Irish Sunday Mirror

We failed Maddie

Top Portugal cop makes amazing admission

- alan.selby@mirror.co.uk

heard theories so stupid over these 10 years. When we don’t understand something, we complicate it.

“I think sometimes – always – the best solution is the simple solution.”

Mr Cristovao left the police to head up Portugal’s Associatio­n for Missing Children the year Maddie vanished. He later wrote a book about the case.

Now, discussing her disappeara­nce for the first time in nearly a decade, he has laid out the errors he thinks set the investigat­ion on the road to failure.

Instead of old-fashioned legwork, he believes there was too much focus on outlandish theories and behavioura­l profiles in the first hours and days.

Ten years ago, Mr Cristovao claimed the Mccanns had been neglectful to leave their children alone as they dined nearby. But he insists he does not believe Kate and Gerry, from Rothley, Leics, are behind her death.

He said: “The most important thing was starting an investigat­ion on Madeleine – where is she? – instead of starting an investigat­ion because the mother looks like this, or the father looks like that, or the mother won’t cry, or the father won’t cry.

“For me, that’s bulls**t, because everybody has their own way. I have my own little girl, and if she goes missing for 10 seconds I feel like my world has fallen apart. Everybody reacts differentl­y.”

Mr Cristovao says this was the biggest failing of all – from the first on the scene, to the judicial police, to the British investigat­ors who later joined the hunt. This was even though the case went on to become reportedly the most expensive in Portuguese history. He said: “When Madeleine disappeare­d, we had 12 other missing children – three or four in the Madeira islands, the rest on the mainland. “The money we spent on Madeleine was a million times more than all the others put together. “I don’t know if it was pressure from government or the media, but it was the most expensive investigat­ion in the history of Portugal – by far. “That’s one of the lessons too, not always putting big numbers and lots of policemen. Sometimes you don’t need 400 officers, you need only three or four to focus on the results.”

In the UK police have spent more than €13million on the investigat­ion.

Mr Cristovao also believes the waters were made murkier by the scale of the operation internatio­nally – as agencies competed for control.

He said: “Half the world was investigat­ing because everyone wanted the reward. Everybody wanted to be recognised for solving the case.

“Madeleine was big business for many, many people.”

Ex-scotland Yard detective Colin Sutton said yesterday Madeleine was most likely kidnapped by trafficker­s. He said: “It’s more likely than a paedophile ring. Six and seven-year-olds are much more at risk from paedophile­s.”

When we don’t understand something, we complicate it. The simple solution is best. PEREIRA CRISTOVAO ON WILD MADDIE THEORIES

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? VANISHED FROM VILLA Madeleine, 3, disappeare­d 10 years ago next month
VANISHED FROM VILLA Madeleine, 3, disappeare­d 10 years ago next month
 ??  ?? TOO MANY MISTAKES Pereira Cristovao
TOO MANY MISTAKES Pereira Cristovao
 ??  ??

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