Josef Fritzl held his daughter captive for 24 years, Austria's police said
The house in Amstetten, Austria, where the girl is believed to have imprisoned for 24 years
Josef Fritzl: the man who haunts Austria
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Austrians describe the pale grey, two-storey family home near the centre of
this provincial town as the "house of horror". It is not difficult
to understand why. In its cramped cellar, 73-year-old Josef Fritzl held his
own daughter prisoner, beat her and raped her, fathering seven children with
her over a period that lasted nearly a quarter of a century.
Two of Fritzl's sons, aged 18 and five, were freed from lifelong
imprisonment in his cellar at the weekend. Yesterday, the back entrance of
the house containing the cellar prison was surrounded by police entry tape
and dozens of TV camera crews.
Hours earlier, Fritzl made a full confession about his crimes, which
investigators described as the "worst and most shocking case of incest
in Austrian criminal history". The retired electrical engineer, who has
seven other children with his own wife, was due to be charged last night.
Police in Amstetten revealed the details of the case yesterday which they
said had come to light after protracted questioning of Fritzl and his
daughter Elisabeth, 42, who was first sexually abused by her father at the
age of 11. She gave birth to seven children during her ordeal.
Elisabeth Fritzl's nightmare began in earnest at the age of 18 in 1984.
Police said her father drugged and handcuffed her and then imprisoned in his
cellar behind a steel door concealed in a narrow corridor.
It was there that Fritzl subjected his daughter to a seemingly endless
horror story involving incest, beatings and continuous rape. Police revealed
that Elisabeth bore seven children as a result of being raped. Three were
sent upstairs where they were "adopted" by Fritzl and his wife
Rosemarie, who professed to knowing nothing about her husband's incestuous
relationship with her daughter.
One of the three other children who were kept in the cellar died there less
than a year after being born. Police said Fritzl got rid of the evidence by
throwing the corpse into a furnace. All of the children were born in the
dungeon without medical supervision. "Elisabeth Fritzl had to cope
completely on her own," said a police spokesman. Fritzl apparently
bought them a few clothes.
Police photographs of Elisabeth Fritzl's cellar prison revealed the
existence of several tiny underground chambers, a washing space and a
cooking area. Police said the underground complex, measuring 80sq m, also
contained a rubber-walled "padded cell" and that childish drawings
of animals and a sun had been painted on walls. The only concession
regarding the outside world appears to have been a television.
Franz Polzer, the head of Lower Austria's police criminal investigation
department, said Fritzl had deliberately manufactured a series of elaborate
lies to conceal his crimes from police, his own children, neighbours and
even his own wife. "If you look at him today, you would hardly believe
he was capable of doing these things. This man led a double life for 24
years," he said.
Fritzl managed to convince police his daughter had gone missing shortly
after he abducted and imprisoned her in 1984. He was said to have coerced
his daughter into writing a letter in which she claimed she was unable to
cope with her life and had run off to join an obscure religious sect.
The Austrian authorities appear to have been convinced by Fritzl's lies and
gave up looking for her shortly after her disappearance in 1984.
Three of the children fathered by Fritzl – two daughters aged 15 and 14 and
a son aged 12 – were allowed to live "normal" lives above
the cellar. However Elisabeth remained imprisoned in the cellar with her
oldest daughter, Kerstin 19, and two of her other sons, aged 18 and five,
the whole time.
Police first suspected foul play on 19 April after Kerstin Fritzl turned up
at an Amstetten clinic. Doctors said she was seriously ill and fighting for
her life with an undisclosed illness. Doctors appealed on television for
Elisabeth Fritzl to come forward and help her daughter. "Josef Fritzl
then for once showed he had a human side and allowed his daughter
[Elisabeth] out of the cellar to join his daughter [Kerstin]," said Mr
Polzer.
Once she reached hospital Elisabeth Fritzl supplied police with a statement
explaining her 24-year ordeal. Fritzl was arrested shortly afterwards and
later confessed to his crimes and said he regretted his behaviour. However
he did not make a full confession until yesterday.
Neighbours in Amstetten's Ybbsstrasse, where the Fritzl house is located,
reacted with disbelief yesterday. Maria, an elderly woman, said: "I
just don't believe it. They were nice people. I used to watch them taking
their three children to school." Classmates of Fritzl's three "
normal" children who lived upstairs told Austrian Radio: "The
Fritzl girls and the boy always kept a bit apart in school. They kept away
from the others and seem to lead separate lives."
The Amstetten scandal is certain to raise further questions about the
conduct of Austrian police in cases involving missing persons. Above all,
why police, social services, doctors and teachers at the schools attended by
the Fritzl children failed to detect than anything was amiss for nearly a
quarter of a century.