Christian Brueckner, the freed suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, has attempted to confront the German prosecutor who accused him of killing the British girl.
Brueckner, who was released from a rape sentence two weeks ago, travelled several hours to confront lawyer Hans Christian Wolters.
Wolters has long stated that he has evidence that proves Brueckner’s involvement in the 2007 disappearance of Madeleine McCann during a family holiday in Praia da Luz, Portugal.
Brueckner, who denies all allegations, told Sky News outside the Public Prosecutor’s Office in Braunschweig, Germany: ‘The prosecutor refused to meet me, but I told his representative I wanted his help to get my life back.
‘I’m being hounded by the media, and it’s his fault. I want him to take responsibility.
‘I was told there was nothing they could do to help. I had been convicted and released, and I wasn’t their responsibility.’
Wolters told the broadcaster that he had been tipped off about the suspect’s planned confrontation at his office and refused to speak with him.
Since being released from Sehnde prison, near Hanover, on September 17, where he was serving a seven-year sentence for the 2005 rape of an American pensioner in Portugal, he has been living in Neumunster, a three-hour drive from Braunschweig.

Christian Brueckner (pictured) has attempted to confront the German prosecutor who accused him of killing Madeleine McCann

The disappearance of Madeleine McCann in Portugal in 2007 has never been solved
Since then, his every move has been monitored by both German and international media.
Photographs have been published of him tucking into a burger outside a motorway McDonald’s.
Chilling CCTV footage from inside a mobile phone shop in the city appeared to show him laughing as he showed off his ankle tag, which enables police to track him round the clock, and attempting to buy an untraceable phone using his German ID card.
He is said to have bragged to the shop owner, during a 90-minute conversation, that he had information that ‘could bring the scandal of the century to an end’ – which many have taken to refer to Madeleine, the British toddler who disappeared while on holiday with her family in Praia da Luz in 2007.
There have also been reports of him visiting a Domino’s takeaway, wearing a fake beard as he asked staff for free pizza, as well as concerning accounts of women screaming when he entered a nightclub.
Though his release had been on the cards for several months, Brueckner’s movements since leaving prison appear both unplanned and chaotic – something that does not instil confidence in those charged with keeping him under surveillance.
Speaking exclusively to the Daily Mail last week, a source close to his legal team said he will not stay in Neumunster, indeed, the plan is to move him to Munich, in the south of the country, at the earliest opportunity.
The move to a bigger city (Munich has 1.6 million residents, while Neumunster has just 79,000) will make Brueckner less conspicuous – and, consequently, more difficult to track.
The source says Neumunster was never the plan, rather Brueckner ended up there by default.
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .