Maddie, the heartrending dilemma

30 April 2010 | Posted by  50 comments

statistics from PACT report 'Every five minutes' published in 2005

by Martin Samuel

There are, it is roughly estimated, as many as 180,000 missing children in the United Kingdom.

According to the home Office, the number of full-time police in England and Wales is 142,000.

You see the problem, yes? Even if we took one officer and told him his only job was to find Madeleine McCann, he would still have to take alternate Thursdays off to help investigate some other disappearance.

This is why there exists a point at which investigations into missing people are scaled down.

Always reluctantly, always with the hope that one day circumstances will change, but Gerry McCann is wrong to say the police have given up on his daughter, as the third anniversary of her disappearance approaches.

They have not forgotten, but simply lost the trail.

This happens. Not every investigation can be resolved, or allowed to continue interminably when leads and clues are exhausted.

I do not believe any police officer fails to comprehend the significance of finding Madeleine; not just for her parents, but for the mental health of the nation.

Police may respond inadequately to vandalism or petty crime, but if any of the information Mr McCann says has recently been unearthed by private detectives was of use, an official investigation team would have been all over it.

The charity PACT (Parents and Abducted Children Together) says one child goes missing every five minutes [Every Five Minutes - pdf link]; the police, therefore, are not, like the McCanns, solely responsible for a single lost toddler.

Are those most urgently in need of help now to join the end of an ancient queue?

Police work prioritises, it shuffles resources, evolving in the most harshly pragmatic way.

It cannot become mired in history, as cold as that sounds. Russell Bohling is a vulnerable 18-year-old with a speech impediment, who was about to inherit £300,000 to start his own business.

His car has been found on a cliff top in east Yorkshire, and he is missing. The quicker police act, the more chance there is of resolution, happy or otherwise.

At the same time there will be other cases in the area, as yet unanswered. each officer assigned to Russell’s disappearance is therefore being taken off another duty. What is the alternative?

Give his family a number like at a supermarket delicatessen counter and tell them to wait their turn?

‘Find Madeleine’ was the campaign. The police tried and failed. Now they must find Russell.

Next week, it will be someone else. Tragic realities are confronted all the time, but what more can they do?


opinion article continues in Daily Mail - 30.04.2010
Russell is 5ft 8in, of medium build with short, straight, brown hair. He was last seen wearing black Ben Sherman jacket, blue jeans and black leather trainers.

Chief Supt Davison is urging Russell or anyone with information to contact him on (01482) 597801 or police headquarters on 0845 6060222.


Kate and Gerry McCann are interviewed by Lorraine Kelly for GMTV

28 April 2010 | Posted by  115 comments



Pre-recorded interview broadcast by GMTV on 28.04.2010

POLICE HAVE 'GIVEN UP' ON MADELEINE MCCANN HUNT SAY PARENTS

By Jaya Sidodia


THE parents of Madeleine McCann have accused the British police of giving up on the hunt for their missing daughter.

Gerry and Kate McCann have called for British detectives to review the case from start to finish.

They made their plea days before the third anniversary of Madeleine’s disappearance from a holiday apartment

The McCanns, both 41, believe that the investigation has stalled.

They say the British and Portuguese police have failed to follow up leads generated by the couple’s own private investigators.

In an interview due to be broadcast on GMTV this morning, Mr McCann, a consultant cardiologist, said: “It’s not right that an innocent, vulnerable British citizen is essentially given up on.

“And I don’t think it’s right that as parents, that we have to drive the search. Of course we will, but not everyone has had the same resources and support that we have had to be able to do that. And I think it’s pretty cruel.”

He added: “We need to have a proper review of all the information.”

Mrs McCann gave up her work as a GP to focus on the search for Madeleine, who disappeared aged three on May 3 2007 while the family was on holiday in the Algarve.

She said: “We do this in medicine. You know, if there’s a case where you don’t seem to be getting a diagnosis, somebody will come in and review it.

“They’ll go back to square one – and that’s where you find out what else needs to be done and it will help point you in the right direction.”

She added that she finds her daughter’s birthday, May 12, harder to cope with than the anniversary of her disappearance. “Her birthday is actually a much more difficult day for us than May 3,” she said.

“May 3 really is just another day without Madeleine, but the 12th is obviously a day when we should be celebrating Madeleine, celebrating with Madeleine.”

In a separate interview yesterday Kate recalled how one of her son Sean’s friends had asked her: “Are you a doctor?” She said: “Sean just came in and said, ‘Mummy was a doctor but her job now is to find Madeleine’.”

Kate also told of the heartbreaking moment she told Sean and his twin sister Amelie that Madeleine had been taken.
“I think it was last year Amelie said to me, ‘Has Madeleine run away?’” she said. That really upset me because I thought I really don’t want her to think Madeleine is at fault.”

The couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire, left Madeleine and Sean and Amelie, then aged two, alone in their holiday apartment while they went for dinner with friends.

Mr McCann said that if they could go back in time, they would not have left Madeleine alone.

He said: “If we could turn back the clock and change what happened, obviously we wouldn’t have done it.”

in Express 28.04.2010


Britain has 'given up on Madeleine'



The father of missing Madeleine McCann has said his "innocent, vulnerable" daughter had been "essentially given up on" by British authorities.

During a television interview days before the third anniversary of her disappearance, Gerry McCann urged the Government to carry out a "comprehensive review" of the case.

He told Lorraine Kelly: "It's not right that an innocent, vulnerable British citizen is essentially given up on.

"And I don't think it's right that as parents, that we have to drive the search. Of course we will, but not everyone has had the same resources and support that we have had to be able to do that. And I think it's pretty cruel."

The pre-recorded GMTV interview will be broadcast on Wednesday. Mr McCann said it was "incredibly frustrating" that police in Portugal and the UK are not doing more to find the missing youngster.

At the time of her disappearance, the couple were criticised for leaving their three children alone in a holiday apartment as they went for dinner nearby. Mr McCann said that if they could go back, they would not have left her alone.

He said: "If we could turn back the clock and change what happened, obviously we wouldn't have done it. We can't. And what I would say is, you know, people have got to put themselves into our position. What would you do if it was your daughter? After this, what would you do?"

The parents still believe Madeleine, who went missing when she was three, is alive and are releasing a pack for people to take abroad and put up posters featuring her picture.

Kate McCann said: "Certainly in my heart I feel she is out there. I mean I know there is nothing to say that she isn't, so we have to carry on working and thinking like that.

"I mean logically I can't say, I mean none of us can say for definite other than the people involved. But I know we can't give up because there is no evidence to say that she is not."


source: The Press Association, 28.04.2010




McCanns beg police to start again in the search for Madeleine





By Andy Dolan


The parents of Madeleine McCann have accused British police of 'giving up' on their missing daughter.

Kate and Gerry McCann spoke out just days before the third anniversary of Maddie's disappearance, urging investigators to go back to the start and review the case.

The McCanns, both 41, fear their own £2million search - funded by public donations received since Maddie vanished from their Algarve holiday apartment - has stalled.

They claim this is due to the failure of both Portuguese and UK police to investigate leads unearthed by their private investigators.

In a pre-recorded GMTV interview due to be broadcast today, Mr McCann said: 'It's not right that an innocent, vulnerable British citizen is essentially given up on. And I don't think it's right that, as parents, that we have to drive the search.'

He added: 'We need to have a proper review of all the information --that's how we will move the investigation forward.'

Mrs McCann, a GP who gave up work to concentrate on the search for Madeleine, said: 'We do this in medicine. You know, if there is a case that you don't seem to be getting the diagnosis, somebody will come in and review it. They'll go back to square one... and that's where you find out what else needs to be done and it will help point you in the right direction.'

Leicestershire Police has carried out its own inquiries as has the taxpayer-funded Child Exploitation and On-Line Protection Centre. But neither is actively seeking the little girl.

The three-year saga has already cost UK taxpayers nearly £500,000.

The couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire, told GMTV's Lorraine Kelly it was 'incredibly frustrating' that police in Portugal and the UK are not doing more to find Maddie, who was three when she disappeared from the holiday complex at Praia da Luz on the evening of May 3, 2007.

The McCanns were criticised for leaving the girl and their twins Sean and Amelie, then two, alone in the apartment while they dined with friends at a tapas restaurant 40 yards away.

In the latest interview, Mr McCann, a consultant cardiologist, said that if they could go back, they would not leave Maddie alone.


in: Daily Mail, 28.04.2010




Maddy cops £22K bill for 196 jet trips

26 April 2010 | Posted by  52 comments


A british police force took 196 flights to Portugal costing £22,000 in the first year of the search for Madeleine McCann.

And it ran up 709 days supporting her parents, Gerry and Kate, and helping Portuguese cops.

Flights to Portugal by Leicestershire Constabulary from May 2007 to July 2008 cost £22,055.

The force said: "Officers used budget airlines."

Madeleine, from Rothley, vanished from Praia da Luz on May 3, 2007, aged three. Revealed under the Freedom of Information Act, the total cost of the first year of the probe to the force was £500,000, most of which will be met by the Home Office.


in: Daily Mirror, 26.04.2010

Madeleine McCann's parents to be interviewed by Lorraine Kelly

22 April 2010 | Posted by  160 comments

Madeleine McCann's parents will be interviewed by Lorraine Kelly as the third anniversary of her disappearance nears.

Kate and Gerry go on the GMTV couch on Tuesday, to be seen by viewers the next day - their only UK TV appearance before the May 3 anniversary.

Madeleine, then aged three, vanished on holiday in Portugal in 2007.

"Lorraine's been very supportive of the family," said a source. "This is a thank you and a reminder that she's still missing."


in: The Mirror, 22.04.2010

Gonçalo Amaral at the Lisbon Book Fair on May 1

21 April 2010 | Posted by  28 comments

For the first time, editor Planeta will have their own booth at the Lisbon Book Fair that will take place between the 29th of April and the 16th of May, at Parque Eduardo VII.

Their presence at the event will include the sale of over 70 book titles and the promotion of autograph sessions with authors, according to the editor.

At the editor's booth, the public will be able to find works by Juan José Millás («The World» and «The Objects Call Us»), crime novels (from Donna Leon to Alan Bradley), historic thrillers (by Glenn Cooper, Gongora, etc.), «Firmin» (by Sam Savage), «Uma Noite Não São Dias» (by Mário Zambujal) and «Morrer é Só Não Ser Visto» (by Inês Barros Baptista), among others.

In childrens' and juvenile literature, Geronimo, Tea Stilton, Cassandra Clare and L.J. Smith are some of the highlighted authors.

The autograph sessions will include the presence of Gonçalo Amaral, who will be available on the 1st of May, at around 4 p.m., to sign «The English Gag» (written following the Maddie Case).

On the 2nd of May, at the same time, Inês Barros Baptista («Morrer é Só Não ser Visto») will be present.


source: Diário Digital, 21.04.2010


Looking back at the McCann Case - A Duty of Care: Criminal Negligence, Bad Parenting or Just Naïve?

16 April 2010 | Posted by  168 comments
A Duty of Care: Criminal Negligence, Bad Parenting or Just Naïve?
Editorial by Dr WG McCarney OBE JP

When investigating the injury or death of a child who has been left unattended prosecutors in the US focus on the nature of the risk taken by the parent, and the nature of the result.

In such cases, the words “foreseeable” and “preventable” are often invoked in debate.

It was around 2pm on July 3, 2007. 18-year-old Jovanna Shiriver was home alone in a third-floor apartment on Classon Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn with two children for the first time. She was bathing her daughter, 11-month-old Smeily Ordoñez, and her boyfriend’s 2-year-old sister. The 2-year-old’s mother was in hospital. Ms. Shiriver was feeling overwhelmed trying to do everything – mind the children, cook and do housework.

The children were standing in what Ms. Shiriver described as low water when she became distracted by the smell of the rice burning. She went to the kitchen, down the hall from the bathroom to stir the rice. She said she left the children alone for five minutes. When she returned Smeily was lying on her back. The water just barely covered her face. She snatched the baby and ran to a bedroom, trying to revive her. The apartment had no telephone so she then ran with Smeily to her neighbour upstairs. When her neighbour failed to revive the baby they called the police at 2:02pm.

The baby was rushed to the nearest hospital where she was placed on life support. She was later transferred to another hospital which specialises in medical and physical rehabilitation.

Detectives spoke with Ms. Shiriver about what had happened, arrested her and brought her to the Rose M. Singer Centre, a jail for women on Rikers Island. Ms Shiriver’s moments at the stove constituted a criminal act, the prosecutor said. She was indicted on two counts of endangering the welfare of a child, a Class D felony, and two counts of reckless endangerment. She has been in prison since the day of the accident. A law-enforcement official said Ms. Shiriver could face additional charges if the baby dies.

Ama Dwimoh, chief of the Crimes Against Children Bureau of the Brooklyn district attorney’s office said that people have to understand that there is a duty owed to children by the very nature of who they are. To her mind Ms. Shiriver’s action was criminal negligence as opposed to bad parenting. When investigating the injury or death of a child who has been left unattended prosecutors focus on the nature of the risk taken by the parent, and the nature of the result. In such cases, the words “foreseeable” and “preventable” are often invoked in debate.

State law gives a guideline for distinguishing between criminal negligence and flighty parenting. Was the risk of such nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constituted a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe? In practical terms, that leads to a series of questions: Does the family have a case history with child welfare agencies? How old was the child? Where was the child left? How many children were left together unattended?

Sitting beside a swimming pool in the Algarve on the evening of May 3 Gerry and Kate McCann were enjoying themselves. The tapas bar of the Mark Warner holiday resort in Praia da Luz was buzzing with holidaymakers and it was quiz night.

The McCanns were favourites to win the contest organised by the resort’s aerobics teacher Najova Chekaya. After all, the two doctors had brains on their side. Around their table were seven friends from England, three of them also doctors and one a top medical research fellow.

 1 jar of Sangria quiz show + 1, 6 white wine, 10 red wine + 1

The group of nine were holidaying in Portugal and wanted to have a good time. As one of the doctors, Matthew Oldfield, was to recall: “We drank. So what! We were on holiday.”

50 yards away on the other side of the swimming pool, the group’s children were sleeping alone. In the bedroom of one ground floor apartment was Madeleine, the McCann’s three-year-old daughter. Her twin brother and sister, Sean and Amelie, aged two, lay in cots either side of her. They had been tucked up at 7pm. Half an hour later the McCanns had joined their friends for dinner at the tapas bar.

Gerry and Kate McCann and their friends are like-minded people, with children of similar ages. And they knew each other in the Midlands. Mr McCann is a consultant cardiologist at a Leicester’s Glenfield Hospital and his wife is a GP. Both are aged 39.

Until recently Dr Oldfield worked at Leicester general hospital. David Payne is a senior research fellow in cardiovascular sciences at Leicester University and his wife, Fiona, is a doctor. Another of the holidaymakers, Dr Russell O’Brien, also worked at Leicester University before moving this summer. Recently they all went to Mark Warner’s in Greece where they had decided to leave their children to sleep while they had dinner nearby.

The McCanns reported that, in Praia da Luz, they were dining just 50 yards from the apartment. However, Madeleine’s bedroom was situated next to the apartment’s front door which is around the corner and a further 30 yards on, next to a road into the resort and a busy car park. The bedroom, and the front door to the apartment, is completely out of the sight of the tapas bar.

The McCanns insist that the children were being checked regularly and their friends support this. However the Portuguese police are concerned about discrepancies in the witness statements. Their stories and the timings of their movements on the night do not tally. Furthermore, emails and phone messages sent between the group - and intercepted by the PolÌcia Judiciaria and British detectives helping the inquiry - are reported to contain conversations that contradict earlier statements.

Mr McCann said he checked on his three children at 9.05pm. He noticed that a door in the apartment which had been left shut was ajar. He thought nothing of it. His daughter was fast asleep so he went back to the tapas bar.

Another of the group, Jane Tanner, says she took her turn 10 minutes later. She claimed later to police that she saw a dark-haired man of about 35 carrying a child as she walked back to the bar afterwards but thought nothing of it.

Soon after her return - at 9.45pm - Dr Oldfield did his round of the bedrooms. In a first statement to police, it is unclear if he actually went inside the McCann flat.

It appears that in many of the checks the children were not visible, but involved listening at doors or even outside the apartments.

In a second statement Dr Oldfield insisted he did look in Madeleine’s bedroom, believes he saw her there, and that there was light coming in through the windows as though the heavy shutters had been opened. Again, he thought little of it until afterwards. Then it was Mrs McCann’s turn. She went to the apartment at 10.00 pm and found Madeleine gone.


What is now perturbing Portuguese police is how could she be abducted when the McCann group were checking so often? Or have reports inadvertently exaggerated how vigilant the parents really were?

A worker at the tapas bar says that only a tall man, believed to be Russell O’Brien, got up from the table during the entire evening. Of course, this witness might be wrong. A busy barman could not have eyes on the McCann party for two and a half hours.

Najova Chekaya, who was running the quiz, was invited over to the McCann table by Mr McCann himself when the game ended at 9.30. She stayed for half an hour. She later claimed to friends that nobody left the table.

There is another conundrum too. It concerns the sighting by Jane Tanner of the man carrying a child. He was wearing beige trousers and smart black shoes. Her report is taken seriously by police. Yet a British holidaymaker, Jeremy Wilkins, has given a deposition that does not support her evidence. He knew Mr McCann because he played tennis with him, and was walking his eight-month-old son in the night air when the drama unfolded. He says that he met Mr McCann, who had come out of his apartment at 9.05pm , and had a word with him. Soon after that Jane Tanner would have crossed paths with Mr Wilkins and his baby. Mr Wilkins says he saw no man carrying a child or Jane Tanner herself. In his statement he said that it was a very narrow path and that it would have been almost impossible for anyone to walk by without him noticing.

Local newspapers and television have criticised the McCann group, who left their children alone for two and a half hours as they wined and dined. One question being asked is why didn’t the parents put their children in the evening crèche which is open until 11.30pm ? Why didn’t they hire a babysitter, bookable at the Mark Warner reception desk?

On July 23 Gerry McCann was grilled by American TV networks on this very point.

Speaking on ABC’s Good Morning America, the heart consultant said: “We didn’t think we needed a babysitter. We are good parents and what we did felt perfectly reasonable at the time. Clearly we couldn’t have predicted what was to happen.”

It seems unlikely that Ama Dwimoh, chief of the Crimes Against Children Bureau of the Brooklyn district attorney’s office would agree. As noted above, New York State law gives a guideline for distinguishing between criminal negligence and flighty parenting. Was the risk of such nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constituted a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe?

The outpouring of support which followed news of Madeleine’s disappearance is itself a cause for concern. Was this the reaction of parents who would do as the McCanns had done – leave their children home alone while they go out to dine – and who were now feeling “there but for the grace of God go I”?

A well known spokesperson for a parents’ group in Northern Ireland said on a local TV news bulletin that what the McCanns did was perfectly reasonable.

Gerry McCann was quizzed on American TV about the possibility he and his wife Kate could be prosecuted for leaving Madeleine and two year old twins Sean and Amelie alone in the apartment that night.

He told CNN: “We have been assured by the authorities that what we did fell well within the boundaries of good parenting. We have been advised our behaviour was legally well within the bounds of responsible parenting and have been assured no action will be taken. We were essentially performing our own baby-listening service. What Kate and I did was at worst naïve”.

The Crown Prosecution Service has already dismissed claims that the McCanns, from Rothley, Leics, could be prosecuted for neglecting Madeleine. One can only wonder whether the response would have been the same had Madeleine been the daughter of an 18-year-old single mum from one of our minority groups.

Gerry McCann says he is convinced that the high-profile campaign to find his daughter Madeleine could also help other missing children. While the tragic episode has captured the hearts of the British public in an unprecedented fashion, the blanket media coverage has so far not helped to find the youngster and some argue it may even have hindered it.

The scale of the interest shows that people do care and that they want to help, but all the attention focused on this one incident has glossed over a much more widespread problem. Of course every effort should be made to find Madeleine, but the massive amount of help and money that the search has had will no doubt seem unfair to a certain section of society – the families and friends of other missing people.

An estimated 210,000 people are reported missing in the UK each year and about two-thirds of those are under the age of 18. This means that there are thousands of parents who have gone through or are going through the same ordeal as the McCann’s without being afforded the same hope that the mass media attention brings.

Paul Tuohy, chief executive of the charity Missing People, (formerly called the National Missing Persons Helpline), says the charity offers support to around 2,000 families each year and that 10 missing people are located every week directly as a result of their work.

People go missing for a variety of reasons. Some people go missing for just 24 hours, while others are away for years. Some of them are found, while others are never seen again. When someone goes missing, the effect it has on their family or loved ones can be devastating. They can be left feeling angry, depressed, bewildered and often with a sense of bereavement.

 McCanns, 12 May 2007 - Madeleine's Birthday, Praia da Luz Church, Portugal

The grief that the McCanns are living through very publicly in Portugal is replicated behind closed doors all over the country. While the publicity surrounding Madeleine’s disappearance has not yet resulted in finding her, perhaps some good will come out of it, as it has raised awareness of the widespread issue of missing people and missing children in particular.

The problem of missing children is complex and multifaceted. There are different types of missing children, including family abductions, endangered runaways, non-family abductions, and lost, injured, or otherwise missing children (including disappeared un-accompanied minors seeking asylum). The media is very good at bringing attention to certain types of missing children cases, such as Madeleine’s, but others go by almost unreported.

To combat the inequality, Missing People hoped that as many people as possible would acknowledge International Missing Children’s Day on May 25. The aim was to encourage the population to think about all the children still missing in Europe and around the world and to spread a message of hope and solidarity at international level to parents who have no news about their children and do not know where they are or what has become of them. The day passed largely unnoticed.

The (US) National and International Centres for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC and ICMEC) were established in 1984 and 1998 respectively after six-year-old Adam Walsh was murdered after being snatched from a department store in Florida in 1981.

The case led to a major review of child abduction cases in the US and legislation passed last year - the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act - was named in his honour. The Act significantly strengthens America’s nationwide sex offender registration system and introduces harsher penalties for child sex offenders.

In October 2005 I was invited as a “European Expert” to participate in a US / EU summit organised by the International Center for Missing & Exploited Children in collaboration with Child Focus -the European Centre for Missing and Sexually Exploited Children. The event was entitled “Missing and Exploited Children: The Past, The Present and The Future” and aimed at developing a strategy for moving forward to strengthen our common fight against this phenomena. The summit was held in Buonas, Switzerland on 25-27 October 2005. While questioning my right to be called an “expert” I agreed to attend and to participate in the debates. I was very impressed by Adam Walsh’s father who addressed the summit. I spoke at length with Ernie Allen, President and CEO of ICMEC and was impressed by the work being done by both.

Last June, Madeleine’s parents sought the assistance of the ICMEC to create an international resource that would quickly disseminate pictures of missing children throughout the world. Gerry McCann recently visited the headquarters of NCMEC and ICMEC in Virginia where he discussed the need for disseminating information and images of missing children on a broader, global basis.

On August 10, ICMEC, in partnership with Google’s YouTube, and The Find Madeleine Campaign announced the creation of a new initiative that will provide worldwide exposure to information and videos of missing children. A new YouTube Missing Children’s Channel has been created exclusively for posting videos of missing children. The new channel can be found at:

www.youtube.com/DontYouForgetAboutMe

In launching the initiative Ernie Allen noted that hundreds of thousands of children go missing around the world every year. Some are abducted to other countries, creating unique challenges for law enforcement and family members searching for them. In the US alone, nearly 800,000 children are missing each year or about 2,000 each day. Photos remain the single most effective tool for finding a missing child. This new resource will provide unprecedented exposure for missing children, reaching potentially millions of viewers every day and increasing the opportunity that someone has seen them.

In the UK Missing People and similar organisations are clearly doing what they can. But they can’t do it all on their own. The public and media have a very important part to play. Not every child that goes missing does so in such dramatic circumstances as Madeleine McCann, but the strain on the families and friends is just as much. Madeleine is obviously a very young missing person and that could explain the level of interest, but what the public and media must learn to do is share their attention, sympathy and efforts to help across the board. They need to spread their level of interest across all missing persons’ cases, not just focus on the high profile ones.

Academic report published in September 2007 in the Northern Ireland Lay Magistrate Magazine by the Youth and Family Judges and Magistrates Association Company Secretary Dr Willie McCarney, OBE, JP

Related

Are Madeleine McCann's Parents Guilty Of Neglect? (And Is This Really The Biggest News Story In Britain?)

Woman in court over discovery of baby’s body

One Neglected British child dies every week


Understanding neglect

British couple facing child abandonment charges after boy found alone by Tenerife beach

The children failed by social services

Why Baby P was doomed to die

In figures: British child neglect

Madeleine McCann saga reflects our society

[Dr McCarney has been a Lay Magistrate (a part-time, voluntary role) in Northern Ireland for the past 29 years. He sits in the Youth Court dealing with young offenders aged 10 to 17 and in the Family Proceedings Court dealing with children in need of care and protection aged 0 to 17.

Dr McCarney is a Justice of the Peace for the City of Belfast.

He is a psychologist who taught for 13 years in Secondary Schools in Northern Ireland where he concentrated on working with disaffected, underachieving, boys aged 11-18 years old. He then moved to St Mary’s College, a Department of the Queens University of Belfast, which concentrates on teacher training. He lectured there for 21 years and his task was to show future teachers how informal teaching methods could help disaffected young people, preventing them from dropping out of school and keep them from getting on the wrong side of the law.

Dr McCarney has edited a number of books and is author of numerous articles on youth justice and child welfare. He is Editor of the Northern Ireland Youth and Family Courts Association’s ‘Lay Panel Magazine’ and Editor-in-Chief of the Chronicle – the magazine of the International Association of Youth and Family Judges and Magistrates.

Dr McCarney is a past Chairman of the Northern Ireland Youth and Family Courts Association and a past Chairman of the British Juvenile and Family Courts Society (now renamed Children Law UK). He was elected President of the International Association of Youth and Family Judges and Magistrates at their Congress in Melbourne, Australia, in October 2002 and will serve until the next Congress in 2006.]

Rise of the superinjunction: libel, privacy and press freedom under fire in the UK

15 April 2010 | Posted by  29 comments
The Frontline Club in London hosted a debate on the use of super-injunctions last night with Guardian investigations editor David Leigh, Carter-Ruck partner Nigel Tait, science writer Simon Singh and David Hooper, a media law specialist and partner at Reynolds Porter Chamberlain.



«It's one of the world's oldest surviving democracies, but just how free is the British media? Law firms can and do serve newsdesks with so-called superinjunctions banning all mention of their client or of the writ itself.

Lawyers acting for footballer John Terry and oil trader Trafigura [Carter Ruck] both tried this tactic to stop unfavourable coverage - only for the facts to eventually trickle into the public domain.

Are these strong-arm tactics a threat to press freedom? Or simply an inevtiable response to the irresponsible, scandal-obsessed British newspapers? And more importantly, how can lawyers and judges expect to keep allegations secret when it only takes one person and a broadband connection to publish them around the world in seconds.»

from Frontline Club 

Related
MPs' verdict on News of the World phone-hacking scandal: Amnesia, obfuscation and hush money
Carter Ruck and Trafigura: Dirty Tricks and Toxic Waste in the Ivory Coast
Trafigura and the Minton Report: 'Super injunction' was lifted after the horse had bolted
The Day Twitter Destroyed a Gagging Order
Note to Trafigura/Carter Ruck: you can’t suppress Twitter


HoC Culture, Media and Sport Committee - Second Report on Press standards, privacy and libel
The McCanns' Injunction: Quotes by the Defence Lawyers
The Temporary Injunction: Granted on September 9, 2009
McCann couple demands books to be fully destroyed
To forbid or not to forbid books is still a question
The Temporary Injunction: Granted on September 9, 2009
McCanns' pain doesn't justify censorship effort
Kate and Gerry McCann Threaten to Sue Bloggers
A Censurable Censure

Related Sites on Media, Press & Citizen Freedom of Speech
Index on Censorship
Article 19
Libel Reform Campaign
Tabloid Watch
UK Freedom of Information Blog
Inform Blog
Private Eye
Don't Get Fooled Again
Bad Science [Ben Goldacre's blog]
Political Scrapbook

NOTW: Brits launch Maddie probe

11 April 2010 | Posted by  318 comments


Jim Gamble, CEOP


By Lucy Panton

British police are to launch a new probe into missing Madeleine McCann after massive failures were found in the Portuguese investigation.

