
Two years ago, the 23-year-old had publicly said she was the girl who disappeared in 2007 in Portugal and then apologized.
The 23-year-old Polish woman who publicly claimed to be Madeleine 'Maddie' McCann and later apologised has re-claimed her identity as the British girl who disappeared in Portugal in 2007. The girl, Julia Wandelt , posted an alleged DNA test on her social media account, “@AmIJuliaWandelt”, which she claims proves her claim.
The girl explained that Maddie's parents refused to take a DNA test. She therefore relied on a world expert who performed the test with DNA found at the crime scene. In one of several posts published on her profile, the 23-year-old said that her "source" believes that the genetic evidence "strongly supports the hypothesis that Gerry McCann could be the biological father of Julia Wandelt".
The results also show that the young woman is "part British and part Irish" and not 100% Polish, as claimed by private investigator Fia Johansson , who in 2023 shared Wandelt's DNA results, which showed she was completely Polish.
The case - Three years ago, Wandelt created an Instagram account, @iammadeleinemccan, where she claimed to be Maddie. The 23-year-old said she began to suspect she was the child after her grandmother made allusions. Since then, Wandelt has become a global star. A year later, however, Wandelt apologized for her comments. "I never meant to hurt anyone, including the McCanns. I really wanted to know who they are," she said. Now she has returned to talk about the case on social media with a new profile.
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