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Carte Blanche, tracing people, DNA

Calling Danie Krugel to the Madeleine McCann search

By Judi McLeod

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Phil McCann, whose noble mission it is to "cover 80 percent of the world's inboxes in two weeks" in the ongoing search for four-year-old Madeleine McCann, should tap Danie Krugel, of Carte Blanche fame, for help.

The whereabouts of Madeleine McCann have been unknown since her disappearance on Thursday, May 3, 2007.

The then three-year-old British girl was on holiday with her parents and siblings in the resort of Praia da Luz in the Algarve, Portugal and mysteriously disappeared from the apartment in which they were staying.

Madeleine McCannInvestigation by the Portuguese Police concluded that Madeleine, who was in a ground floor bedroom with her two-year-old twin siblings, had been abducted.

Previous Story: Calling all Internet Angels: Looking into Madeleine's eyes

Despite a number of reported sightings of Madeleine in Portugal and elsewhere, and several awareness raising campaigns by international celebrities, the trail started to go cold.

…"The story is only being covered in Britain, Eire and Portugal," Madeleine's Aunt Philomena wrote in a chain letter now circulating the Worldwide Internet. "We don't believe she is in Portugal anymore and need to get her picture across Europe as quickly as possible. Suggestions are welcome."

A suggestion from Anne lien Jones, whose email arrived at Canada Free Press (CFP) this morning, is worth following up.

"On Sunday night, the 22nd of July, I watched a South African TV program called Carte Blanche, in which they featured a man named Danie Krugel, a retired South African police officer who developed a truly remarkable way of tracing missing people, oil deposits and bacteria," Jones wrote. "He makes use of a DNA sample of the missing person, quantum physics and GPS-Satellite technology. In the program, which was filmed over a period of one year, he helped the Carte Blanche team to locate the whereabouts of five South African girls who went missing during the 1980s. His computer showed a location not even two miles from where the pedophile suspect lived at the time of the abductions. (The suspect killed his female accomplice and then committed suicide while chased by police years ago. He took the secret of these girls with him to the grave.)

"Danie Krugel's technology was obviously tested before he was used to help in the missing children's case. He found the body of a crime suspect in a morgue in Palanomi Hospital, and he also found the body of a toddler who had recently gone missing.

"In a test conducted by the Carte Blanche team, he found a drum of oil and a sample of bacteria hidden by them in Johannesburg. And he did this from a location miles away from where the samples were hidden."

Although Jones has already forwarded the information about Krugel to Sky News and had a letter about him posted on the Madeleine website, she's not sure authorities searching for Madeleine ever received the information.

"I think it's well worth a try since the chances of finding her are becoming less and less every day," she wrote CFP.

"I also feel that people are starting to miss the point of the whole issue--to find the girl. To me the situation is slowly but surely becoming a romantic tragedy of which the real horror is forgotten by everyone. (Although I do believe that her parents are in deadly pain and that the situation to them is quite real).

"Please, can someone just contact Danie Krugel and ask for his assistance--there's nothing to lose, maybe something to gain."

Authorities whose job it is to find Madeleine can go to the following website: www.carteblanche.co.za to read about Krugel in the story, Fingerprint of Fate.

The summer of 2007 is the `Summer of Finding Maddie'. Thousands of posters, featuring a picture of the little girl of the haunting angelic looks, are being distributed throughout Europe by people from all walks of life who are keeping hopes of finding Maddie alive.

The clock is ticking and today marks Day 90 since Madeleine McCann went missing.

Let the Fingerprint of Fate bring Maddie back home.

Canada Free Press founding editor Most recent by Judi McLeod is an award-winning journalist with 30 years experience in the print media. Her work has appeared on Newsmax.com, Drudge Report, Foxnews.com, Glenn Beck. Judi can be reached at: judi@canadafreepress.com


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