Our top child protection cop Jim Gamble has completed a fresh look at the three-year-old investigation for the Home Office.

He told ministers there were huge holes in the original inquiry that need to be revisited if they want to "come close" to reaching UK standards.

It will come as a bitter pill for Portuguese investigators who have fended off criticism since Maddie disappeared in 2007.

But parents Kate and Gerry McCann, both 41 and both doctors, are "delighted" at the move.

Failures in the original investigation are said to be "so gaping" that British authorities feel it is their duty to look at it again.

This time police will review all the leads using technology and standards expected in a homicide or kidnap case in the UK.

Mr Gamble, head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre, found a basic failure to collate information and join up links that should have been made.

Telephone records were not properly analysed, missing early opportunities for leads.

And Kate and Gerry McCann were named as Arguidos, or formal suspects, by Portuguese police - something that the review says would not have happened if the probe had been carried out in the UK.

Mr Gamble found no evidence sufficient to make them suspects. His findings have now been formally submitted to the Home Office with recommendations to re-investigate.

The damning review has now set the Association of Chief Police Officers the difficult task of trying to decide who takes on the mammoth task. It is already predicted to be "an extremely costly" investigation that, even if done properly, will probably never be solved.

A source said: "It is something that has to be reviewed. It is only right that the McCanns are given the satisfaction that everything that could be done has been done. It now comes down to who is up to the job."

The Home Secretary Alan Johnson is expected to announce that the new probe will NOT be carried out by Leicestershire police, the McCanns' local force. The review has highlighted failures within their handling of the case and ruled them out of the review.

Instead ACPO are now asking around their top cops to see who could take on the very difficult and complex investigation.

The source added: "It will be extremely costly and sadly is unlikely to result in a positive outcome.

"As much as we would all like this to end with good news for the McCanns, the fact is there have been a lot of missed opportunities and no-one will ever be able to reclaim the time and evidence lost."

Two thousand pages of evidence released earlier claimed Portuguese detectives failed to follow up leads.

Home Secretary Alan Johnson ordered officials to examine the "feasibility" of British detectives having a fresh look at all the evidence back in March.

Kate and Gerry McCann, of Rothley, met Mr Johnson to plead for help in their search for their daughter who vanished aged three from a holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal.



in: News Of The World, 11.04.2010

The Sun: 'Maddie perv' dies with his secrets

10 April 2010 | Posted by  85 comments

By Neil Syson

A paedophile who was a prime suspect in the hunt for Madeleine McCann has died - taking any secrets he had to the grave.

Convicted child rapist Raymond Hewlett, 64, died of throat cancer and was cremated at a pauper's funeral in Germany four months ago.

His ex-wife Susan, 64, and children in Telford, Shropshire, were unaware of his death.

Two private detectives hired by Maddie's parents Kate and Gerry went to Aachen, Germany, at least three times in a bid to interview Hewlett.

But a source said: "He always wriggled out of it, saying he was too sick to see them. He was never eliminated from the inquiry."

Maddie, of Rothley, Leics, was three when she vanished on holiday in Portugal in May 2007. Ex-soldier Hewlett bore a close resemblance to a straggly-haired man seen lurking near the McCann apartment.

He was in Portugal when Maddie was snatched and left for Morocco three weeks later. And he told a pal he knew gipsies who sold children to perverts. Hewlett's German second wife Mariana, 35, refused to comment.


in: The Sun, 10.04.2010




Digital economy bill rushed through wash-up in late night session

9 April 2010 | Posted by  14 comments



The House of Commons during the Committee stage of the digital economy bill, April 2010 [this caption was amended on 8 April 2010. It originally said that the Bill was at the third reading]


Government drops clause on orphan works but inserts amendment criticised as over-broad which could block sites based on 'intent'


by Charles Arthur

The government forced through the controversial digital economy bill with the aid of the Conservative party last night, attaining a crucial third reading – which means it will get royal assent and become law – after just two hours of debate in the Commons.

However it was forced to drop clause 43 of the bill, a proposal on orphan works which had been opposed by photographers. They welcomed the news: "The UK government wanted to introduce a law to allow anyone to use your photographs commercially, or in ways you might not like, without asking you first. They have failed," said the site set up to oppose the proposals.

But despite opposition from the Liberal Democrats and a number of Labour MPs who spoke up against measures contained in the bill and put down a number of proposed amendments, the government easily won two votes to determine the content of the bill and its passage through the committee stage without making any changes it had not already agreed.

Tom Watson, the former Cabinet Office minister who resigned in mid-2009, voted against the government for the first time in the final vote to take the bill to a third reading. However the vote was overwhelmingly in the government's favour, which it won by 189 votes to 47.

Earlier the government removed its proposed clause 18, which could have given it sweeping powers to block sites, but replaced it with an amendment to clause 8 of the bill. The new clause allows the secretary of state for business to order the blocking of "a location on the internet which the court is satisfied has been, is being or is likely to be used for or in connection with an activity that infringes copyright".

The Liberal Democrat MP John Hemming protested that this could mean the blocking of the whistleblower site Wikileaks, which carries only copyrighted work. Stephen Timms for the government said that it would not want to see the clause used to restrict freedom of speech – but gave no assurance that sites like Wikileaks would not be blocked.

Don Foster, the Liberal Democrats' spokesman for culture, media and sport, protested that the clause was too wide-ranging: "it could apply to Google," he complained, adding that its inclusion of the phrase about "likely to be used" meant that a site could be blocked on its assumed intentions rather than its actions.

The Lib Dem opposition to that amendment prompted the first vote - known as a division – on the bill, but the Labour and Conservative whips pushed it through, winning it by 197 votes to 40. The next 42 clauses of the bill were then considered in five minutes.

Numerous MPs complained that the bill was too important and its ramifications too great for it to be pushed through in this "wash-up" period in which bills are not given the usual detailed examination.

However the government declined to yield – although it had already done a deal with the Tories which meant that a number of its provisions, including clause 43 and the creation of independent local news consortia, would not be part of the bill.


in: The Guardian, 08.03.2010


UK Media News: The PCC Failure, a Superinjunction Inquiry and a FOIA Extension

8 April 2010 | Posted by  35 comments

Interesting media news, one that relates to the McCanns and the PCC, another that relates to Carter Ruck [the McCann couple lawyers] and the abuse of the 'superinjunctions' in the media and another article on the future extension of the FOIA to the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO). Article extracts and links follow bellow.


PCC attacks MPs' report

Regulator criticises select committee's proposal for new powers and defends record over phone-hacking and McCann case. The Press Complaints Commission has today questioned whether a proposal by a parliamentary select committee that it should have the sanction of [...] The press regulator said that the select committee had "failed to acknowledge the current level of proactive work undertaken by the PCC". Issuing "public warnings" without having received a complaint about an article was a policy that "fatally undermined" the credibility of its predecessor, the Press Council.

"It is in this context that the PCC's actions in regard to the McCann case must be viewed. It would not have been possible, contrary to the select committee's assertions, for the commission to have come to an independent view in May 2007 on questions of accuracy or impropriety in the reporting of the McCann case," said Abell.

"The PCC would clearly have needed information from those at the centre of the story to do so. At that point, the commission had already sought to engage with the McCanns and make itself available to offer all necessary assistance. The McCanns publicly thanked the PCC for its work in dealing with harassment and protecting the privacy of their children. They elected, as was their right, to pursue other matters through the courts," he added.

"However, the commission is committed to learning lessons from a case that led to a significant amount of public concern about press standards. It does accept that it could have done more to direct the McCanns' concerns about reporting, and to channel them into more formal complaints. It will take this on board for the future."

The PCC also said that it "proper role" is to uphold press standards through a system to allow editors to be held to account and not to "uphold general standards relating to taste and offence". more in the Guardian

Related also here at Press Gazette PCC: ‘MPs have failed to acknowledge the work we do’ «The Press Complaints Commission has hit back at a recommendation from MPs that it should have tougher powers and be able to suspend publication of newspapers in extreme cases.

In February the Media, Culture and Sport select committee condemned the PCC overs its investigation into phone hacking at the News of the World and its “failure to intervene in irresponsible press coverage following the disappearance of Madeleine McCann in February”.

Committee chairman John Whittingdale said the PCC needed to take a more active role in upholding standards because it is seen as “lacking credibility and authority” . The report named “Press Standards, Privacy and Libel” called for an appointment of a deputy director to enforce standards and for the PCC to be renamed the “Press Complaints and Standards Board” to reflect it’s enhanced power.»

Superinjunctions inquiry to start work next month

Superinjunctions are to be examined by a powerful committee of judges and lawyers, it was announced today, after months of speculation about the impact of the legal restrictions on press freedom. [...] Superinjunctions have been blamed for silencing the press partly because of the cost of attempting to have them overturned. There is currently no information about the extent to which they have been used against the media, although a series of high-profile cases, including the Guardian's attempt to report about the dumping of toxic waste in the Ivory Coast involving the oil trading company Trafigura, led to concern about their use.

Although the lord chief justice, Lord Judge, spoke out against the use of superinjunctions last year, some judges have been sceptical about the extent to which measures are being used. Last month the specialist high court judge Mr Justice Eady, who has presided over many of the most high-profile media cases, said he had never heard the term superinjunction until the measures imposed on the Guardian were questioned in parliament.

"I had never heard the term 'superinjunction' until it was mentioned in parliament," Eady said, speaking at City University. "I was not conscious I had ever granted one, but I might have." The lack of awareness of superinjunctions is one of the factors prompting the committee to investigate, experts say. more in the Guardian

Related here "Judicial committee to examine super-injunctions"

Master of the Rolls, Lord Neuberger, has established a committee of lawyers from newspaper groups, leading London firms and members of the judiciary to examine the use of so called "super-injunctions" to gag the press.

The Judiciary of England and Wales said this morning the move had been prompted by a published in February by the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee which was highly critical of the use of injunctions which prevented reporting of a story and of the existence of the injunction itself.

Oil company Trafigura and its law firm Carter-Ruck caused public outcry in October when it emerged they had unsuccessfully attempted to use a wide-ranging gagging order to prevent The Guardian reporting a Parliamentary question relating to the oil firm.

The new committee, which will be chaired by the Master of the Rolls, includes Marcus Partington, group legal director of Trinity Mirror, and Gillian Phillips, director of Guardian News and Media editorial legal services, alongside figures from law firms which have made use of the injunctions such as Carter-Ruck and Schillings.

The newly-established committee, which will meet for the first time on 4 May, follows justice secretary Jack Straw launching a consultation last year with lawyers from major newspapers over super-injunctions following the row over Carter Ruck using an injunction to apparently stop The Guardian from reporting a question asked in the House of Commons about the law firm Trafigura.

FOI scope to be extended from next year


The Freedom of Information Act will be extended to cover four more bodies from next year. Justice Minister Michael Wills announced last week that the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) [Vice President Matt Baggott who worked with Leicestershire Police on the Madeleine Case, the same Police who still has a link to the former arguidos website and on-line shop] and the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) will be opened up to greater public scrutiny. [...] more in Press Gazzette


EU Child abduction alert system to be adopted in the UK

4 April 2010 | Posted by  167 comments
In 2006 from the European Commission on «Children - Violence against children»

Within the framework of the protection of children, the Commission adopted a Communication on 4 July 2006 entitled “Towards an EU strategy on the Rights of the Child". It aims at establishing a comprehensive EU strategy to promote and safeguard the rights of the child in the European Union's policies and to support Member States' efforts in this field.

The Communication, whose main goal is to underpin the existing legal structure, follows on from other measures taken in the area of violence against children, such as combating trafficking in human beings and sexual exploitation of children, child sex tourism, child pornography, and civil society's contribution to finding missing or sexually exploited children.

Measures listed in the communication that have already been taken in this area include the "116000" hotline phone number for missing children and reflections on how to implement an alert system for missing children throughout Europe, such as the “Child Alert” system recently launched in several European countries, with has been a resounding success .
From the European Commission Press Release system, on 25 May 2009

On International Missing Children's Day, organised by Missing Children Europe, Mr Barrot took part in launching a high-profile publicity campaign for the 116 000 hotline. He expressed the Commission's encouragement for the initiative and its willingness to continue working closely with associations active in the field of protecting children's rights. He expressed his personal commitment to encouraging the adoption in each Member State of an "abduction alert" type of system, which could save lives. He regretted that the 116 000 hotline to social support services for missing children and their families was only operational in five Member States and found the delay difficult to explain. In his view, it showed the importance of resolute action to ensure that the EU's instruments produced practical results on the ground.

On the same occasion, the President of Missing Children Europe, Sir Francis Jacobs, said: "While establishing one and the same telephone number for missing children across the EU sounded quite ambitious and farfetched at first, it is now becoming a tangible reality. With the launch of the campaign in 10 EU Member States, we look forward to reaching out to many children and parents across the EU, through the immediate support granted by our member organizations operating a 116 000 hotline at national level. Every member of society is encouraged to call the number immediately if they know or even suspect that a child is missing or abducted."

To show solidarity with all parents and missing children, Mr Barrot asked European Commission staff to express their support for families affected by a disappearance by wearing a forget-me-not: missing children must not be forgotten.

Background

116 000

A Commission Decision of 2007 requires the EU countries to make the number available but does not require them to assign it to a service provider or operate these services. This calls for a firm commitment on the part of the national authorities. The Commission has repeatedly urged the Member States to make this number operational as soon as possible. So far this has been the case in five Member States: Greece, Hungary, the Netherlands, Portugal and Romania.

As of today, 25 May 2009 - according to information received by the national organisations concerned - the number is also operational in France, Belgium, Poland, Italy and Slovakia. This headway is undoubtedly due to the awareness-raising campaign conducted throughout 2008 as part of a Commission-funded project under the Daphne III Programme which was designed to encourage the EU countries where the number is not yet in use to assign and operate the 116 000 hotline.

"Child abduction alert" system

The Commission has adopted a working paper on best practices for launching a cross-border child abduction alert, which was welcomed by the JHA Council on 27 and 28 November 2008. It has published a call for proposals totalling €1 million as support for the Member States that have not yet adopted a "Child Alert" type of system.

Combating trafficking in human beings and the sexual exploitation of children and child pornography

In March this year the Commission adopted two proposals containing new rules to step up the fight against trafficking in human beings, the sexual exploitation of children and child pornography. These new proposals will guarantee greater assistance for victims and harsher measures against the criminals responsible for the sexual exploitation of children and trafficking.

As of 29 June 2009 the EU Child Alert System was implemented in Portugal, as reported in this blog entry :«Portuguese Child Alert System in Action»

As of today, Portugal has a child abduction alert system that will allow to gather, immediately after the crime, elements that can help quickly locate an abducted child.

A protocol that will be signed today at the Polícia Judiciária Superior School in Loures will associate several tens of public and private entities, including Lusa agency, which are apt to broadcast the message of abduction alert, with the judiciary and police authorities.

The creation of the national child abduction alert system follows the proposal that was presented during the Portuguese Presidency of the European Union at the Justice and Home Affairs Council informal meeting, which took place in Lisbon, where Portugal proposed the creation of a Europe-wide mechanism.

Today the UK News Agency Press Association reports:

Kidnap alert system to be unveiled


Police will unveil a new nationwide alert system for enlisting the public to help them rescue abducted children next month.

Officials have been working behind the scenes for months to iron out bureaucratic hurdles to broadcasting sensitive information.

Kate and Gerry McCann have campaigned for such a system to be introduced since their daughter Madeleine disappeared in Portugal in May 2007. They emphasised how the first hours after an abduction are crucial and that an alert would spread information more quickly.

The new network, comparable to the amber alert system in the United States, will be compatible with other European countries for the first time.

As a result a continent-wide alert could be issued in circumstances where youngsters may be taken across national borders.

Although some 100,000 children are reported missing to police each year, senior officers expect the national alert to be used extremely rarely.

The upgraded child rescue alert system will use new computer software to handle the anticipated deluge of calls from concerned members of the public.

Similar alerts in France provoked 600 calls within the first three hours, leaving investigators struggling to prioritise information.

Regional and national television and radio stations will broadcast messages, in some cases interrupting scheduled programmes. Those behind the system also hope to eventually use internet and text messaging as well as motorway information signs.

The system is being co-ordinated by the National Police Improvement Agency (NPIA) and any national abduction will be led by Greater Manchester Police.

Related: British Media: How lies are spun, grown and perpetuated «Again the British newspapers keep perpetuating the myth - the McCanns did not have the idea nor did they campaign for the EU Wide Child Alert System, at best they opportunistically obfuscated the real protagonists of the EU Child Alert System: Justice and Home Affairs Commissioner Franco Frattini, who was the among the first ones promoting this project, along with Ludmilla Putin, Margarida Sousa Uva Barroso - link to an article of 2005, Laura Bush, and a few European Union MEP's