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20th September 2022
01:18pm BST

(Picture: Getty Images)[/caption]
Mr Amaral was originally the lead detective on the case, but he was removed after criticising British police.
Madeleine disappeared from a holiday apartment in the Portuguese holiday resort of Praia da Luz in May 2007 when she was just three.
Her parents were initially placed under investigation by Portuguese police, but were removed as suspects in the case in July 2008.
The couple sued Mr Amaral for libel and were awarded £358,000 in damages by a Portuguese court, but an appeal against the decision was later upheld by the country's Supreme Court.
In their case at the European Court, the couple said the Portuguese courts had failed to uphold their right to a private life and their presumption of innocence.
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Kate and Gerry McCann, whose daughter Madeleine disappeared from a holiday flat in Portugal ten years ago, are seen during an interview with the BBC's Fiona Bruce at Prestwold Hall on April 28, 2017 in Loughborough, England. (Picture: Getty Images)[/caption]
On Tuesday, however, the court said that the couple were already public figures before Mr Amaral's book was published and that any damage to their reputation had been caused by the fact they had been declared suspects by authorities, and not by Mr Amaral's claims.
The judgement also said that, in its ruling, Portugal's Supreme Court had not "made comments implying any guilt... or even suggesting suspicions against" the McCanns, and so their complaint concerning their right to be presumed innocent was "manifestly ill-founded".
A German man, Christian Brueckner, has previously been declared an official suspect in the case.
He is serving a prison sentence in Germany for separate offences and had denied involvement in Madeleine's disappearance.Explore more on these topics: