Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
The Complete Mystery of Madeleine McCann™ :: Team McCann :: Jon Clarke: Disgraced Editor and Journalist of The Olive Press (Spain)
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Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
New chapter from PeterMac; Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
http://whatreallyhappenedtomadeleinemccann.blogspot.com/2016/07/chapter-33-jon-clarke-entrenched-lies.html
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Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
There is nothing to question that the man lied.Jill Havern wrote:
New chapter from PeterMac; Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
http://whatreallyhappenedtomadeleinemccann.blogspot.com/2016/07/chapter-33-jon-clarke-entrenched-lies.html
What is to question is why he lied.
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Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
Jez Wilkins , draws a sketch of where he was standing whilst talking to Gerry McCann
No trench on that sketch !
Jane Tanner draws a sketch of where JW and GMc were standing when she walked past them ( without either seeing her !)
No trench on that sketch either !
No mention of a trench from any of Tapas 9 on any of their " checks " !
Why lie Mr Clarke , when your lies can be easily seen through ?
No trench on that sketch !
Jane Tanner draws a sketch of where JW and GMc were standing when she walked past them ( without either seeing her !)
No trench on that sketch either !
No mention of a trench from any of Tapas 9 on any of their " checks " !
Why lie Mr Clarke , when your lies can be easily seen through ?
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Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
These are stills from the Netflix Comedy programme, which are in turn from video shot in PdL on 4 and 5/5/7
Everything you see is in the public domain.
I have no sources other than the ones to which everyone has access.
AS you say - WHY does he feel the need to LIE, so often, so consistently, and so unnecessarily
Everything you see is in the public domain.
I have no sources other than the ones to which everyone has access.
AS you say - WHY does he feel the need to LIE, so often, so consistently, and so unnecessarily
Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
NETF**X, S1:E2
I have been sent the transcript of Episode 2, for which many thanks to the person who prepared and sent it.
Again Jon Clarke "El Mentiroso" of The Olive Press features.
What he does say does not really stand up to critical examination.
THUS
Jon Clarke: Yeah, from the first day, I've got original high definition pictures. This is the police arriving for example, with sniffer dogs. [Jon is at his desk pointing at pictures on his laptop screen] at about four or five o'clock in the afternoon on the first day. By this point there were quite a lot of detectives in Lagos and none of them knew what to do or were doing anything. This is the Policia judiciaria, [chuckling] which is a funny looking headquarters. You can just about make out the police badge here. See all the detectives? Look at them, all plain clothes chaps, scruffy looking buggers. Look at them all wondering what to do next.
In what way does this advance your story ?
The Dogs were in Pdl long before you arrived, as you well know, and you were filmed in the vicinity of the dog vans and handlers.
Plain clothes detectives often dress as ‘scruffy looking buggers’ so as to blend in with, say, investigative journalists, who are perhaps doing the same to blend in with, for example, plain clothes detectives.
Jon Clarke speaking present day whilst footage of apartment 5a outside is being shown : “We had police confirmation that they were looking into well known paedophiles, British and German, who lived in the area that were on the sex offenders database that had come here and that were on an official Interpol list, which was really, straightaway, quite . . . sinister. “
Why is it sinister that the police were investigating the very thing the McCanns were insisting was the truth ?
Jon Clarke speaking over LC, present day: “Lori Campbell was the reporter on the ground for the Sunday Mirror and we went off to local villages, looking into known paedophiles in the area. I remember driving in and thinking, you know, it was a fairly pretty place…”
Did you have a list of “known paedophiles in the area” with their photographs, full descriptions, known haunts and habits, home addresses, ages and other and personal details ?
If so, who gave it to you ?
If not, what the hell are you talking about ?
And if it was a matter of simply speaking to local people in the surrounding villages, do you or Ms Campbell speak fluent demotic Portuguese, particularly the southern and central dialect, or the variation heard in the Algarve ?
Or did you and Ms Campbell simply go on a jolly, on expenses. An assignment, or perhaps an assignation, since on your own admission you spent many weeks, even months, in the area.
