Daily Mail story today re Portugal's elite paedophile ring

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Daily Mail story today re Portugal's elite paedophile ring

Postby Jeff » Sat Oct 20, 2007 12:27 pm

Why Portugal is a haven for paedophiles - the disturbing backcloth to the Madeleine case

20th October 2007

A ferrari engine makes a deep, distinctive sound.

When the children at Portugal's most famous orphanage heard the sports car roaring down the driveway, fear swept through the dormitories.

The noise could mean only one thing: the man known as The Doctor was coming to call.

Yet this medical practitioner had no intention of adhering to the ancient Hippocratic Oath.

Instead, arriving at Casa Pia (House of the Pious), a 17th century Lisbon orphanage where more than 4,000 children are cared for each year behind high stone walls, the doctor would summon selected boys and girls from their beds for examinations one night each week.

Where possible, he chose deaf-mutes.

After checking that the children were not suffering from any sexual infections, the doctor was joined by the orphanage caretaker, known as Bibi, who ushered the unfortunate children outside to a waiting van.

With the doctor following in his red Ferrari, Bibi drove the van to the prestigious homes of some of the leading members of Lisbon society - ranging from Portuguese government ministers and high-ranking diplomats, to famous television stars and members of the judiciary.

There, the children were repeatedly sexually abused. Some were allegedly drugged to make them compliant; others were plied with alcohol.

This continued for years. Assaults were filmed; pictures of one attack were subsequently found at the home of a suspected paedophile in Paris.


According to medical records, the victims' injuries were horrific - and consistent with serious sexual assault and rape. In witness statements, many were able to describe in minute detail the homes where they were taken and identifying marks on the bodies of their abusers.

The existence of this so-called "magic circle" of the Portuguese establishment, allegedly involved in an international paedophile ring using boys and girls from Casa Pia, was last week likened to an earthquake waiting to shake Portugal to its foundations.

New allegations about the scale of the network will be put before the country's highest court within the next few weeks.

Amid rumours of links to other paedophile gangs across Europe and the U.S., international experts on child sex crimes and murders are expected to be in court when the case re-opens, four years after a group of victims broke a silence lasting more than 30 years.

But what relevance does this have to the disappearance 170 days ago of four-year-old Madeleine McCann in Praia da Luz, about 280km from Lisbon?

And what does it mean for Kate and Gerry McCann, who have not only had to cope with losing their child, but have also been subjects of a vicious campaign in the Portuguese press to smear them?

It is crucial for two reasons; first because it proves what international crime agencies have long suspected: that Portugal has become a magnet for predatory paedophiles from around the world, using the country's lax laws and preying on the high numbers of poor, abandoned children.

And second, because Paulo Rebelo, an urbane, methodical detective who led the Casa Pia paedophile inquiry, was last night finishing his first week as the new chief of the investigation into the disappearance of the British child.

Rebelo has replaced Goncalo Amaral, the "oafish" local police chief out of his depth in a case that has captured unprecedented world attention, with millions fascinated by the story of the girl snatched from her bed on holiday while her parents ate with friends 200 yards away.

The sight of the sweaty, corpulent Amaral in restaurants and cafes near the Portimao police headquarters had become commonplace since Madeleine disappeared.

While the McCanns were warned repeatedly they faced jail for speaking about the case, he was been overheard, during his daily three-hour lunches of wine and shellfish, accusing the couple of killing their daughter.

In one conversation with Portugal's ex-Formula One racing driver Pedro Lamy, Amaral revealed he was convinced the McCanns drugged their daughter and accidentally killed her. "The police case is we are sure the parents killed Madeleine. They are both doctors and know about drugs.

"We are confident in our case," he said.

In an effort to make up for lost time following Amaral's dismissal, Rebelo has recruited his own men from Lisbon. To the fury of the original officers, he has lost little time in sidelining them, bringing in two child sex experts from the Casa Pia case as well as homicide specialists and computer analysts - known as "the cleaners" due to their reputation for leaving no stone unturned.

According to senior police sources, he also launched a furious private attack on the 100 officers involved in the original inquiry, which he has now cut back to 40.

At a meeting, he accused some officers of having "closed minds" about who was guilty, saying that "pre-conceptions should be challenged".

