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Elisabeth Fritzl faces long questioning about father, cellar

Elisabeth Fritzl, the Austrian woman who was held hostage in a cellar by her father for 24 years, has begun to tell her story to prosecutors, in the run-up to a trial in the worst recorded case of incest and imprisonment.

At a preliminary session with investigators on Friday, Elisabeth, 42, was taken to a secret location and shown the rooms where the intense interviewing sessions are to take place over several days or weeks. The questioning is due to begin in earnest tomorrow. Her evidence will be videotaped and played during the trial so that she will not have to face her father in court this winter.

Elisabeth had earlier backed out of an attempt to question her. She had been told that her father, Josef, 74, would be able to watch the sessions via a video link from his St Pölten prison cell and that he would be allowed to pose questions directly to her. She told investigators she was not ready to face him.

But Fritzl’s lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, has since declared that his client would waive his right to be present during the questioning, although he still has the chance to change his mind.

As Elisabeth recalls the years during which she was allegedly sexually abused by her father, tied up, and bore seven children to him without any medical attention, psychologists will be on hand and can insist that the interviewing is broken off at any time.

Elisabeth will be interviewed by Andrea Hummer, the young judge who will preside over the case and who is an expert in sexual crimes. In a neighbouring room, the interview will be watched by state prosecutor Christiane Burkheiser and Fritzl’s lawyer, both of whom will be able to pose questions to Elisabeth via Hummer. The scenario is one usually reserved for child victims of sexual abuse to protect them from further trauma.

‘The questioning will take place according to the state of mind of the witness,’ Gerhard Sedlacek, spokesman for the state prosecution service of St Pölten told Der Spiegel. ‘We waited until she was healthy enough to give evidence before beginning.’

At the end of the month, her oldest children, Stefan, 18, and Kerstin, 19 - who emerged from an artificially induced coma to the amazement of medical staff and her family last month - are also due to give evidence. They, along with Felix, five, were imprisoned with their mother in the cellar. Three other children - Lisa, 15, Monika, 14, and Alexander, 12 - whom Fritzl claimed his daughter had dropped on the family doorstep, asking him and his wife Rosemarie to take care of them, were brought up upstairs.

As the two parts of the family, who are living in a flat at a psychiatric clinic near their hometown of Amstetten, seek to build a new life together, it has been revealed that hospital staff have been regularly disguising the children and smuggling them past waiting photographers to take them on secret trips to learn about ordinary life and social interaction.

Lisa, 15, was even sent to a camp run by the fire brigade for the region’s youth after she wrote in May to Amstetten’s fire chief Armin Blutsch, expressing her ‘deepest wish’ to attend. Her name was changed to protect her identity, and she mixed with 4,000 children over four days and was able to meet school friends for the first time since the case came to light three months ago.

There are unconfirmed reports that Alexander was also sent to the camp. There have been trips to zoos and leisure parks, also following requests by the children. Felix, meanwhile, is being taught to swim in the clinic’s pool. ‘Fortunately, everything is going very well,’ said Christoph Herbst, the family’s lawyer.

Part of the children’s day is taken up with answering letters from the hundreds of well-wishers from around the world. Otherwise, the family has been enjoying walks in the hospital grounds and learning, above all, to be patient with each other.

Psychologists say that one of the greatest challenges has been for the ‘upstairs’ children to accept the slowness of the ‘downstairs’ children, whose lives revolved around a few books and a television set, and were played out in a tiny space devoid of artificial light or fresh air. The ‘downstairs’ children continue to be startled by seemingly mundane events like a moving cloud or a chirping bird.

For now, the focus is on the investigation. The key decision that must be made is what Fritzl, who has confessed to imprisoning Elisabeth and having children with her, can be charged with. A neonatologist is seeking to determine whether Fritzl can be charged with murder after DNA tests confirmed he was the father of a twin who died shortly after birth and whose body he allegedly threw into a furnace.

‘It will be difficult to bring a murder charge,’ Sedlacek admitted. ‘But we’ll leave no possibility unturned.’

If he is found guilty of murder along with kidnapping and rape, Fritzl faces life in prison. Without a murder conviction, he faces 10 to 15 years in jail, which, it is believed, would create a national and international outcry.

This article appeared in the Observer on Sunday July 13 2008 on p36 of the World news section. It was last updated at 00:00 on July 13 2008.

July 12, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Fritzl children return to freedom while Josef preps for court

From MEDIndia:

In a delicious twist of irony, imprisoned Josef Fritzl insists on open air exercises in prison while his cellar children are slowly venturing out into the wide world outside.

Fritzl had kept his daughter Elisabeth locked in a cellar in Amstetten, Austria, and fathered her seven children before police caught him when he was forced to hospitalize one of the three brought up in the dungeon.

One of the seven died when very young, three were never allowed to leave the cellar even for a minute, while the other three went on to live with Fritzl as his adopted or fostered children.

Elisabeth, her children and her mother are getting treatment and counseling at a psychiatric clinic guarded by police since late April.

One of the children who lived upstairs — a 15-year-old girl — spent last weekend “incognito” at a youth fire brigade camp with 4,000 other youngsters and met up with some of her school friends for the first time in nearly three months.

Other family members also have made day trips outside under disguise, the Kurier newspaper reported.

Elisabeth has been questioned by prosecutors for the first time, it has been reported.

The Austria Press Agency, citing unidentified judicial sources, said 42-year-old Elisabeth Fritzl was interviewed Friday in a secret location.

Film of the interviews will be shown in court at the father’s trial later this year, Austrian media reported.

Fritzl himself has been making copious notes ready for the interview, as he will be present when Elisabeth speaks via a video link up and will be allowed to ask questions via his lawyer.

And the man who locked away his daughter in a windowless cellar for 24 years, has asked permission to leave his prison cell, saying he can no longer stand being cooped up.

Prison spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Erich Huber-Guensthofer said: “Mr Fritzl is accommodated in a cell for two and recently he has made use of his right to go outside for half an hour per day.

“He usually sits there watching television all day, especially news programmes about him,” said one prison source. “He’s terrified that someone will attack him or try to kill him.”

July 12, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Breaking: Elisabeth Fritzl gives testimony to Austrian authorities

This, from the BBC:

Legal authorities in Austria have begun questioning Elisabeth Fritzl, the woman who was held captive in a cellar for 24 years by her father, Josef.

The questioning involved a doctor to determine how one of the seven babies she was forced to bear by her father had died, said the prosecutor’s office.

Mr Fritzl confessed to incinerating the body of the dead baby, officials say.

Formal charges against Josef Fritzl may be ready within a few months - allowing a trial to start later this year.

The interview is being filmed so that Elisabeth Fritzl will not have to give evidence in person in court, officials said.

It is not clear how long the questioning will last or where it is taking place.

Possible murder charge

Mr Fritzl is being held in pre-trial detention in St Poelten, 80 km (50 miles) west of the capital, Vienna.

His alleged victims, including Elisabeth, 42, are undergoing treatment at a psychiatric hospital.

Prosecutors say Mr Fritzl has confessed to keeping his daughter captive in a cell at his home in Amstetten, where he says he had seven children with her.Three of the children were confined to the cellar, three were raised above ground, and one died in infancy, officials say.

Mr Fritzl confessed to disposing of the child’s corpse - a twin born in 1997 - and could face murder charges if he is found responsible for the death, officials say.

DNA tests have shown he is the father of Elisabeth’s six surviving children.

The case first came to light after Kerstin, one of the children fathered by Mr Fritzl, became seriously ill and was taken to hospital.

Unable to find any medical records, they appealed for the teenager’s mother to come forward.

At that point Mr Fritzl released Elisabeth, who then explained the story to police.

Kerstin was finally reunited with her family after coming out of a coma earlier this month. She is expected to make a full recovery.

 

July 11, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Josef Fritzl “going crazy” from confinement

From the Telegraph, UK:

Josef Fritzl, who locked his daughter in a cellar dungeon for 24 years, has asked permission to leave his prison cell after admitting he can no longer stand being cooped up.

Fritzl, 73, kept daughter Elisabeth locked in a windowless cellar in Amstetten, Austria, and fathered her seven children before being caught by police. Three of the children had never seen daylight before being released.

Now, after just two months of incarceration and despite his fear of being attacked by fellow prisoners, he has demanded his right to 30 minutes exercise every day.

Fritzl has now twice had half-hour walks, protected from other inmates by a close guard of prison officers.

Prison spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Erich Huber-Guensthofer said: “Mr Fritzl is accommodated in a cell for two and recently he has made use of his right to go outside for half an hour per day.

“He usually sits there watching television all day, especially news programmes about him,” said one prison source. “He’s terrified that someone will attack him or try to kill him.”