Jon Clarke present day: The locals have suspicions and a lot of people had suspicions, but you didn't know. You couldn't know. It was very hard to know. So it was a horrible kind of climate of fear and paranoia here.
“but you didn’t know, You couldn’t know. It was very hard to know . . . “ Well Quite ! That is why people make enquiries.
Jon Clarke: The very first person I bumped into was a guy here outside who I later discovered was Robert Murat, who said he was helping the family, doing some translation, was filling people in on what was happening. He'd told me what time she'd gone missing, that . . . the age, her name. I think maybe it was him that used the name Maddie, rather than Madeleine, 'cause the parents called her Madeleine, and I don't know if they used the nickname Maddie.
Surely by now, 12 years down the line, even you know that this Madeleine / Maddie nonsense was exposed as another pointless McCann lie a very long time ago.
And just out of interest, you are on record as saying that the “very first persons you ‘bumped into’ “ were the McCanns, in Apartment 5A, or as they were leaving, and elsewhere you said that you spent your time grilling neighbours, – before you noticed the long deep trench in the road which no one else had, and the Police were using to park over.
How many ‘very first persons’ did you bump into ?
Jon Clarke: A fairly engaging, but slightly strange fellow. Slightly unusual shall we say. He was just...There, just standing around. It was almost like he'd decided, he was gonna be the liaison officer, you know, the public liaison officer, just to talk to press and to help out. I mean, he could have just been trying to help, like people are. They just wanted to do their best so, you know, he lived locally, he worked locally, so he probably just wanted to help.
“He was just there, just standing around.” As the immortal Eccles replied when asked by Seagoon: “What are you doing down here ?” – “Everybody’s got be somewhere.”
“He probably just wanted to help”. Just like you had offered to, in fact. But you didn’t live locally, or even in the same country. Nor, so far as I am aware, do you speak fluent Portuguese.
He does. Both.
Jon Clarke, present day: We were all camped out in a bar in Praia da Luz and I was unwinding after, you know, a fairly hard day.
Where you were observed by another reporter, Paulo Reis, who recorded and then documented the way in which Press stories were ‘developed’ by the cabal of non-Lusophone British reporters.
Jon Clarke: Initially, I probably kept them to myself, but then Lori Campbell, a reporter from the Sunday Mirror, I think she also found the guy a little bit strange. She asked him various questions about what his involvement was and he'd been very vague with her.
Strange in what way ? Sightless in one eye ? Speaking fluent Portuguese ? Living and working locally ? Do you know what she had asked him, in order better to judge whether he had been vague in his answers, had given precise and accurate answers to vague questions, or had simply decided that he felt under no obligation to answer questions from a tabloid journalist ?
Jon Clarke. I think she'd felt there was something unusual about him from the Soham investigation in England, the Soham crime, the two young girls who'd gone missing.
Was Mr Murat involved in the Soham crime ? If not, do you care to re-phrase that sentence. Urgently. And on the record.
Jon Clarke: It was a bit odd. You get two journalists together with a feeling in their stomach that something's not quite right, that it needs to be acted on. I think you need to do something about it. So she went and reported this guy had been acting strangely.
If TWO journalists have a ‘feeling in their stomach’, that must be surely be conclusive evidence and you need to do something about it . . . ? – or have I not understood this point?
Jon Clarke present day: Being an arguido in Portugal is an unusual word. It doesn't mean you're charged. It means that you're...You're more than just a suspect. You actually become officially a suspect. It's quite a serious thing for the police to do that.
Thank you for making that clear. The McCanns are equally clear, and said under oath at Leveson that Arguido did NOT mean suspect. In this case you are of course absolutely correct, and they were absolutely wrong. And lying. Repeatedly. Under oath.
“It doesn’t mean you’re charged.” But, if we go back to 2017, we find you wrote that the McCanns HAD BEEN charged by the Portuguese Police. Another small inconvenient fact.
“But this didn’t stop the Portuguese police from charging them… “ OP 2017
Jon Clarke present day: I think just because he was released didn't necessarily mean that he wasn't involved and didn't mean that any of the people around him weren't involved. It meant there wasn't enough evidence to charge him. For me, it almost, in some ways, justified my job that the initial suspicions I had about this man were being taken seriously and actually could lead to potentially a conviction. It was a very tangible, very interesting development in the case.
I take it you apply this test equally to the McCanns. As in “just because [they were] released didn't necessarily mean that [they weren’t] involved and didn't mean that any of the people around [them] weren't involved. It meant there wasn't enough evidence to charge [them]. For me, it almost, in some ways, justified my job that the initial suspicions I had about [the parents] were being taken seriously and actually could lead to potentially a conviction.”
I suspect this is not what you had in mind, though it would be consistent.
Jon Clarke: You have to put the whole Robert Murat case, you know, that he's a slightly unusual looking fella and he had an ex-wife back in England and a daughter the same age as Maddie, which was even more...Strange.
Some might say you were an “unusual looking fella’, in your faded and shabby-chic olive coloured sweat shirt, jeans and 1970’s long greasy hair, and you have told the world that you have a wife back in Spain, and a daughter about the same age as Maddie. Does this make you . . . ’strange’ ?
Jon Clarke present day: The fact that there's almost a line of sight from his house to the apartment, there was a feeling that maybe the family had been watched for a few days to see what their movements were.
Can you see anything along ‘Almost a line of sight’ ? The McCanns said there was a direct line of sight from the Tapas bar to the Apartment. The fact that this direct line of sight was obstructed by an opaque plastic screen, a pool, a wall and a high hedge, and that both the McCanns placed themselves on record as having their BACKS to any possible ‘line of sight’ should perhaps have caused even an incompetent journalist to ask at least one simple question.
Jon Clarke: The police had reasonably good suspicions that there was some . . . Something strange, some collusion happening at 11:30 or 11:40 the night that Maddie went missing.
Indeed they did. The deleted phone records of the McCanns from Monday 30th April onwards are also matter of continued interest to investigators
Jon Clarke: The fact that these phone calls were made late at night, to me was very suspicious.
You are not alone in that observation
I have been sent the transcript of Episode 2, for which many thanks to the person who prepared and sent it.
Again Jon Clarke "El Mentiroso" of The Olive Press features.
What he does say does not really stand up to critical examination.
THUS
Jon Clarke: Yeah, from the first day, I've got original high definition pictures. This is the police arriving for example, with sniffer dogs. [Jon is at his desk pointing at pictures on his laptop screen] at about four or five o'clock in the afternoon on the first day. By this point there were quite a lot of detectives in Lagos and none of them knew what to do or were doing anything. This is the Policia judiciaria, [chuckling] which is a funny looking headquarters. You can just about make out the police badge here. See all the detectives? Look at them, all plain clothes chaps, scruffy looking buggers. Look at them all wondering what to do next.
In what way does this advance your story ?
The Dogs were in Pdl long before you arrived, as you well know, and you were filmed in the vicinity of the dog vans and handlers.
Plain clothes detectives often dress as ‘scruffy looking buggers’ so as to blend in with, say, investigative journalists, who are perhaps doing the same to blend in with, for example, plain clothes detectives.
Jon Clarke speaking present day whilst footage of apartment 5a outside is being shown : “We had police confirmation that they were looking into well known paedophiles, British and German, who lived in the area that were on the sex offenders database that had come here and that were on an official Interpol list, which was really, straightaway, quite . . . sinister. “
Why is it sinister that the police were investigating the very thing the McCanns were insisting was the truth ?
Jon Clarke speaking over LC, present day: “Lori Campbell was the reporter on the ground for the Sunday Mirror and we went off to local villages, looking into known paedophiles in the area. I remember driving in and thinking, you know, it was a fairly pretty place…”
Did you have a list of “known paedophiles in the area” with their photographs, full descriptions, known haunts and habits, home addresses, ages and other and personal details ?
If so, who gave it to you ?
If not, what the hell are you talking about ?
And if it was a matter of simply speaking to local people in the surrounding villages, do you or Ms Campbell speak fluent demotic Portuguese, particularly the southern and central dialect, or the variation heard in the Algarve ?
Or did you and Ms Campbell simply go on a jolly, on expenses. An assignment, or perhaps an assignation, since on your own admission you spent many weeks, even months, in the area.
Jon Clarke present day: The locals have suspicions and a lot of people had suspicions, but you didn't know. You couldn't know. It was very hard to know. So it was a horrible kind of climate of fear and paranoia here.
“but you didn’t know, You couldn’t know. It was very hard to know . . . “ Well Quite ! That is why people make enquiries.
Jon Clarke: The very first person I bumped into was a guy here outside who I later discovered was Robert Murat, who said he was helping the family, doing some translation, was filling people in on what was happening. He'd told me what time she'd gone missing, that . . . the age, her name. I think maybe it was him that used the name Maddie, rather than Madeleine, 'cause the parents called her Madeleine, and I don't know if they used the nickname Maddie.
Surely by now, 12 years down the line, even you know that this Madeleine / Maddie nonsense was exposed as another pointless McCann lie a very long time ago.
And just out of interest, you are on record as saying that the “very first persons you ‘bumped into’ “ were the McCanns, in Apartment 5A, or as they were leaving, and elsewhere you said that you spent your time grilling neighbours, – before you noticed the long deep trench in the road which no one else had, and the Police were using to park over.
How many ‘very first persons’ did you bump into ?
Jon Clarke: A fairly engaging, but slightly strange fellow. Slightly unusual shall we say. He was just...There, just standing around. It was almost like he'd decided, he was gonna be the liaison officer, you know, the public liaison officer, just to talk to press and to help out. I mean, he could have just been trying to help, like people are. They just wanted to do their best so, you know, he lived locally, he worked locally, so he probably just wanted to help.
“He was just there, just standing around.” As the immortal Eccles replied when asked by Seagoon: “What are you doing down here ?” – “Everybody’s got be somewhere.”
“He probably just wanted to help”. Just like you had offered to, in fact. But you didn’t live locally, or even in the same country. Nor, so far as I am aware, do you speak fluent Portuguese.
He does. Both.
Jon Clarke, present day: We were all camped out in a bar in Praia da Luz and I was unwinding after, you know, a fairly hard day.
Where you were observed by another reporter, Paulo Reis, who recorded and then documented the way in which Press stories were ‘developed’ by the cabal of non-Lusophone British reporters.
Jon Clarke: Initially, I probably kept them to myself, but then Lori Campbell, a reporter from the Sunday Mirror, I think she also found the guy a little bit strange. She asked him various questions about what his involvement was and he'd been very vague with her.
Strange in what way ? Sightless in one eye ? Speaking fluent Portuguese ? Living and working locally ? Do you know what she had asked him, in order better to judge whether he had been vague in his answers, had given precise and accurate answers to vague questions, or had simply decided that he felt under no obligation to answer questions from a tabloid journalist ?
Jon Clarke. I think she'd felt there was something unusual about him from the Soham investigation in England, the Soham crime, the two young girls who'd gone missing.
Was Mr Murat involved in the Soham crime ? If not, do you care to re-phrase that sentence. Urgently. And on the record.
Jon Clarke: It was a bit odd. You get two journalists together with a feeling in their stomach that something's not quite right, that it needs to be acted on. I think you need to do something about it. So she went and reported this guy had been acting strangely.
If TWO journalists have a ‘feeling in their stomach’, that must be surely be conclusive evidence and you need to do something about it . . . ? – or have I not understood this point?
Jon Clarke present day: Being an arguido in Portugal is an unusual word. It doesn't mean you're charged. It means that you're...You're more than just a suspect. You actually become officially a suspect. It's quite a serious thing for the police to do that.
Thank you for making that clear. The McCanns are equally clear, and said under oath at Leveson that Arguido did NOT mean suspect. In this case you are of course absolutely correct, and they were absolutely wrong. And lying. Repeatedly. Under oath.
“It doesn’t mean you’re charged.” But, if we go back to 2017, we find you wrote that the McCanns HAD BEEN charged by the Portuguese Police. Another small inconvenient fact.
“But this didn’t stop the Portuguese police from charging them… “ OP 2017
Jon Clarke present day: I think just because he was released didn't necessarily mean that he wasn't involved and didn't mean that any of the people around him weren't involved. It meant there wasn't enough evidence to charge him. For me, it almost, in some ways, justified my job that the initial suspicions I had about this man were being taken seriously and actually could lead to potentially a conviction. It was a very tangible, very interesting development in the case.
I take it you apply this test equally to the McCanns. As in “just because [they were] released didn't necessarily mean that [they weren’t] involved and didn't mean that any of the people around [them] weren't involved. It meant there wasn't enough evidence to charge [them]. For me, it almost, in some ways, justified my job that the initial suspicions I had about [the parents] were being taken seriously and actually could lead to potentially a conviction.”
I suspect this is not what you had in mind, though it would be consistent.
Jon Clarke: You have to put the whole Robert Murat case, you know, that he's a slightly unusual looking fella and he had an ex-wife back in England and a daughter the same age as Maddie, which was even more...Strange.
Some might say you were an “unusual looking fella’, in your faded and shabby-chic olive coloured sweat shirt, jeans and 1970’s long greasy hair, and you have told the world that you have a wife back in Spain, and a daughter about the same age as Maddie. Does this make you . . . ’strange’ ?
Jon Clarke present day: The fact that there's almost a line of sight from his house to the apartment, there was a feeling that maybe the family had been watched for a few days to see what their movements were.
Can you see anything along ‘Almost a line of sight’ ? The McCanns said there was a direct line of sight from the Tapas bar to the Apartment. The fact that this direct line of sight was obstructed by an opaque plastic screen, a pool, a wall and a high hedge, and that both the McCanns placed themselves on record as having their BACKS to any possible ‘line of sight’ should perhaps have caused even an incompetent journalist to ask at least one simple question.
Jon Clarke: The police had reasonably good suspicions that there was some . . . Something strange, some collusion happening at 11:30 or 11:40 the night that Maddie went missing.
Indeed they did. The deleted phone records of the McCanns from Monday 30th April onwards are also matter of continued interest to investigators
Jon Clarke: The fact that these phone calls were made late at night, to me was very suspicious.
You are not alone in that observation
Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
PeterMac wrote:These are stills from the Netflix Comedy programme, which are in turn from video shot in PdL on 4 and 5/5/7
Everything you see is in the public domain.
I have no sources other than the ones to which everyone has access.
AS you say - WHY does he feel the need to LIE, so often, so consistently, and so unnecessarily
If there were a trench of the size described (or in fact a trench of any size there, then it would have been clear there had been a trench because they would have filled in said trench and then paved over it with fresh tarmac which would be a different color to the surrounding road as well as then put pitch around the join to allow for expansion.
The only way they would not be able to see where this trench had been was to have paved over the whole frikken road.
I am pretty sure said person would have seen what a patched repair on a road looks like given the current road conditions with pot holes from vehicles as well as road works for utilities (which usually follow on immediately is some case or with in a short period of time since the council doesn't contact the local utilities telling they have a road open and do they need to do any work in that area whilst the hole is open?
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Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
Everyone can see there are cars parked all along the road where Jon Clarke says the huge trench is....
I pity the "2 or 3 guys" that Jon said was working in the trench with all those cars parking on top of them.
I pity the "2 or 3 guys" that Jon said was working in the trench with all those cars parking on top of them.
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A wise man once said:
"Be careful who you let on to your ship,
because some people will sink the whole ship
just because they can't be the Captain."
Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
"Disgraced Journalist" Jon Clarke said there was a trench there on 4/5/7.
Those photos are taken on 4/5/7 and 5/5/7
There was no trench
He lied then
He lied in 2017
He is lying now
Why ?
There is absolutely no reason for him to lie.
He knows he will be found out, not just by us, but by anyone watching the Netflix programmes.
The clear evidence is all there, in the same Episode.
He could have talked about the real roadworks and made the same point without lying, as I tried to suggest in an Appendix
But he seems incapable of separating fantasy from reality.
"So I busied myself talking to neighbours and residents, none of whom had been spoken to by Police that stage, and gradually built up a picture of the facts that were then known, and then explored further into the small town towards the beach and the sea. That is where I found the uncovered deep trenches and road works, and the dreadful possibility occurred to me . . ."
I do not know what his game is.
Nor how much he is being paid.
Those photos are taken on 4/5/7 and 5/5/7
There was no trench
He lied then
He lied in 2017
He is lying now
Why ?
There is absolutely no reason for him to lie.
He knows he will be found out, not just by us, but by anyone watching the Netflix programmes.
The clear evidence is all there, in the same Episode.
He could have talked about the real roadworks and made the same point without lying, as I tried to suggest in an Appendix
But he seems incapable of separating fantasy from reality.
"So I busied myself talking to neighbours and residents, none of whom had been spoken to by Police that stage, and gradually built up a picture of the facts that were then known, and then explored further into the small town towards the beach and the sea. That is where I found the uncovered deep trenches and road works, and the dreadful possibility occurred to me . . ."
I do not know what his game is.
Nor how much he is being paid.
Re: Chapter 33: Jon Clarke Entrenched Lies
[This is a response to all three current threads of Chapters 31,32 and 33]
OK
Let’s all take a deep breath, and think logically
What can Clarke now do ? He has a few options
He could utilise the standard McCann Defence.
Sue someone – for something
Or more realistically think carefully about his options
1 Say and do nothing – and hope it will all pass over and be forgotten.
2 Continue to maintain that his story is correct and everyone else is wrong
3 Apologise, correct, explain, and beg forgiveness
Each of these has certain problems
1 Say and do nothing – and hope it will all pass over and be forgotten. This option passed a very long time ago, probably by early June 2007. The McCanns and their money have kept it in the public eye for the past decade. And given the level of global interest it is not simply going to pass and be forgotten.
Every time a journalist publishes or says something different from what has been said before, the interest is renewed and a tighter focus is put on the point raised.
So this option will simply exacerbate the situation, as the diffusion of the core lies and the clamour for explanation increase exponentially.
2 Continue to maintain that his story is correct and everyone else is wrong – has the unfortunate problem that there are three different, contradictory and incompatible stories, so Clarke would have to choose one of them, and discard the other two before he could adopt this posture. He would then have to deal with those two before he could attempt this. (Or possibly even come up with a fourth and say the previous three were false.)
3 Correct, apologise, explain, and beg forgiveness.
Correction, apology and explanation do not seem to be in the lexicon of any of the participants in this saga. The McCanns have never apologised for “leaving the children” – leading to the perhaps justified suspicion that in fact they didn’t. For Clarke to do this would be astonishing. He would have to admit three separate and mutually irreconcilable lies, perpetuated over a 12 year period and published in global media. He would have to admit to the world that he had deliberately and cynically mis-led many people on significant issues concerning the disappearance and probable death of a little girl; his readers, his advertisers, and the producers at Netflix.
He might also be pushed to come clean about what actually DID happen.
To set the record straight in fact. And that may be a step too far. We understand that.
He was highly paid for what he did, and is clearly still paid for it. An audit trail might lead back to his handler and ultimately to whoever is coordinating the campaign, and they might not be willing to be exposed by a ‘maverick’ suddenly breaking ranks and going ‘rogue’. Given that some deaths are already associated with this case, he might feel he is in physical danger. He is no stranger to this, and made much of it in his book “The Costa Killer”. So no one would blame him for not wishing to join the late Dr Kelly, Mike Todd or Brenda Leyland.
That does not condone his continuing mendacity, his serial invention of new versions, new stories, new sightings, nor stop us condemning him for having done it in the first place.
But given that his personal reputation has been destroyed by the very medium of film which he clearly hoped would enhance it; that his paper “The Olive Press” is now exposed as having published deliberate falsehoods over more than a decade; and that the internet is going to record these matters for all time . . .
perhaps he should do something.
He is trapped.
