TL;DR
- Julia Wandelt, 24, has been convicted of harassing Kate and Gerry McCann, the parents of missing child Madeleine McCann, but was cleared of stalking charges.
- The trial judge imposed a restraining order against Wandelt due to the significant risk of future harassment, although she has already served more than the maximum six-month sentence while on remand.
- Wandelt’s claims about being Madeleine were rejected after a DNA test, and she caused distress to the McCanns, contacting them over 60 times in one day.
Woman who claimed to be Madeleine McCann found guilty of harassing missing toddler’s parents | UK News
A young woman who claimed to be Madeleine McCann has been convicted of harassing the missing toddler’s parents.
However, Julia Wandelt, 24, was cleared of stalking the couple.
Sentencing the Polish national on Friday, trial judge Mrs Justice Cutts made Wandelt the subject of a restraining order against Kate and Gerry McCann because she poses a “significant risk of the harassment of the McCanns in future”.
The judge said the maximum sentence for harassment was six months’ imprisonment.
“You have served more than that in the time that you have been on remand awaiting your trial.
“It’s a sentence I impose on you today.”
Born three years after Madeleine, Wandelt said she suspected she had been abducted and brought up by a couple who were not her real parents.
She was having mental health issues at the time and had been abused by an elderly relative.
The relative looked like an artist’s drawing of a man who was once a suspect in the Madeleine case, which she stumbled across during internet research on missing children.
She went to Los Angeles and told a US TV chat show audience: “I believe I am Madeleine McCann.”
Madeleine was nearly four when she vanished from the family’s rented holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May 2007.
She had been left sleeping with her younger twin siblings, Sean and Amelia, while her parents dined nearby with friends, making intermittent checks on the children.
Madeleine is the world’s most famous missing child – the subject of three international police investigations that have failed to find any trace of her.
Over three years, she attracted half a million followers on her Instagram account, iammadeleinemccan, and posted her claims on TikTok.
Police told her she was not Madeleine and ordered her not to approach her family, but she ignored the warning.
She turned up at the McCanns’ home and sent sinister letters and messages repeatedly begging for a DNA test.
The McCanns and their children gave evidence in the five-week trial at Leicester Crown Court, describing the upset Wandelt had caused them.
The court heard Wandelt claimed to have memories, induced by hypnosis sessions, of being abducted and of living with the McCanns as a child, including feeding Madeleine’s brother and playing ring-a-ring-a-roses.
Wandelt called and messaged Mrs McCann more than 60 times in one day on 13 April last year, claiming to have a memory of the mother stroking her head.
When Wandelt was arrested earlier this year, a DNA test proved she was not Madeleine.
In the witness box, Wandelt denied her claims were driven by a desire for money or fame.
She said she was not a liar and never intended to cause the McCanns and their children harm.
The court was told a deportation order had already been served against Wandelt and that it was a matter for the secretary of state whether she remained in custody.
Wandelt’s co-defendant, Karen Spragg, 61, from Cardiff, was found not guilty of stalking and harassment.



