadcast, Mrs McCann said: "We're not the ones that have done something wrong here.

"It's the person who's gone into that apartment and taken a little girl away from her family."

Praia da Luz

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The BBC's Tom Burridge: "Madeleine has been in people's prayers in Praia da Luz since the day she went missing"

Meanwhile Robert Murat, the first official suspect in the case but long since officially cleared of any involvement, told the BBC he hoped the new appeal would produce results.

"It's gone on and on and every time something new comes up, you know, it brings hope and then it seems to fade away and disappear. So I'm hoping that's not going to be the case again," he said.

The Crimewatch appeal will be shown in the UK on BBC One on Monday from 21:00 BST. It will also be broadcast in the Netherlands and Germany.


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