In the same way that the McCanns are trapped by forced and jemmied shutters, which weren’t
In the same way Kate McCann is trapped by curtains wide open, and curtains tight closed
In the same way they are trapped by the Pool Photo taken on Thursday 3rd, which wasn’t
In the same way Gerry is trapped by standing on the right, with Tanner and Wilkins on the left
To get out of the traps they have to explain why they said it.
Can we feel sympathy ?
Towards the McCanns for the death of their eldest child - undoubtedly. But for little else
To Clarke in his present predicament, if he refuses to correct, apologise and explain ?
More difficult.
To Jon – to Kate and Gerry – to the Tapas friends –
It is never too late to do the right thing.
OK
Let’s all take a deep breath, and think logically
What can Clarke now do ? He has a few options
He could utilise the standard McCann Defence.
Sue someone – for something
Or more realistically think carefully about his options
1 Say and do nothing – and hope it will all pass over and be forgotten.
2 Continue to maintain that his story is correct and everyone else is wrong
3 Apologise, correct, explain, and beg forgiveness
Each of these has certain problems
1 Say and do nothing – and hope it will all pass over and be forgotten. This option passed a very long time ago, probably by early June 2007. The McCanns and their money have kept it in the public eye for the past decade. And given the level of global interest it is not simply going to pass and be forgotten.
Every time a journalist publishes or says something different from what has been said before, the interest is renewed and a tighter focus is put on the point raised.
So this option will simply exacerbate the situation, as the diffusion of the core lies and the clamour for explanation increase exponentially.
2 Continue to maintain that his story is correct and everyone else is wrong – has the unfortunate problem that there are three different, contradictory and incompatible stories, so Clarke would have to choose one of them, and discard the other two before he could adopt this posture. He would then have to deal with those two before he could attempt this. (Or possibly even come up with a fourth and say the previous three were false.)
3 Correct, apologise, explain, and beg forgiveness.
Correction, apology and explanation do not seem to be in the lexicon of any of the participants in this saga. The McCanns have never apologised for “leaving the children” – leading to the perhaps justified suspicion that in fact they didn’t. For Clarke to do this would be astonishing. He would have to admit three separate and mutually irreconcilable lies, perpetuated over a 12 year period and published in global media. He would have to admit to the world that he had deliberately and cynically mis-led many people on significant issues concerning the disappearance and probable death of a little girl; his readers, his advertisers, and the producers at Netflix.
He might also be pushed to come clean about what actually DID happen.
To set the record straight in fact. And that may be a step too far. We understand that.
He was highly paid for what he did, and is clearly still paid for it. An audit trail might lead back to his handler and ultimately to whoever is coordinating the campaign, and they might not be willing to be exposed by a ‘maverick’ suddenly breaking ranks and going ‘rogue’. Given that some deaths are already associated with this case, he might feel he is in physical danger. He is no stranger to this, and made much of it in his book “The Costa Killer”. So no one would blame him for not wishing to join the late Dr Kelly, Mike Todd or Brenda Leyland.
That does not condone his continuing mendacity, his serial invention of new versions, new stories, new sightings, nor stop us condemning him for having done it in the first place.
But given that his personal reputation has been destroyed by the very medium of film which he clearly hoped would enhance it; that his paper “The Olive Press” is now exposed as having published deliberate falsehoods over more than a decade; and that the internet is going to record these matters for all time . . .
perhaps he should do something.
He is trapped.
In the same way that the McCanns are trapped by forced and jemmied shutters, which weren’t
In the same way Kate McCann is trapped by curtains wide open, and curtains tight closed
In the same way they are trapped by the Pool Photo taken on Thursday 3rd, which wasn’t
In the same way Gerry is trapped by standing on the right, with Tanner and Wilkins on the left
To get out of the traps they have to explain why they said it.
Can we feel sympathy ?
Towards the McCanns for the death of their eldest child - undoubtedly. But for little else
To Clarke in his present predicament, if he refuses to correct, apologise and explain ?
More difficult.
To Jon – to Kate and Gerry – to the Tapas friends –
It is never too late to do the right thing.
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The Complete Mystery of Madeleine McCann™ :: Team McCann :: Jon Clarke: Disgraced Editor and Journalist of The Olive Press (Spain)
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