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Portugal MADELEINE McCANN: Missing from Praia da Luz, Portugal - 3 May 2007 - Age 3 (4 Viewers)

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Madeleine Beth McCann (born 12 May 2003) disappeared on the evening of 3 May 2007 from her bed in a holiday apartment at a resort in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve region of Portugal. Her whereabouts remain unknown.[3] The Daily Telegraph described the disappearance as "the most heavily reported missing-person case in modern history".[4]

Madeleine was on holiday from the UK with her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann; her two-year-old twin siblings; and a group of family friends and their children. She and the twins had been left asleep at 20:30 in the ground-floor apartment, while the McCanns and friends dined in a restaurant 55 metres (180 ft) away.[5] The parents checked on the children throughout the evening, until Madeleine's mother discovered she was missing at 22:00.




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'Blindingly obvious' alleged stalker's DNA does not match Madeleine McCann's, court hears​

Mr Duck KC asked why Miss Wandelt continued to knock on the McCanns' door when they went inside their home.

Miss Wandelt said she wanted Mrs McCann to have her DNA report.

The prosecutor said: "The one thing that’s blindingly obvious is that your profile and Madeleine McCann’s did not match."

In response, Miss Wandelt questioned if the profile was Madeleine’s, as it was “from three people".

Mr Duck KC asked: "Do you accept that by simply looking at the profile, it has nothing to do with you?"

Miss Wandelt replied: "Assuming this does belong to Madeleine, yes."

Mr Duck KC said: "Assuming Madeleine’s DNA profile to be hers, we know yours is yours. They are miles away from matching up."

In response, Miss Wandelt said: "Yes."
It's getting really hard to have even an ounce of sympathy for this lady.
 
I also can't understand how she can't comprehend that she would be shown 3 tests and not/refuse to understand that they most likely came from the parents of Maddie and Maddie and she is related to none of them.
 
Why would Madeleine's DNA be from three people? Not sure I follow that. Maybe the defense will elaborate if they do a re-exam.
 
Why would Madeleine's DNA be from three people? Not sure I follow that. Maybe the defense will elaborate if they do a re-exam.
Not maddie's dna from 3 people. They tested this lady's dna against 3 people's dna - presumably Maddie, her mom and her dad's dna. Seems easy enough to show her that she is not only not Maddie, but not even related to any of them.
 
This is from the original Investigation.




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UK






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Page last updated at 10:13 GMT, Tuesday, 5 August 2008 11:13 UK

McCann DNA evidence 'exaggerated'

The McCanns holiday apartment

Police images show the Algarve room after Madeleine disappeared


The parents of Madeleine McCann have accused police in Portugal of exaggerating DNA evidence before naming them suspects in her disappearance.
A UK forensic scientist had already warned DNA in their hire car was "inconclusive", it has been revealed.
His e-mail was in thousands of pages of evidence now been made public.
Madeleine vanished, aged three, on a holiday in the Algarve on 3 May 2007. Kate and Gerry McCann are no longer suspects in the case.
Lack of evidence
The papers, which also include photographs of the family's deserted apartment, make clear that the McCanns came under suspicion following a visit to Portugal by UK detectives last August.
Portuguese police cited DNA evidence as grounds for their suspicions.
Kate and Gerry McCann's spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said police had told Mr McCann during interrogation that his missing daughter's DNA had been found in the boot of the car - hired 24 days after her disappearance.​

The McCann's spokesman Clarence Mitchell says that the files will be investigated privately​

The investigation papers show a sniffer dog detected the apparent odour of a body in their hire car and apartment, but tests on a sample from the car were inconclusive.
British forensic scientist John Lowe said the sample contained 15 out of 19 components of Madeleine's DNA which were not "unique to her".
Mr Mitchell told the BBC: "I can confirm in his interview the police put to Gerry as a matter of fact that DNA - Madeleine's DNA - had been found in the vehicle.
"You can see from the official report that wasn't the case. It was inconclusive at best.
"You have to ask yourself what the police were trying to achieve by overstating evidence they simply didn't have in that way to Gerry."
The police inquiry into her disappearance was wound up last month due to a lack of evidence.
The McCanns and a third British national, Robert Murat, were declared to be no longer formal suspects when the police closed the case. The McCanns and Mr Murat, 34, always strongly denied having had any involvement in what happened to Madeleine.​
Madeleine McCann

Madeleine went missing in May 2007 days before her fourth birthday


Lawyers for the McCanns, both 40, from Rothley, Leicestershire, were given access to the documents last week.
They are studying the papers for fresh leads that the couple's private detectives could follow up.
Mr Mitchell said: "One of the great frustrations for Kate and Gerry, through all this, was that they just didn't get any information from the Portuguese of any real note at all.
"Now there is a chance to analyse this, and if there's anything that needs priority action in terms of finding Madeleine.
"Such as was this area searched or not? Was there another sighting in a certain place, or not?
"All of that will be moved on quickly. But Kate and Gerry themselves are not fully aware of the mass of detail yet, they're waiting for the lawyers to tell them in due course."
Police questions
Some 20,000 pages of evidence were released on Monday to journalists who had made a formal request to prosecutors, including the BBC.
The sniffer dog's apparent detection of the odour of a body was followed by a second dog detecting what was thought to be blood in the same locations.
The BBC's Steve Kingstone said the documents showed an initial report from Britain's forensic science service saying the samples indicated some compatibility with the components of Madeleine's DNA.
However the laboratory did not draw firm conclusions and stressed that the samples contained the DNA of more than one person.
In an e-mail dated 3 September 2007, John Lowe of the major incidents team of the Forensic Science Service (FSS) said it was impossible to conclude whether the material taken from the car came from Madeleine.​
Gerry and Kate McCann

The McCanns want to follow any leads that come from the police documents


The e-mail was translated into Portuguese the following day and four days later Portuguese detectives named the McCanns arguidos - formal suspects - citing DNA evidence as grounds for their suspicions.
In his message to Det Supt Stuart Prior, head of the British side of the inquiry, Mr Lowe said a sample from the boot of the McCanns' hire car, which they rented 24 days after Madeleine went missing, contained 15 out of 19 of her DNA components.
But he cautioned that this result - based on the controversial "low copy number" DNA analysis technique which uses very small samples - was "too complex for meaningful interpretation or inclusion".
The expert said the components of the missing girl's DNA profile were not unique to her - in fact some were present among FSS scientists, including himself.
"We cannot answer the question: is the match genuine, or is it a chance match," he wrote.
Subsequent interview transcripts reveal that Kate McCann was asked directly: "Did you have anything to do with the disappearance of your daughter?"
She refused to answer this and dozens of other questions, as was her legal right.​

 
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