A private investigator helping young Julia Faustyna, who claims to be Madeleine McCann, has reported that he has evidence she is not the daughter of the family who raised her in Poland.
What happened?
- Detective says he has evidence Julia was trafficked. The information was shared with the Radar Online website;
- Julia did three different DNA tests, but the results have not yet been published;
- One of them needs to determine if she has British ancestry. (like Madeleines) or Poles (like her family defends);
- The Portuguese authorities, the country where Madeleine disappeared, are calledif the test shows British ancestry.
We now have a lot of evidence that Julia was brought to Poland from another country by an international women trafficking group. We are still investigating, but Julia is definitely not the biological child of her relatives in Poland.
Fia Johansson, private investigator who is Julia’s spokesperson
The investigator’s version contradicts what Polish and British authorities have already said about the case.. The two denied any connection between Julia and the McCains. The authorities’ main line of investigation is that the girl was kidnapped by a German who is being held for another crime.
The previous police action contradicts the version presented by the young woman. Activities are still ongoing, but it can already be ruled out that this version is true.
Pawel Noga, spokesman for the Polish police, in a statement
Consider the Madeleine McCann case
- Madeleine disappeared in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in 2007 when she was 3 years old;
- Investigators in charge of the case assume that the girl was killed;
- According to the authorities, the main suspect in the crime is the German Christian Brückner, the German police concluded in 2020;
- Brueckner, who was already in prison for raping a 72yearold American tourist where McCann disappeared two years earlier;
- The Portuguese authorities supported the German investigation and showed that, according to telephone records, Brueckner was in the region at the time of the crime.