In addition, he oversaw Operation Predator - raids on more than 70 suspected paedophiles, whose computers were searched last week for images of Madeleine or other evidence of criminal sexual acts. Although by last night Rebelo had failed to make a breakthrough, sources say it is a clear sign, along with reports that Russian child traffickers may be involved, of a strand of his current thinking.

In a Lisbon café, an associate of Rebelo told the Mail: "The Casa Pia case had a deep affect on Paulo. You come across things that are appalling and cruel. But you get a feeling that there are some seriously bad people in the world, and some of them are here. He does not rule anything out."

So, after enduring months of soul-destroying leaks from the Portuguese police - from claims that they drugged Madeleine and then disposed of her body, to allegations that Gerry was not even her real father - the McCanns are no longer the sole focus of the Portuguese police investigation.

But the nightmare goes on. A group of officers loyal to Amaral are still leaking smears to the Portuguese press.

The latest?

That bodily fluids from Madeleine's corpse were found in the boot of the couple's hire care and that "background checks" were to be carried out on Gerry McCann's laptop. And then the police "sources" claimed that Kate killed Madeleine without telling Gerry, and that the body was "refrigerated" before being dumped up to 25 days later.

His career in tatters and now back on desk duties in Faro, Amaral faces a criminal hearing in the case of another missing child, Joana Cipriano, after being accused of concealing evidence that the girl's mother was tortured into confessing to her murder.

Amaral and his colleagues face countless unanswered questions about mistakes in the original police investigation into Maddie's disappearance, such as failing to ensure the McCanns' apartment was sealed off for forensics. (This did not happen until the next day, by which time the McCanns, their friends, resort staff and detectives had traipsed through, destroying potentially vital evidence.)

They also failed to seal off the Mark Warner Ocean Club resort. No roadblocks were set up and police on the Spanish border - two hours' drive away - were not alerted for 12 hours. Staff were only quizzed 60 hours later. And the CCTV footage from a busy main road was never studied. The list of mistakes goes on.

While the shift in the investigation may ease the intolerable pressure on the McCanns, it will do little to console them.

As well as growing fears that Madeleine was abducted by a paedophile ring, they can have little hope of justice when leading Portuguese figures are allegedly involved in covering-up their own child sex scandal.

Both cases - the two highest profile criminal investigations in the country since the end of the Portuguese military dictatorship in 1974 - have been riven by allegations of compromised police officers, high-level interference and vicious, virulent attacks on key witnesses.

Pedro Namora, a former Casa Pia orphan who witnessed 11 rapes on fellow orphans, during which they were tied to their beds, sympathises with the McCanns. He believes elements in the force have conspired to suppress both scandals, fearing damage to the country's reputation.

"Portugal is a paedophiles' paradise," said Mr Namora, now a lawyer campaigning on behalf of the Casa Pia victims. "If all the names come out, this will be an earthquake in Portugal. There is a massive, sophisticated network at play here - stretching from the government to the judiciary and the police.

"The network is enormous and extremely powerful. There are magistrates, ambassadors, police, politicians - all have procured children from Casa Pia. It is extremely difficult to break this down. These people cover for each other, because if one is arrested, they all are arrested. They don't want anyone to know."

Now 44, Mr Namora watched as friends sank into alcoholism, drug addiction and death after their traumatic childhood experiences at Casa Pia. "I was the only one who made it," he said. "What could I do? I couldn't keep silent."

He has received death threats and warnings about what will happen to his own children, after taking up the case when an orphan called "Joel" approached him, saying prominent paedophiles were using Casa Pia as a "supermarket for children".

Mr Namora has been threatened after fighting on behalf of the abused children he grew up with.

After being telephoned by a stranger offering to pay off his mortgage, he was told the exact movements of his own three children, and warned that they and their father would come to a grisly end unless he shut up.


An open, warm man, Mr Namora makes an unlikely conspiracy theorist-But he believes the case, which he brought to light in 2003, will underscore Portugal's growing attraction for paedophiles, which has seen six children disappear in recent years.

One reason for this attraction is that the law was quietly relaxed last year, ahead of the forthcoming trial, meaning that repeat offences against the same child would merit only a single charge - and a lesser sentence.

