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PA Archive/Press Association Images
controversial book

Madeleine McCann's parents lose libel appeal over claims they were involved in her disappearance

Madeleine would turn 13 next month.

AN APPEALS COURT in Portugal has overturned the libel conviction of a former Portuguese detective who published a book alleging the parents of missing British girl Madeleine McCann were involved in a cover up of their daughter’s disappearance, the parents’ lawyer has said.

Lisbon lawyer Isabel Duarte told The Associated Press she was notified of the court’s decision to uphold Goncalo Amaral’s appeal against the order to pay Kate and Gerry McCann €500,000 in compensation. That ruling was handed down by a lower court in Lisbon a year ago, prompting Amaral to appeal.

Duarte said she intended to fight the decision at the Supreme Court, though she hadn’t yet assembled her legal arguments.

Amaral was part of the police investigation into Madeleine’s disappearance from a holiday home in Portugal’s Algarve region in May 2007, days before her fourth birthday. In 2008 he published his book about the case called The Truth of the Lie.

The McCanns sought €1.2 million in damages from Amaral, saying they were “totally destroyed” and “depressed” by Amaral’s allegations and felt “ashamed” that they might appear to have been to blame for their daughter’s disappearance.

mc File photo of Kate and Gerry McCann Rui Vieira / PA Archive/Press Association Images Rui Vieira / PA Archive/Press Association Images / PA Archive/Press Association Images

Amaral had argued in his defence that his claims stemmed from the police investigation and that Portuguese media had already reported the possibility that the parents might have played a role in Madeleine’s disappearance.

The appeals court “decided that (Amaral) had the right to do what he did, it said he can write what he wants,” Duarte said, stating: “It absolved him, said he didn’t have to pay anything.”

She said the McCanns took the reversal in their stride after a long time battling in Portuguese courts.

“They’re used to it,” Duarte said.

Portuguese police closed the case in 2008 because authorities had detected no crime, but British police are still looking into it. Madeleine would turn 13 next month.

Comments are closed due to ongoing legal proceedings. 

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Author
Associated Foreign Press