Irish Daily Mail

I was frozen out by bungling local Maddie cops, says top UK detective

Child abduction expert says ‘macho, 1970s culture’ of Portuguese police hindered hunt for suspect

- By Stephen Wright and Richard Pendlebury

WERE it not for coronaviru­s, Graham Hill would be in the US this week training FBI agents. His speciality is the abduction and murder of children by sexual predators, and when he talks senior detectives from police and investigat­ion agencies around the world listen.

But they didn’t in the Portuguese holiday resort of Praia da Luz in 2007.

Dr Hill has given the Mail a disturbing insider account of the chaotic first two weeks of the hunt for Madeleine McCann.

On May 7, 2007, Dr Hill – then a Surrey detective superinten­dent seconded to the UK’s new Child Exploitati­on and Online Protection centre – flew to Portugal to lend expert help to the hunt for Madeleine.

The three-year-old’s disappeara­nce on May 3 from a bedroom at the Ocean Club while her parents, Gerry and Kate, ate dinner was beginning to dominate the news.

Detective Superinten­dent Hill – who had secured the world’s first conviction based on familial DNA – could have helped while the evidence was still fresh.

But thanks to systemic dysfunctio­n and suspicion of outside interventi­on by the Portuguese police team – led by detective Goncalo Amaral, who would be removed from the case and publish a book which made false allegation­s against Madeleine’s parents – his input was unwelcome.

Thirteen years and £12million pounds of UK taxpayer-funded investigat­ion later she has still not been found.

But ten days ago, German prosecutor­s named convicted paedophile Christian Brueckner, 43, as a prime suspect.

He is serving a jail term in Germany for drug-dealing. In December he was sentenced to seven years for raping a 72-yearold US woman in Praia da Luz in 2005 – a conviction that is being reviewed.

The blame game has already begun, however. Why wasn’t Brueckner on the radar of the initial Portuguese investigat­ion, and why wasn’t he identified by the Met’s own nine-year probe – Operation Grange?

A source close to the McCann case said last night: ‘A war is brewing between the Portuguese police and Scotland Yard over their previous knowledge of Brueckner.

‘The Portuguese are, once again, becoming defensive about their role.’

PORTUGUESE police have told local media that UK Met detectives knew about Brueckner in 2012 but had ‘devalued’ him as a suspect by not ‘attributin­g relevance’ and ‘never’ requesting further informatio­n.

A British police source confirmed that Brueckner was a ‘person of interest’ at the start of Operation Grange, but there was insufficie­nt evidence to make him a suspect.

Dr Hill, who retired from the force in 2012, has watched the latest developmen­t with interest.

On the day he arrived in Praia da Luz in 2007 he met Mr and Mrs McCann, who told him they were already concerned about what was being done by local police.

He said: ‘They wanted reassuranc­e. Gerry McCann told me, “I took my daughter from one EU country to another EU country. How could the standards of police investigat­ion be so different?”

‘I could not give them any reassuranc­e. But I said I would try to help them find their daughter.’

The next morning at the town’s police station he met those leading the Portuguese investigat­ors.

‘It was like going back to the 1970s,’ he recalls. ‘Very macho. The incident room was full of cigarette smoke and there was a noticeable absence of women.

‘It wasn’t what I expected coming from a UK investigat­ive perspectiv­e. There did not seem to be a lot of people around. It wasn’t very busy. And that’s all I saw of how they worked. I was never invited anywhere else.’

‘It was fraught from the word go. The detectives were very polite and measured but also suspicious of why we were there and what we were seeking to achieve. I only met Amaral on that first occasion and one further meeting. Clearly he felt he did not need my help.’

Dr Hill said he asked every day for informatio­n or a meeting with someone connected to the case, adding: ‘I had to do all the pushing. The meeting would be scheduled then, invariably, cancelled.

‘If I asked about search strategies they would simply tell me they were doing everything possible. If I asked about known sex offenders they would tell me it was all in hand. I was kept at a distance. I could offer advice on predatory sex offenders and hope they would show some interest and engage, but they didn’t.

‘It took an awfully long time to establish even the smallest detail.

‘No one ever said, “What do you think?”. They were simply paying lip service to my presence.’

It was several days before they even told him they were focused on a prime suspect – British expat Robert Murat. Dr Hill offered them advice on interview techniques, which was the only time he believes they ever really listened to him, but Murat proved to be completely innocent.

No other suspects were ever mentioned to him. The McCanns only became suspects, or ‘arguidos’, in September – another indication of how the investigat­ion was run badly from the start.

Dr Hill said that had Portuguese detectives been more willing to discuss the case ‘I would have told them the first people they needed to eliminate from the investigat­ion is the parents or a relative’. He added: ‘For the Portuguese to make them suspects months later was complete nonsense.

‘The job had got away from them very early on and they never recovered. It was too big for them.’

After ten days of passive obstructio­n, Dr Hill returned to the UK.

DIFFICULT questions must be asked of Portuguese and British police, he said, as to why Brueckner was not properly investigat­ed before now. He added: ‘When did the Portuguese know about Brueckner? And in what context? These same questions apply to the Metropolit­an Police.

‘The worst-case scenario for any senior investigat­ing officer is that there is informatio­n already in their systems which would have led to an ID of the offender.

Citing US research, he said: ‘They looked at 75 conviction­s for child abduction – 70% of those who carried them out were spoken to in the first 48 hours of the investigat­ion. It’s good to say, “Let’s go back and look again”. But that didn’t happen. Madeleine still has not been found. But we must learn lessons from her case.’

news@dailymail.ie

 ??  ?? Still missing: The McCanns with an image of how Maddie might have looked in 2012
Still missing: The McCanns with an image of how Maddie might have looked in 2012
 ??  ?? Taken off the case: Goncalo Amaral
Taken off the case: Goncalo Amaral

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