In echoes of the McCanns' ordeal, the initial investigation was badly handled when allegations of abuse were first made at Casa Pia in 1982. Carlos Silvino, the man known as Bibi, was linked to rapes and assaults, but police "lost" pictures showing prominent Lisbon politicians with him and the children.

He was only charged after dozens of children came forward in 2003. They also accused Jorge Ritto, a former Portuguese ambassador, of child abuse. Ritto, it transpired, had also once been sent home in disgrace from a posting in Germany after an incident involving a young boy in a park.

The conspiracy did not end there. Teresa Costa Macedo, a former secretary of state for the family, has revealed that she knew about the attacks in the early Eighties - and that she had alerted General Antonio Ramalho Eanes, the then Portuguese president, about the allegations.

Mrs Costa Macedo, who remained silent for two decades after being warned she would be killed if she spoke, now says that the caretaker "was just one element in a huge paedophile network that involved important people in our country. It wasn't just him [the caretaker]. He was a procurer of children for well-known people who range from diplomats and politicians to people linked to the media".

While still a government minister, Costa Macedo handed police "photographs, an account of the methods used to spirit children out of the orphanage and testimonies of a number of children". Many of the photographs were found at ex-ambassador Jorge Ritto's house. Police reportedly found four children locked up who had been missing from Casa Pia.

Under armed guard at a safe house last week, Bibi could count himself a lucky man. He originally faced allegations that he had sexually assaulted more than 600 children. That has since been reduced to 30. Silvino has hinted at the high-level of the conspiracy, saying: "They can't touch me - there are too many people involved."

Following Ritto's arrest, the police questioned Carloz Cruz, known as Portugal's "Mr Television", and Joao Diniz, a high- society doctor and driver of the red Ferrari. The network allegedly went further. Paulo Pedroso, a government minister, was arrested and quizzed about 15 cases of child sexual abuse.

Amid allegations that paedophile networks have become endemic in Portugal - the European police force Interpol has named the country as one of the worst offenders in Europe - there are fears that the Casa Pia scandal will come to eclipse Belgium's notorious Marc Dutroux case, in which the arrest of a notorious paedophile and child murderer revealed a sordid picture of judicial and political corruption.

Of course, the Casa Pia case may have no direct link to the disappearance of Madeleine, but the culture in which such a serious child abuse network was allowed to operate is the same culture that pervades the whole of Portugal. Was it this attitude that led to the bungled initial investigation in the McCann case?

Perhaps the appointment of the man who exposed the Casa Pia scandal will give the parents of Maddie hope that a proper investigation will now discover the truth.

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Postby Sepka » Sat Oct 20, 2007 12:33 pm

I've not really been following the case, but now I'm intrigued. What exactly is Pedro Lamy's involvement in all this?
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Postby theeKultleeder » Sat Oct 20, 2007 12:41 pm

As an aside: I've heard the Daily Mail is not a reliable source (political science teacher). I found an article there that was just a plagiarism of a Sy Hersh article from the New Yorker.
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tKl...it's like the Daily Express

Postby slow_dazzle » Sat Oct 20, 2007 2:22 pm

John Cooper Clarke's poem sez it all

Image

Great poet - cut up to the top level domain for more good stuff.

Awful publication.

As for the article, something about it makes me really suspicious. REALLY suspicious.
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Re: tKl...it's like the Daily Express

Postby Sepka » Sat Oct 20, 2007 2:42 pm

slow_dazzle wrote:As for the article, something about it makes me really suspicious.


The first line caught my attention. Ferrari engines, apart from the Dino, have a very distinctive tone, but I've never heard anyone describe it as 'deep' before. It's mid-pitched, and snarly.

Maybe it's just the usual journalistic tendency to fall back on cliches. People generally picture powerful engines as being deep-toned, after all. It does make me wonder about his sources, and whether they actually heard a Ferrari, though.
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Postby blanc » Sat Oct 20, 2007 3:04 pm

the casa pia allegations have been ongoing for some time. the mail is not the first paper to publish this material, it is not new news, apart from the replacement of the portimao officer, as to the newspapers reliabilty - pray tell me what is the gold standard?
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Postby theeKultleeder » Sat Oct 20, 2007 3:15 pm

Well, I found a Mail article on Znet, discussed in class at school, and was sharply criticized by my teacher. Only later did I find the Sy Hersh piece from which its main elements were plagiarized. So, how about "no plagiarism" for a start?

[This teacher was soooo cool. He fled Communism in his homeland of Czechoslovakia and had so many good stories to tell. He also managed to maintain a healthy liberalism and a socialistic bent.]
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Postby Seamus OBlimey » Sat Oct 20, 2007 3:50 pm

tKl's right to distrust the Mail. To me this reads as a smear of the Portugese and their police to counteract the bad publicity the McCanns have been getting recently. I doubt the Mail would be reporting Casa Pia case for any other reason (unless, maybe, if Portugal were up against England in some major sporting event.) While both are interesting and ongoing sagas I wouldn't rely on the Mail to keep me informed on either.
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answers to a few posters

Postby slow_dazzle » Sat Oct 20, 2007 4:10 pm

Sepka - agreed - the information is a bit too specific; there's a red Testarossa parked in a garage about 300 yards from where I live and it doesn't sound much different to most other big petrol engines that pass my house. And mentioning a Ferrari sets context right from the start. Why not say "the broken sound of a knackered van exhaust"? Maybe the iconography of a Ferrari is intentional.

blanc - It's not the content of the Daily Wail that's the issue, it's the context of the information. "They might be pederasts" (pedophile means something else - the shits who molest kids are pederasts) "They might be pederasts" "They might be pederasts" Simply emphasising one word in a sentence alters the context. That's my beef with the Tavistock nicey nicey Daily Wail - it's not about content, it's context.

Which leads me to my narrative on said context.

Where possible, he chose deaf-mutes


Some were allegedly drugged to make them compliant; others were plied with alcohol


have also been subjects of a vicious campaign in the Portuguese press to smear them


using the country's lax laws


the "oafish" local police chief out of his depth


The sight of the sweaty, corpulent Amaral


during his daily three-hour lunches of wine and shellfish


after enduring months of soul-destroying leaks from the Portuguese police


A group of officers loyal to Amaral are still leaking smears to the Portuguese press


they can have little hope of justice when leading Portuguese figures are allegedly involved in covering-up their own child sex scandal.


Does anyone see a pattern or discern an agenda here?

Whoever took that beautiful child should be thrown to a pack of starving wolves.

But this isn't objective reporting. I accept that emotive language is part and parcel of tabloid fare. Equally, the Brit superiority complex could inform the language used. Nevertheless, the whole tenor of the article is anything but objective or balanced.

It would be naive to place any reliance on this story.

I suggest Portugese tabloids should run a story on the fact that Thomas Hamilton was allowed to renew his Firearms Certificate despite a senior detective writing a damning report about Hamilton's predilection for young boys. Terms applied could include "incompetent", "unbelievable" and "disgraceful'.

What's good for the goose...
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Postby blanc » Sat Oct 20, 2007 6:49 pm

I see your point. I tend to filter out all such tabloideries as I go.
meat is - there is an ongoing investigation into elite paedophiles using children from casa pia; the man who conducted this investigation now has the investigation of Madeleine McCann's disappearance; the portuguese police leaked info about their suspicions of Kate McCann; the officer who was associated with that investigation formerly is under investigation for allegedly covering up the use of violence to obtain confession from a mother whose child disappeared who is now in prison; the McCann's have had a bad time from the Portuguese media. All of this seems to be fact.
I doubt the Mail identified defendents in the casa pia case (or their cars) without being pretty sure of their facts, sure enough not to be exposed to libel action anyway. No ferraris down my street, can't comment on their engine note, and couldn't care less. Many survivors of organised abuse, from different locations, report being fetched in expensive cars. That is worth reporting, it assists an understanding of what is going on.

FWIW I think its a near miracle every time anything about organised abuse gets in the papers. I have met many journalists who have tried again and again to get articles published about cases, and got them pulled. One reason that happens, one such journalist told me, is that advertisers don't like to have their ads appearing near articles about children being raped. Another reason, is the 'legal' department, hacking the work to avoid all possible action, so that nothing meaningful is left. Another time, when a senior member of non elected gov. was arrested, the article just got pulled anyway, and that was not from the Mail btw, but from one of the serious broadsheets.

I hope it means that the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance will not stick at the point it has been up to now - ie looking for evidence that will pin it on Kate or Gerry McCann.

There are paedophile criminal groups operating in Portugal. I don't think that the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance pursued that line with much persistence. There may have been reasons for that. Yet in the absence of any resolution to the case, and with the child still missing, a new direction is welcome.

The Mail and the Express are not the same paper btw, plagiarism in journalism is fairly common, I've never bought the Mail - too populist and not my political orientation, but I am sent articles quite often from them by someone who does like the paper. Much British journalism takes an anti-foreigner line in many issues, I just wonder where the truly objective newspapers get published. Never seen one myself.
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Re: answers to a few posters

Postby Doodad » Sat Oct 20, 2007 7:25 pm

slow_dazzle wrote:Sepka - agreed - the information is a bit too specific; there's a red Testarossa parked in a garage about 300 yards from where I live and it doesn't sound much different to most other big petrol engines that pass my house.



http://www.nicksforzaferrari.com/forzaf ... e1_058.htm

wav files of Ferrari exhausts.
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Postby 8bitagent » Sat Oct 20, 2007 11:39 pm

They make it sound like an old story, that "older cases" showed elites in Portugal kidnapping children for sexual torture.

When this stuff is STILL going on with the elites.

Not long ago top rungs of the government were arrested for this stuff.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3355621.stm


I created a thread exhaustively documenting how world governments, corporations, the UN and proxy groups liasoned with government drug running terror operations are all behind the global child kidnapping world:
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewt ... 53ef63f7d0


And anyone familar with the Dutrox case, knows that in Belgium the elites
were sacrificng kids at castles and mansions...

no doubt part of their dark offerings to their masters.

Theres nothing tabloid about this article in the OP, the global NWO is deeply involved in this sick shit, that goes far behind "Eyes Wide Shut".

(Im starting to wonder if maybe that elite UK mansion/Gargoyle 1999 story was real)
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Postby blanc » Sun Oct 21, 2007 8:22 am

I don't think there are national boundaries in elite crime 8bitagent.
the same patterns emerge again and again. but it does trouble me that people seem to be willing to go along with the pin it on Kate tale to the extent of seeing criticism of this line of investigation as being evidence of cover up. this seems upside down to me. smearing family members is so often a part of the smokescreen, to avoid investigation. there are leads concerning criminals who have been active in the algarve which have not been followed, and whatever forensic evidence which has been trumpeted as pointing to parental involvement is, it doesn't seem to have been considered very strong by the judge; and such forensic evidence (as is hinted at) can be planted.
I don't know that I'm impressed with the idea that one car's engine note couldn't be identified from a host of others. Me and my dog both recognise ours from 300 meters away, and its not such an uncommon model. maybe the recognition of the engine sound has something to do with driving habits, same person doing same route changes gear at same place etc etc. you really think this phrase in the article is so important Sepka?
children who learn't that the approach of a certain vehicle preceded horrific abuse, would be attuned to its sound, wouldn't they?
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blanc - about the engine sound/car type

Postby slow_dazzle » Sun Oct 21, 2007 8:43 am

it was how the car was described so precisely that made me very supsicious right from the start. The whole affair seems to be somehow tied into something other than a horrible story about a child going missing, hence my looking for something deeper. Perhaps I'm just being too distrustful.

Whenever I see considerable detail in a story like the one in the Mail I start asking myself whether there is a purpose the story. It could just be the sort of Brit superiority complex/Little England mentality that is typified by Middle England publications such as the Mail. After all, the story is a bit of a rant.
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Postby orz » Sun Oct 21, 2007 8:52 am

I'm sure whoever wrote the article neither new nor cared about the reality of sound of the motor, nor expected the reader to even think about this fact as literally true or not. It's a piece of creative writing loosely (if at all) based around the facts, designed to create the desired emotional response in Daily Mail readers.

An open, warm man, Mr Namora makes an unlikely conspiracy theorist

Nice :roll:
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