Prosecutors are about to interview Elisabeth, 42, and expect to put her father on trial in September.

Fritzl has been making copious notes ready for the interview, as he will be present when Elisabeth speaks via a video link up and will be allowed to ask questions via his lawyer.

 

July 11, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Up-to-date coverage on Austria’s Elisabeth Fritzl and family

Recently I have been gently scolded by folks who visit the site specifically for updates on Elisabeth et al, because I have not been updating this particular threat with all of the links in it.  I sincerely apologize for that, and will strive to be better.

Listed from newest coverage to oldest coverage:

Josef only faces ten years for crimes

Doctor’s permit Elisabeth to testify this month

Formal charges still months away for Josef

Josef seeks highest bidder for memoirs

Elisabeth may file lawsuit for privacy

Breaking News: Josef Fritzl now writing tell-all book- July 6, 2008

Is Josef Fritzl a victim too?

Josef Fritzl: Extreme Egoism

Josef Fritzl trial in 2008

Is Elisabeth “refusing” to testify against Fritzl?

Doctors say Elisabeth not prepared to testify

Read more »

July 10, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Military cover-up of Black female soldier’s assault, death

 
The following is from http://www.lavenajohnson.com/2007/03/cover-up-of-soldiers-death.html

We all need to know more about this young woman and how she died.
Once upon a time lived a young woman from a St. Louis suburb. She was an honor roll student, she played the violin, she donated blood and volunteered for American Heart Association walks. She elected to put off college for a while and joined the Army once out of school. At Fort Campbell, KY, she was assigned as a weapons supply manager to the 129th Corps Support Battalion.
She was LaVena Johnson, private first class, and she died near Balad, Iraq, on July 19, 2005, just eight days shy of her twentieth birthday. She was the first woman soldier from Missouri to die while serving in Iraq or Afghanistan.

The tragedy of her story begins there.

An Army representative initially told LaVena’s father, Dr. John Johnson, that his daughter “died of self-inflicted, noncombat injuries,” but initially added that it was not a suicide. The subsequent Army investigation reversed this finding and declared LaVena’s death a suicide, a finding refuted by the soldier’s family. In an article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Dr. Johnson pointed to indications that his daughter had endured a physical struggle before she died - two loose front teeth, a “busted lip” that had to be reconstructed by the funeral home - suggesting that “someone might have punched her in the mouth.”

A promise by the office of Representative William Lacy Clay to look into the matter produced nothing. The military said that the matter was closed.

Little more on LaVena’s death was said until St. Louis CBS affiliate KMOV aired a story last night which disclosed troubling details not previously made public - details which belie the Army’s assertion that the young Florissant native died by her own hand. The video of the report is available on the KMOV website.

Reporter Matt Sczesny spoke with LaVena’s father and examined documents and photos sent by Army investigators. So far from supporting the claim that LaVena died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the documents provided elements of another scenario altogether:

Indications of physical abuse that went unremarked by the autopsy
The absence of psychological indicators of suicidal thoughts; indeed, testimony that LaVena was happy and healthy prior to her death
Indications, via residue tests, that LaVena may not even have handled the weapon that killed her
A blood trail outside the tent where Lavena’s body was found
Indications that someone attenpted to set LaVena’s body on fire
The Army has resisted calls by Dr. Johnson and by KMOV to reopen its investigation.

We have seen in other military deaths, most infamously that of Army Ranger and former professional football player Cpl. Pat Tillman, that the Army has engaged in an insulting game of deny and delay when it comes to uncovering embarrassing facts. Only when public and official attention is brought to bear on the matter - as happened, eventually and with great effort, with the case of Cpl. Tillman - do unpleasant truths come to light.

Astonishing as it seems, it takes that level of outrage to compel the Army to find the truth and tell it, to honor its own soldiers. No such groundswell has yet emerged in the case of LaVena; not enough voices have demanded that someone in the military, anyone, speak for her. At first glance, the contrast between the cases of Pat Tillman and LaVena Johnson seems vast, but at the core the situations are the same. In each case, the death of a young soldier in a dangerous place and time was not explained to the families they left behind, the families that gave them up so that they could serve us. An honest accounting of their passing is all the dead ask of us.

The mother of Pat Tillman put the matter in stark and honest terms:

“This is how they treat a family of a high-profile individual,” she said. “How are they treating others?”
In the case of Private First Class Johnson, we know the answer.

July 10, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments