The Sable Verity

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Elisabeth Fritzl tried twice to escape cellar

New details appeared in the unbelievable dungeon incest affair of Lower Austria.

The victim, who was raped by her father the first time when she was 11 years old, tried to escape two times from her home.

The second time was in August 1984, and this was one time too much for her father. He decided to etherise, and displace her into the cellar. His wife and the police he told that she escaped a third time. Nobody was able to find her again.

In the cellar he continued to rape her almost every day. During the last 24 years, the victim gave birth to 7 children. One died because of a lack of medical care during the birth. 3 lived with her mother in the cellar, and the other three officially upstairs as foundlings on the first floor.

The man told he has found them always infront of his door. It’s told those three children lived a normal life, are known as very friendly and popular in the neighbourhood, and very good at school.

The victim was able to escape out of her prison when one of the children was brought fatally ill into hospital. Because the girl is suffering under a strange and serious disease, the doctors were searching for the biological mother through the medias. This was the chance for the victim to convince the father to let her go, and visit the suffering daughter in hospital.

Now the police has also found the dungeon. The place was secured by an electrical number code, and consists of several bed rooms, as well as a kitchen and a toilet. All rooms had only a height of 1,70 metres. The victim was only able to walk crouched. She looks much older than 44 years, and has grey hair.

May 14, 2008 Posted by Sable | News | , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Austria’s Josef Fritzl: “Monster” image is unfair

 

But he agreed during their roughly two-hour talk — Fritzl’s first face-to-face meeting with a prosecutor — to provide further testimony, St. Poelten prosecution spokesman Gerhard Sedlacek said. Further questioning is not planned for at least two weeks, he said.

Authorities say Fritzl initially confessed, after news of the family’s existence surfaced last month, to keeping daughter Elisabeth, now 42, and some of their seven children locked in a reinforced basement cellar.

But Fritzl, 73, who has not been charged, has not elaborated further on his confession. Sedlacek said he provided the prosecutor Wednesday with details about his background, including his professional career.

The underground family came to light April 19 when the oldest child, a 19-year-old woman, was hospitalized with a severe infection in Amstetten, west of Vienna.

Doctors, unable to find medical records for the woman, appealed on TV for her mother to come forward. Fritzl then accompanied Elisabeth to the hospital April 26.

He subsequently told police that he had fathered seven children with Elisabeth: three kept all their lives in the cellar, one adopted by him and his wife, two others raised in their custody and one who died as an infant.

In Amstetten, specialists continued to sift through the Fritzl home for evidence. Chief investigator Franz Polzer said that in addition to the cellar, Fritzl had deemed several rooms of the vast house off-limits to others.

These are now being examined in detail, he said. At some point, investigators also are planning to check the yard using sonar technology.

“We don’t have any concrete reason to suspect there is anything else, but we want to be absolutely sure,” Polzer said.

Justice Minister Maria Berger acknowledged that authorities may have shown a certain “gullibility” in accepting Fritzl’s claim when Elisabeth first disappeared in 1984 that she had run away to join a cult.

“Today, one would certainly pursue this more precisely,” Berger told Der Standard newspaper in an interview published Wednesday.

Local authorities in Lower Austria province have maintained that they acted appropriately.

Fritzl’s lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, said his client had access to a television in jail and was closely watching coverage of his case, which has garnered worldwide attention.

Mayer said Fritzl was bothered by the fact that he was being made out to be a monster. He said Fritzl told him, “I’m only being portrayed as a monster and not as someone who committed monstrous acts.”

Mayer made his comments when asked to confirm a report Wednesday by the newspaper Oesterreich that quoted Fritzl as saying he was not a monster and that without him, his 19-year-old daughter Kerstin would no longer be alive.

Berger told parliament that what happened to the Amstetten victims “couldn’t be made right” and stressed the need to better shield children from sex abuse.

Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer and Vice Chancellor Wilhelm Molterer announced plans to tighten laws for sex offenders.

“We will boost prevention because it is most important that criminal offenses are averted,” Gusenbauer said in a statement.

Fritzl reportedly was convicted of rape in 1967. On Wednesday, Gusenbauer said that the federal government considered it “completely inconceivable” that a convicted sex offender was able to adopt a child and that such individuals would be allowed to do jobs involving contact with children and adolescents.

 

More reports on this case here

May 13, 2008 Posted by Sable | Issues, News, Politics | , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Austria’s Josef Fritzl: I cared for my secret family in the cellar

 May 8, 2008

Josef Fritzl also said in remarks relayed by his lawyer to the Austrian magazine News that he tried to care for his secret family members, taking flowers, books and stuffed toys to them in the dingy dungeon below his home in the town of Amstetten.

The lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, confirmed that Fritzl made the remarks from a prison in the city of St. Poelten, where he is being held in pretrial detention.

“I constantly knew, over the entire 24 years, that what I did was not right, that I must have been crazy because I did something like this,” Fritzl was quoted as saying.

The case came to light last month, and 73-year-old Fritzl has since confessed to locking up his daughter Elisabeth in 1984, repeatedly raping her and fathering her seven children. Fritzl met for the first time with a prosecutor Wednesday.

“I tried as best I could to care for my family in the cellar,” Fritzl said in the published comments.

“When I went into the bunker, I brought my daughter flowers and my children books and stuffed animals,” Fritzl said, adding that he would watch adventure videos with the children while Elisabeth cooked their favorite meals.

“And then we’d all sit at the kitchen table and eat together,” he said.

Fritzl’s double life began to disintegrate when Elisabeth’s oldest child, a 19-year-old woman, was hospitalized with a severe infection in Amstetten, west of Vienna.

Unable to find medical records for the woman, doctors appealed on TV for her mother to come forward. Fritzl accompanied Elisabeth to the hospital April 26.

He told police that he had fathered seven children with Elisabeth: three kept in the cellar all their lives, one adopted by him and his wife, two raised in the couple’s custody and one who died as an infant.

In other comments published by News, Fritzl said that he grew up an only child in “humble circumstances” and that his mother, whom he “admired very much,” threw his father out of the house when he was 4.

“She was the boss at home and I the only man in the house,” Fritzl said of his mother.

Fritzl also said that he considered good behavior and decency important and that Elisabeth had stopped following rules when she hit puberty.

After locking her up, Fritzl said, he repeatedly thought about letting her go but was scared about being arrested and having people find out what he had done.

“With every week that I held my daughter, my situation got crazier. … It’s true; I thought repeatedly about whether I should let her go or not,” he said.

Fritzl, who always wanted to have a large family, said he was happy about the children Elisabeth bore him. To prepare her for labor, he brought her medical books, towels, disinfectants and diapers, he said.

May 13, 2008 Posted by Sable | Issues, News, Politics | , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Fritzl was convicted, served time for 1967 rape

May 7, 2008

 

“He was such a tyrant,” said the woman identified only as Christine R. in a Saturday interview conducted and translated by the Associated Press.

“He tolerated no dissent,” Christine R. added. Read more »

May 13, 2008 Posted by Sable | Issues, News, Politics | , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

What’s Done in the Dark: You know you’re a sick bastard when, pt. 2

April 29, 2008.  For 24 years Elisabeth Fritzl and three of her children lived an isolated life in three tiny underground chambers, deprived of natural light and room to move around freely.

Police handout image of reinforced door leading to secret 'prison' in Amstetten (28 April 2008)
A hidden concrete door concealed a network of small rooms

The rest of the Fritzl family lived in the house upstairs and had been forbidden by the domineering Josef Fritzl from ever going into the cellar, where the dungeon was.

The secret location was so well hidden that when the police searched the property they failed to find it until Mr Fritzl showed them where it was. Read more »

May 13, 2008 Posted by Sable | NeedtoKnow, News, Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Breaking News from Austria: You know you’re a sick bastard when…

April 29, 2008

update: Part 2 http://sableverity.wordpress.com/2008/04/29/whats-done-in-the-dark-you-know-youre-a-sick-bastard-when-pt-2/

original post This is a departure for this blog; I don’t usually pick up on stories like this…but then again, nothing compares, which is why I’m writing about it.  I am a woman, and a mother, and the story outlined below is one of true horror. Read more »

May 13, 2008 Posted by Sable | Issues, NeedtoKnow, News, Politics | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments